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Actual pew research by Pew Research – politicalbetting.com

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  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,403
    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The reality is that many local shops are more expensive than the chains or online delivery. It is up to us to pay that bit more. But I wouldn't dream of asking anyone to pay more because in my mind it's better to have an artisanal food shop nearby rather than go to Tescos.
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,252
    edited April 22

    Stormy cutting a fine figure at court today. I gather the mushroom motif means something..


    The mushrooms have been applied later. Notice how they do not follow the silky curves of the good lady's surplice inspired frock.
    After intensive examination of Ms Daniels' form I think you're right.
    Perhaps our necklace expert could divine some meaning from her key on a chain?
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,563
    Waterfall said:

    HYUFD said:

    I never take my phone to church, for starters using it in the services is rather rude, a bit like doing so in a play or a cinema or concert. So am not sure this tells us much

    I take my mobile everywhere but switch it off or put it in silent mode where appropriate, such as at a church service.

    I like to think that deep in Moscow/GCHQ/Langley someone is tracking my every move.
    If i go for a long walk i switch my mobile off....feels more relaxing somehow.
    People like you make Harold Finch cry.

    https://youtu.be/oZfQymnABxQ?si=oySzDkgA5vDf7SM6
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,793

    kle4 said:

    Stormy cutting a fine figure at court today. I gather the mushroom motif means something..


    The mushrooms are clearly photoshopped on. What's the significance?
    She was a guest on a late night talk show and was asked to select a mushroom which most looked like Donald Trump's penis.

    You're welcome.
    There wasn't mushroom for error.
    The host sounds a fungi.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,563
    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The reality is that many local shops are more expensive than the chains or online delivery. It is up to us to pay that bit more. But I wouldn't dream of asking anyone to pay more because in my mind it's better to have an artisanal food shop nearby rather than go to Tescos.
    The reality is that small, local shops *will* cost more. The economies of scale etc.
  • Options
    SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 15,637
    kle4 said:

    Stormy cutting a fine figure at court today. I gather the mushroom motif means something..


    The mushrooms are clearly photoshopped on. What's the significance?
    She was a guest on a late night talk show and was asked to select a mushroom which most looked like Donald Trump's penis.

    You're welcome.
    So the photo-shopped penises were added by some MAGA-maniac?

    Who's inflated (ahem) view of DJT goes beyond mere politics!
  • Options
    Clutch_BromptonClutch_Brompton Posts: 426
    edited April 22
    Deleted due to quotation SNAFU
  • Options
    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 39,061
    A sign of the EV bubble, of which only a few will survive:

    https://twitter.com/Osinttechnical/status/1782452395156369915

    But those few may take over the world...
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 26,907
    edited April 22
    "Ian Dunt
    @IanDunt

    I'm very sorry to hear Andrew Mitchell sell his soul on the radio right now. A formerly decent man with knowledge of his subject area who must know the nonsense he is spewing. He should hang his head in shame."

    https://twitter.com/IanDunt/status/1782306537999904826
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,774
    Anyone else getting odd issues with PB tonight?

    There seems to have been an outbreak of decency, friendliness and good-humour.

    I'm using Safari on a Mac - not sure if other platform users are seeing the same thing.
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 26,907
    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
  • Options
    CiceroCicero Posts: 2,254
    algarkirk said:

    There's a serious social/political issue here, actually.

    There is a definite phenomenon of American Evangelicals who don't go to church. It can be pretty alarming.

    In fact, people become even more entrenched in their political views when they stop attending services. Though churches have a reputation in some circles as promoting hyper-politicization, they can be depolarizing institutions. Being part of a religious community often forces people to get along with others—including others with different political views—and it may channel people’s efforts into charitable work or forms of community outreach that have little to do with politics. Leaving the community removes those moderating forces, opening the door to extremism.

    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/09/christianity-religion-america-church-polarization/675215/

    As well as the loss of socialisation, there's the loss of contact with the teachings of that bloke who was nailed to a tree for saying how great it would be to be nice to people for a change.

    You know, feeding the hungry, giving drinks to the thirsty, welcoming the stranger, that sort of thing.

    As I agree with this more or less entirely it seems churlish to suggest that it is not the case that Jesus was crucified for saying we should be kind and nice to each other. I think it is more or less certain that he was seen, rightly or wrongly, as a threat to the civil order. The Roman justice system was not great, but it didn't execute people for teaching kindness.
    The Roman justice system crucified Jesus because the mob demanded it, and so it was done for the sake of public order. Pilate washed his hands of the whole affair and gave the mob what they wanted. The Sermon on the Mount really does say that kindness is the root of goodness. Being tortured to death is more or less the exact opposite of the Christian ideal. If you deny the idea of kindness , I think it is pretty hard to be a Christian, whatever you say you are.
  • Options
    SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 15,637

    kle4 said:

    legatus said:

    TimS said:

    stodge said:

    kle4 said:

    MattW said:

    On topic for PB.

    Observation from an online Green Councillor friend in Oxford, to whom I have just been explaining the joys of Ashfield local politics.

    Oh my this sounds like an extremely eventful constituency!

    An additional interesting thing for us is that Conservatives, you know, the National party of govt still, haven’t stood this time in several wards (and didn’t stand against me).

    https://twitter.com/EmilyKerr36/status/1782089214147928248

    Are Conservative Councillor Candidate numbers holding up everywhere, the world wonders?

    The sort of question usually only AndyJS could answer.
    There are 2,655 seats being fought - the Conservatives have 95% candidate coverage, Labour 91%, the Lib Dems 68% and the Greens 62%. Reform are only standing 12% of possible candidates.
    Hence why the locals will be the start of the long decline of Reform as we head to the election. And much, though not all, of that will go back to Con.
    TimS said:

    stodge said:

    kle4 said:

    MattW said:

    On topic for PB.

    Observation from an online Green Councillor friend in Oxford, to whom I have just been explaining the joys of Ashfield local politics.

    Oh my this sounds like an extremely eventful constituency!

    An additional interesting thing for us is that Conservatives, you know, the National party of govt still, haven’t stood this time in several wards (and didn’t stand against me).

    https://twitter.com/EmilyKerr36/status/1782089214147928248

    Are Conservative Councillor Candidate numbers holding up everywhere, the world wonders?

    The sort of question usually only AndyJS could answer.
    There are 2,655 seats being fought - the Conservatives have 95% candidate coverage, Labour 91%, the Lib Dems 68% and the Greens 62%. Reform are only standing 12% of possible candidates.
    Hence why the locals will be the start of the long decline of Reform as we head to the election. And much, though not all, of that will go back to Con.
    For what it is worth, polling evidence suggests that only circa 35% of Reform voters would switch to the Tories were a candidate not to be standing. Moreover over 15% would vote Labour - so the net benefit to the Tories might be quite modest.
    Also depends on whether Reform do actually stand candidates in 600+ seats.
    UKIP managed 624 at their peak, Brexit bothered to stand in less than 300 last time.

    I think they could get to 500+ if they want, it's probably easier to find someone to stand for Parliament than NowhereShire Borough Council.

    Good point. Makes me think I might offer myself as the local Reform candidate just to take votes from the Tory, then campaign on my own version of their manifesto (including Rejoin the EU).
    Reformed Reform?
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,563

    A sign of the EV bubble, of which only a few will survive:

    https://twitter.com/Osinttechnical/status/1782452395156369915

    But those few may take over the world...

    To be fair, this VinFast outfit has an actual car, which they actually make, an actual car carrier ship and have actually imported some actual cars into the US.

    This puts them way in front of about 95% of these EV startups. Remember when someone was launching a Tesla Killer every week?
  • Options
    WaterfallWaterfall Posts: 96

    Let me repeat, Florida is THE LEAST SOUTHERN of Southern States.

    As for Virginia, most of Virginia outside of DC burbs is still culturally Southern. Whereas most of Floridan outside of the Panhandle and adjacent areas is NOT, and has not been for half a century.

    Miami is a notoriously unfriendly city not southern at all.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991
    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    This is true. I admire many of the good things that communal religion has had to offer, and the people I know inspired by it. You can find plenty of good messages in there (along with silly prohibitions on foodstuffs or whatever).

    But I don't believe in the fundamental tenets of faith.
  • Options
    LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 15,416
    TimS said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Asparagus from our garden. 15 food metres, 15 minutes from harvest to plate.
    Good one

    In the early summer of 2021 - still headfucked by Covid - i did my first post pandemic Gazette assignment. Eating food all along the East Anglian coast. Yes, it’s hard work, but someone etc

    The very first meal was an amazing lunch in Burnham on Crouch where I ate the last of the local asparagus with unctuous hollandaise in a deicious and very English garden

    Yes, English asparagus in England!

    Cold Czech pilsener in a cobbled Bohemian square in the August heat. Perfect

    Salad Nicoise on a blazing summer day in a Provençal town looking down on Nice, itself
    The coldest daytime temperature recorded in France today was…Nice. 4.4C during a hailstorm.
    22.4C was the day's high temperature today in SW Ireland - sausages from the local piggery at Gubbeen part of dinner.

    And my appreciation of this fine weather heightened by a long winter of endless rain.
  • Options
    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 39,061

    A sign of the EV bubble, of which only a few will survive:

    https://twitter.com/Osinttechnical/status/1782452395156369915

    But those few may take over the world...

    To be fair, this VinFast outfit has an actual car, which they actually make, an actual car carrier ship and have actually imported some actual cars into the US.

    This puts them way in front of about 95% of these EV startups. Remember when someone was launching a Tesla Killer every week?
    Do these 'Tesla killers' have accelerator pedals that don't threaten to kill people?

    I mean, if you cannot even get the peddle correct.... ;)
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,474
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,130
    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    In rural areas some small villages and hamlets no longer even have a pub or shop or school now but they still have a Parish church (even if they only get a service there once a month on rotation). Going to their local church is therefore one of the few ways they meet other members of the village or hamlet reasonably regularly in person
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,793
    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    Not that uncommon! Just look at parents trying to get their nippers into a Church school.

    But if you do, beware it might start to grow on you. Not everyone gets a revelation in a blinding flash out of the blue, indeed even many great religious teachers spend years searching and preparing their minds.

    Indeed part of my spiritual journey was by studying the KJV as literature, and finding things that I didn't expect that really resonated.
  • Options
    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 39,061
    edited April 22
    This... looks remarkably sci:fi:

    https://twitter.com/Rainmaker1973/status/1782412793742004594

    "A short film from 1902 of a German suspended railway called the Wuppertal Schwebebahn, shot in 68 mm, colorized and upscaled in 4K.

    It shows an unusual drone-like view of a German city at the beginning of the 20th century."

    No cars to be seen anywhere (obvs...), and few horses, either.

    Edit: compared to a modern view:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uPj0CDfpEm0
  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,691
    Sky News website report on the man with Sunak in his pocket:

    "India's Modi reported to Electoral Commission after referring to Muslims as 'infiltrators' during campaign speech"
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,403
    edited April 22
    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    Not really. I have been to church several times this and last year. For funerals and weddings sadly and happily. I have no problem with it it is a matter of respect.

    I mean I wouldn't go on a Sunday morning when people seem actually to believe all the Jesus is within you bolleaux but each to their own.

    Very funny did anyone see the post fight, in ring interviews with Ryan Garcia and Devin Haney over the weekend. Garcia was immediately thanks be to god and god is in my left hook and when I deploy it god doesn't f**k about, etc while Haney was hamdulilah Allah declares it to be so.

    Garcia won if anyone is interested although I'm not sure what that tells us about global geo-politics or the clash of civilisations.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,474
    My usual French food experience so far on this trip

    Traditional Parisian brasserie food: as good as ever. Red velvet banquettes. Steak tartare and chips. Brilliantly warming onion soup with cheesy croutons. Its not going to get noticed but often its all you want and need

    Cheap fast food: same as everywhere - everyone in Paris now goes to Pret A Manger. The symbol of new globalisation. A British sandwich chain with a French name now colonising Paris

    Now I’m in a locally celebrated hotel-restaurant in Brittany. It’s ambitious and a tiny bit fusion. And it’s decidedly meh. Fussy yet under flavoured and you’d almost certainly get better in the British equivalent
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,774
    HYUFD said:

    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    In rural areas some small villages and hamlets no longer even have a pub or shop or school now but they still have a Parish church (even if they only get a service there once a month on rotation). Going to their local church is therefore one of the few ways they meet other members of the village or hamlet reasonably regularly in person
    Welcome to our village: No shop, no pub, no school, and even the church has closed and been sold off for conversion into a house. And that's a village of over 400 people.

    There is no hope for the future either because the lack of those facilities means that the council has decided no further buildings can be built in our village. So we are frozen in our state of decline.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991
    Foxy said:

    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    Not that uncommon! Just look at parents trying to get their nippers into a Church school.

    But if you do, beware it might start to grow on you. Not everyone gets a revelation in a blinding flash out of the blue, indeed even many great religious teachers spend years searching and preparing their minds.

    Indeed part of my spiritual journey was by studying the KJV as literature, and finding things that I didn't expect that really resonated.
    I recently attended an event which I'm pretty sure must have been organised by a church group or something, as lots of people talked about their faith at it, and it was quite illuminating in some ways, hearing them talk in a way which very clearly presumed everyone present was a believer and on board with certain positions.

    It reinforced my view that a lot of (not all) theists and atheists have not the slightest understanding of each other's positions.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,403

    Anyone else getting odd issues with PB tonight?

    There seems to have been an outbreak of decency, friendliness and good-humour.

    I'm using Safari on a Mac - not sure if other platform users are seeing the same thing.

    No you fuck off.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,563
    edited April 22

    A sign of the EV bubble, of which only a few will survive:

    https://twitter.com/Osinttechnical/status/1782452395156369915

    But those few may take over the world...

    To be fair, this VinFast outfit has an actual car, which they actually make, an actual car carrier ship and have actually imported some actual cars into the US.

    This puts them way in front of about 95% of these EV startups. Remember when someone was launching a Tesla Killer every week?
    Do these 'Tesla killers' have accelerator pedals that don't threaten to kill people?

    I mean, if you cannot even get the peddle correct.... ;)
    The majority of them had the inventive safety feature of… not actually making any cars.

    Bit like the Best Hospital in The NHS - St Edward’s.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,130

    HYUFD said:

    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    In rural areas some small villages and hamlets no longer even have a pub or shop or school now but they still have a Parish church (even if they only get a service there once a month on rotation). Going to their local church is therefore one of the few ways they meet other members of the village or hamlet reasonably regularly in person
    Welcome to our village: No shop, no pub, no school, and even the church has closed and been sold off for conversion into a house. And that's a village of over 400 people.

    There is no hope for the future either because the lack of those facilities means that the council has decided no further buildings can be built in our village. So we are frozen in our state of decline.
    Use them or lose them basically, otherwise your village just becomes a glorified retirement community with a few farmers nearby
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,774
    Leon said:

    My usual French food experience so far on this trip

    Traditional Parisian brasserie food: as good as ever. Red velvet banquettes. Steak tartare and chips. Brilliantly warming onion soup with cheesy croutons. Its not going to get noticed but often its all you want and need

    Cheap fast food: same as everywhere - everyone in Paris now goes to Pret A Manger. The symbol of new globalisation. A British sandwich chain with a French name now colonising Paris

    Now I’m in a locally celebrated hotel-restaurant in Brittany. It’s ambitious and a tiny bit fusion. And it’s decidedly meh. Fussy yet under flavoured and you’d almost certainly get better in the British equivalent

    Our recent experience of Parisian brasserie food was like yours: as good as ever. But pricey now - gone are the days when you felt you were getting a bargain.

    I still love it though.
  • Options
    OmniumOmnium Posts: 9,800
    TOPPING said:

    Anyone else getting odd issues with PB tonight?

    There seems to have been an outbreak of decency, friendliness and good-humour.

    I'm using Safari on a Mac - not sure if other platform users are seeing the same thing.

    No you fuck off.
    Silly boy.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,774
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    In rural areas some small villages and hamlets no longer even have a pub or shop or school now but they still have a Parish church (even if they only get a service there once a month on rotation). Going to their local church is therefore one of the few ways they meet other members of the village or hamlet reasonably regularly in person
    Welcome to our village: No shop, no pub, no school, and even the church has closed and been sold off for conversion into a house. And that's a village of over 400 people.

    There is no hope for the future either because the lack of those facilities means that the council has decided no further buildings can be built in our village. So we are frozen in our state of decline.
    Use them or lose them basically, otherwise your village just becomes a glorified retirement community with a few farmers nearby
    Well yes but there's no route for a way back. If somebody wanted to build a new shop or pub they would not be allowed by Dorset (in our case) Council. That is madness.
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,252
    edited April 22

    This... looks remarkably sci:fi:

    https://twitter.com/Rainmaker1973/status/1782412793742004594

    "A short film from 1902 of a German suspended railway called the Wuppertal Schwebebahn, shot in 68 mm, colorized and upscaled in 4K.

    It shows an unusual drone-like view of a German city at the beginning of the 20th century."

    No cars to be seen anywhere (obvs...), and few horses, either.

    Edit: compared to a modern view:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uPj0CDfpEm0

    It's still going, suitably (but not too) modernised. On my list if I last that long.








  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,219
    I went to my Birkbeck graduation today. Joan Blackwell, the college President, gave the address - albeit by videolink. I have to say that I hope I’m doing as well as her at 91. She’s understandably retiring from the post this year but she looked like she could carry on!
  • Options
    turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 15,296

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Asparagus from our garden. 15 food metres, 15 minutes from harvest to plate.
    Mine from the allotment is about 400 yards. Tips were just showing on Saturday, so will check tomorrow in hope. Crowns have been in for five years now, so starting to quite productive.
    I love asparagus season! It’s also usually cheap in the supermarkets too.
  • Options
    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 39,061

    A sign of the EV bubble, of which only a few will survive:

    https://twitter.com/Osinttechnical/status/1782452395156369915

    But those few may take over the world...

    To be fair, this VinFast outfit has an actual car, which they actually make, an actual car carrier ship and have actually imported some actual cars into the US.

    This puts them way in front of about 95% of these EV startups. Remember when someone was launching a Tesla Killer every week?
    Do these 'Tesla killers' have accelerator pedals that don't threaten to kill people?

    I mean, if you cannot even get the peddle correct.... ;)
    The majority of them had the inventive safety feature of… not actually making any cars.

    Bit like the Best Hospital in The NHS - St Edward’s.
    Are you actually defending Tesla over that? Or the Cyberfuck as a whole?
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,474

    Leon said:

    My usual French food experience so far on this trip

    Traditional Parisian brasserie food: as good as ever. Red velvet banquettes. Steak tartare and chips. Brilliantly warming onion soup with cheesy croutons. Its not going to get noticed but often its all you want and need

    Cheap fast food: same as everywhere - everyone in Paris now goes to Pret A Manger. The symbol of new globalisation. A British sandwich chain with a French name now colonising Paris

    Now I’m in a locally celebrated hotel-restaurant in Brittany. It’s ambitious and a tiny bit fusion. And it’s decidedly meh. Fussy yet under flavoured and you’d almost certainly get better in the British equivalent

    Our recent experience of Parisian brasserie food was like yours: as good as ever. But pricey now - gone are the days when you felt you were getting a bargain.

    I still love it though.
    Yes. Pricey. Onion soup and steak tartare for one, 2 gin and tonics. €75

    That’s a fuck of a lot given the likely food cost, and you’re certainly not paying for the talent of a clever chef using the best ingredients

    France is not a really great food destination any more. You can eat better and certainly cheaper in many countries

    If you want incredible food at incredible prices: Cambodia. Mind blowingly good and it costs about a fifth what you would pay in Paris, and ITS NEVER FROZEN
  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,219
    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I come here for the encouragement and kindness Leon invariably shows his fellow posters.
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,792
    .

    I am shocked!

    Post Office scandal: Investigation that cleared CEO ‘ignored key witnesses’

    Nick Read was cleared of misconduct after whistleblowing complaint by Jane Davies, the company’s former HR director


    An investigation into the Post Office chief executive did not interview the complainant’s key witnesses and kept her in the dark, MPs have been told.

    Last week Nick Read, who has run the company since 2019, was exonerated of a “myriad charge sheet” set out in a whistleblowing complaint by Jane Davies, the company’s former HR director.

    The existence of the investigation into Read was made public earlier in February by the organisation’s former chairman, Henry Staunton, who was sacked by Kemi Badenoch, the business secretary, in January.


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/post-office-scandal-investigation-witnesses-pn5h5vmx0

    Do NOT be shocked WHEN next lawyers popping up in court(s) representing Donald Trump, are sporting Brit accents.

    OR when Kemi Badenoch appears as warm-up act for Donald Trump at some MAGA-maniac jamboree.
    I actually think that Donald Trump might do a bit better with a UK firm of solicitors. He does seem to select some remarkably incompetent lawyers. British ones would be amoral and start with the handicap of their accents and accidentally calling the judge 'M'Ludd', but they couldn't be much worse.

    Reminds me of a Kavanagh QC episode where he went to Florida.
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=2UGHwqOssQU
    John Thaw, greatest television actor of his day. But the video is blocked "in your country". Rumpole went to the great state of Florida as well. Filming subsidies?
    Most of the Brits I met in Britain who'd been to America had been to Florida. Especially true of working-class folks.

    So setting an American episode of a Brit TV series in Florida makes sense from Brit-audience perspective.
    I would like to proudly state that I have been to America but never been to Florida.
    Nothing to be proud of, seeing as how Florida is a great state and VERY diverse state.

    Check it out some time! Personally fond of St Augustine and the Redneck Riviera.
    Completely out of context Dylan...

    I dreamed I saw St. Augustine
    Alive as you or me
    Tearing through these quarters
    In the utmost misery
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,793
    Leon said:

    My usual French food experience so far on this trip

    Traditional Parisian brasserie food: as good as ever. Red velvet banquettes. Steak tartare and chips. Brilliantly warming onion soup with cheesy croutons. Its not going to get noticed but often its all you want and need

    Cheap fast food: same as everywhere - everyone in Paris now goes to Pret A Manger. The symbol of new globalisation. A British sandwich chain with a French name now colonising Paris

    Now I’m in a locally celebrated hotel-restaurant in Brittany. It’s ambitious and a tiny bit fusion. And it’s decidedly meh. Fussy yet under flavoured and you’d almost certainly get better in the British equivalent

    Have you tried the French Tacos?, if you fancy something different in the way of fast food, albeit hardly a health food. Nothing to do with Mexican Tacos, and part of understanding modern French street culture.

  • Options
    nico679nico679 Posts: 4,979
    The wheels are coming off Gideon Falters attempt to turn himself into a martyr .

  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 26,907
    "Boris Johnson told me he wished he was black, claims journalist

    Afua Hirsch says former PM made ‘problematic remarks’ about her in 2008 in the presence of his then-wife Marina Wheeler

    Amy Gibbons"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2024/04/22/boris-johnson-ex-wife-marina-wheeler-wished-he-was-black/
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,403
    HYUFD said:

    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    In rural areas some small villages and hamlets no longer even have a pub or shop or school now but they still have a Parish church (even if they only get a service there once a month on rotation). Going to their local church is therefore one of the few ways they meet other members of the village or hamlet reasonably regularly in person
    You obviously don't live in one. Small villages and hamlets all have very lively and active whatsapp and facebook groups and organise all kinds of activities. Moreso if they are smaller. Going to the local church absolutely does bring a small percentage of them together, and activities are often arranged about the church but you are as likely to have gardening groups and arts & crafts and coffee mornings and "Women of...." groups also.

    You should get out more. The church is a teeny tiny part of modern rural life.
  • Options
    ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 2,959

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Asparagus from our garden. 15 food metres, 15 minutes from harvest to plate.
    Mine from the allotment is about 400 yards. Tips were just showing on Saturday, so will check tomorrow in hope. Crowns have been in for five years now, so starting to quite productive.
    I love asparagus season! It’s also usually cheap in the supermarkets too.
    Last time I asked about a local allotment I was told the waiting list was somewhere between 15-50 years depending how lucky I got (and I guess how unlucky the existing allotment owners were).

  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,474
    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    My usual French food experience so far on this trip

    Traditional Parisian brasserie food: as good as ever. Red velvet banquettes. Steak tartare and chips. Brilliantly warming onion soup with cheesy croutons. Its not going to get noticed but often its all you want and need

    Cheap fast food: same as everywhere - everyone in Paris now goes to Pret A Manger. The symbol of new globalisation. A British sandwich chain with a French name now colonising Paris

    Now I’m in a locally celebrated hotel-restaurant in Brittany. It’s ambitious and a tiny bit fusion. And it’s decidedly meh. Fussy yet under flavoured and you’d almost certainly get better in the British equivalent

    Have you tried the French Tacos?, if you fancy something different in the way of fast food, albeit hardly a health food. Nothing to do with Mexican Tacos, and part of understanding modern French street culture.

    If it’s as bad as French “Indian curry” then no ta

  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991
    ohnotnow said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Asparagus from our garden. 15 food metres, 15 minutes from harvest to plate.
    Mine from the allotment is about 400 yards. Tips were just showing on Saturday, so will check tomorrow in hope. Crowns have been in for five years now, so starting to quite productive.
    I love asparagus season! It’s also usually cheap in the supermarkets too.
    Last time I asked about a local allotment I was told the waiting list was somewhere between 15-50 years depending how lucky I got (and I guess how unlucky the existing allotment owners were).

    If that has not been the set up for a Midsomer Murders episode I will be astonished.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,774

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Asparagus from our garden. 15 food metres, 15 minutes from harvest to plate.
    Mine from the allotment is about 400 yards. Tips were just showing on Saturday, so will check tomorrow in hope. Crowns have been in for five years now, so starting to quite productive.
    I love asparagus season! It’s also usually cheap in the supermarkets too.
    You are entering a 10+ year golden period with your asparagus. First 5 years it was an occasional treat, now we will be eating asparagus every 2nd or 3rd day for the next two months.

    And it is so much better than supermarket asparagus. Whether that's because they force theirs, use less flavoured, more productive varieties, or it's due to the inevitable delay between cutting and eating, I don't know. But nothing beats our own asparagus.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,403
    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
  • Options
    Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 25,519
    edited April 22
    algarkirk said:

    There's a serious social/political issue here, actually.

    There is a definite phenomenon of American Evangelicals who don't go to church. It can be pretty alarming.

    In fact, people become even more entrenched in their political views when they stop attending services. Though churches have a reputation in some circles as promoting hyper-politicization, they can be depolarizing institutions. Being part of a religious community often forces people to get along with others—including others with different political views—and it may channel people’s efforts into charitable work or forms of community outreach that have little to do with politics. Leaving the community removes those moderating forces, opening the door to extremism.

    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/09/christianity-religion-america-church-polarization/675215/

    As well as the loss of socialisation, there's the loss of contact with the teachings of that bloke who was nailed to a tree for saying how great it would be to be nice to people for a change.

    You know, feeding the hungry, giving drinks to the thirsty, welcoming the stranger, that sort of thing.

    As I agree with this more or less entirely it seems churlish to suggest that it is not the case that Jesus was crucified for saying we should be kind and nice to each other. I think it is more or less certain that he was seen, rightly or wrongly, as a threat to the civil order. The Roman justice system was not great, but it didn't execute people for teaching kindness.
    The gospels indicate that he was crucified as a sop to the natives. He was considered a threat to the pharisees, and therefore they badgered Pilate to have him crucified, an act which the man therefore famously 'washed his hands' of.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,474
    edited April 22
    I don’t understand why French towns aren’t flooded with brilliant Vietnamese and Cambodian restaurants. The same way Britain has gained so much from Indian and Hong Kong Chinese. It’s one of the “benefits” of the imperial experience

    I presume it’s French exceptionalism again. “Our food is the best in the world we don’t need to learn anything”

    Non, mon ami, YOU REALLY DO
  • Options
    Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 25,519

    I am shocked!

    Post Office scandal: Investigation that cleared CEO ‘ignored key witnesses’

    Nick Read was cleared of misconduct after whistleblowing complaint by Jane Davies, the company’s former HR director


    An investigation into the Post Office chief executive did not interview the complainant’s key witnesses and kept her in the dark, MPs have been told.

    Last week Nick Read, who has run the company since 2019, was exonerated of a “myriad charge sheet” set out in a whistleblowing complaint by Jane Davies, the company’s former HR director.

    The existence of the investigation into Read was made public earlier in February by the organisation’s former chairman, Henry Staunton, who was sacked by Kemi Badenoch, the business secretary, in January.


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/post-office-scandal-investigation-witnesses-pn5h5vmx0

    Do NOT be shocked WHEN next lawyers popping up in court(s) representing Donald Trump, are sporting Brit accents.

    OR when Kemi Badenoch appears as warm-up act for Donald Trump at some MAGA-maniac jamboree.
    I actually think that Donald Trump might do a bit better with a UK firm of solicitors. He does seem to select some remarkably incompetent lawyers. British ones would be amoral and start with the handicap of their accents and accidentally calling the judge 'M'Ludd', but they couldn't be much worse.

    Reminds me of a Kavanagh QC episode where he went to Florida.
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=2UGHwqOssQU
    John Thaw, greatest television actor of his day. But the video is blocked "in your country". Rumpole went to the great state of Florida as well. Filming subsidies?
    Was Rumpole actually in Forida, or filmed in the UK with some potted palms and the standard US-actors-who-live-here called in?
    Camber Sands in February stood in for the Sahara Desert in Carry On Follow That Camel.

    Shooting had to be halted several times because there was snow on the sands.

    Makes me proud to be British.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991

    algarkirk said:

    There's a serious social/political issue here, actually.

    There is a definite phenomenon of American Evangelicals who don't go to church. It can be pretty alarming.

    In fact, people become even more entrenched in their political views when they stop attending services. Though churches have a reputation in some circles as promoting hyper-politicization, they can be depolarizing institutions. Being part of a religious community often forces people to get along with others—including others with different political views—and it may channel people’s efforts into charitable work or forms of community outreach that have little to do with politics. Leaving the community removes those moderating forces, opening the door to extremism.

    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/09/christianity-religion-america-church-polarization/675215/

    As well as the loss of socialisation, there's the loss of contact with the teachings of that bloke who was nailed to a tree for saying how great it would be to be nice to people for a change.

    You know, feeding the hungry, giving drinks to the thirsty, welcoming the stranger, that sort of thing.

    As I agree with this more or less entirely it seems churlish to suggest that it is not the case that Jesus was crucified for saying we should be kind and nice to each other. I think it is more or less certain that he was seen, rightly or wrongly, as a threat to the civil order. The Roman justice system was not great, but it didn't execute people for teaching kindness.
    The gospels indicate that he was crucified as a sop to the natives. He was considered a threat to the pharisees, and therefore they badgered Pilate to have him crucified, and act which the man therefore famously 'washed his hands' of.
    It is a plausible reaction for a middle manager position.
  • Options
    turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 15,296
    ohnotnow said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Asparagus from our garden. 15 food metres, 15 minutes from harvest to plate.
    Mine from the allotment is about 400 yards. Tips were just showing on Saturday, so will check tomorrow in hope. Crowns have been in for five years now, so starting to quite productive.
    I love asparagus season! It’s also usually cheap in the supermarkets too.
    Last time I asked about a local allotment I was told the waiting list was somewhere between 15-50 years depending how lucky I got (and I guess how unlucky the existing allotment owners were).

    I was quite lucky when I got it. I knew there was a list but put in my request. I was offered one within weeks as the first on the list thought it ‘too weedy- couldn’t someone sort it out for me’, which I thought was hilarious. We are lucky that there site is huge probably over a hundred plots of various sizes (the old big plots have been divided over the years to suit the tastes of the time pressured modern allotment gardener) so the list is fairly short still, and the turnover on some plots is rather high. One, next to mine, seems to be on its fourth ‘owner’ in five years. I think people sometimes fail to realise how you need to keep on top of things.
  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,219
    DougSeal said:

    I went to my Birkbeck graduation today. Joan Blackwell, the college President, gave the address - albeit by videolink. I have to say that I hope I’m doing as well as her at 91. She’s understandably retiring from the post this year but she looked like she could carry on!

    I meant of course Joan Bakewell. They’ll probably ask me for my degree back after that error…
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,474
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
  • Options
    Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 25,519
    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    It is a trend to do just that. Enough to be remarked upon by the Sepctator.
  • Options
    ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 2,959
    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The reality is that many local shops are more expensive than the chains or online delivery. It is up to us to pay that bit more. But I wouldn't dream of asking anyone to pay more because in my mind it's better to have an artisanal food shop nearby rather than go to Tescos.
    I have a delivery from Ikea this week as despite only being a few miles away 'as the crow flies', the delivery charge is cheaper than the 1hr+ each-way bus journey.
  • Options
    turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 15,296
    kle4 said:

    ohnotnow said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Asparagus from our garden. 15 food metres, 15 minutes from harvest to plate.
    Mine from the allotment is about 400 yards. Tips were just showing on Saturday, so will check tomorrow in hope. Crowns have been in for five years now, so starting to quite productive.
    I love asparagus season! It’s also usually cheap in the supermarkets too.
    Last time I asked about a local allotment I was told the waiting list was somewhere between 15-50 years depending how lucky I got (and I guess how unlucky the existing allotment owners were).

    If that has not been the set up for a Midsomer Murders episode I will be astonished.
    Not yet (there has been a gardens one), so you should definitely send it in…
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,563
    edited April 22

    A sign of the EV bubble, of which only a few will survive:

    https://twitter.com/Osinttechnical/status/1782452395156369915

    But those few may take over the world...

    To be fair, this VinFast outfit has an actual car, which they actually make, an actual car carrier ship and have actually imported some actual cars into the US.

    This puts them way in front of about 95% of these EV startups. Remember when someone was launching a Tesla Killer every week?
    Do these 'Tesla killers' have accelerator pedals that don't threaten to kill people?

    I mean, if you cannot even get the peddle correct.... ;)
    The majority of them had the inventive safety feature of… not actually making any cars.

    Bit like the Best Hospital in The NHS - St Edward’s.
    Are you actually defending Tesla over that? Or the Cyberfuck as a whole?
    No, I was pointing out that VinFast was way ahead of the pack by actually existing. For a while, fraudulent EV startups were the “crypto currency” of the day.

    Edit - you’ve got to admit, not making an cars is a damn good way to prevent any accidents or incidents in or around your cars.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,130
    TOPPING said:

    HYUFD said:

    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    In rural areas some small villages and hamlets no longer even have a pub or shop or school now but they still have a Parish church (even if they only get a service there once a month on rotation). Going to their local church is therefore one of the few ways they meet other members of the village or hamlet reasonably regularly in person
    You obviously don't live in one. Small villages and hamlets all have very lively and active whatsapp and facebook groups and organise all kinds of activities. Moreso if they are smaller. Going to the local church absolutely does bring a small percentage of them together, and activities are often arranged about the church but you are as likely to have gardening groups and arts & crafts and coffee mornings and "Women of...." groups also.

    You should get out more. The church is a teeny tiny part of modern rural life.
    I do now, indeed one with no pub and no post office and no shops now within it (although it still has a church and village hall which does amateur drama and a bit of table tennis). Yes it has a Facebook group but mainly for identifying flooding problems, crime, litter etc in the area.

    There is a horticulture group but based in the next village not this one
  • Options
    turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 15,296

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Asparagus from our garden. 15 food metres, 15 minutes from harvest to plate.
    Mine from the allotment is about 400 yards. Tips were just showing on Saturday, so will check tomorrow in hope. Crowns have been in for five years now, so starting to quite productive.
    I love asparagus season! It’s also usually cheap in the supermarkets too.
    You are entering a 10+ year golden period with your asparagus. First 5 years it was an occasional treat, now we will be eating asparagus every 2nd or 3rd day for the next two months.

    And it is so much better than supermarket asparagus. Whether that's because they force theirs, use less flavoured, more productive varieties, or it's due to the inevitable delay between cutting and eating, I don't know. But nothing beats our own asparagus.
    I think it’s mainly the time from cutting to plate. Cannot be less than a day or two for shop bought, and as you say it’s minutes for your own.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,793
    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    My usual French food experience so far on this trip

    Traditional Parisian brasserie food: as good as ever. Red velvet banquettes. Steak tartare and chips. Brilliantly warming onion soup with cheesy croutons. Its not going to get noticed but often its all you want and need

    Cheap fast food: same as everywhere - everyone in Paris now goes to Pret A Manger. The symbol of new globalisation. A British sandwich chain with a French name now colonising Paris

    Now I’m in a locally celebrated hotel-restaurant in Brittany. It’s ambitious and a tiny bit fusion. And it’s decidedly meh. Fussy yet under flavoured and you’d almost certainly get better in the British equivalent

    Have you tried the French Tacos?, if you fancy something different in the way of fast food, albeit hardly a health food. Nothing to do with Mexican Tacos, and part of understanding modern French street culture.

    If it’s as bad as French “Indian curry” then no ta

    It's a completely different dish.

    https://amp.theguardian.com/world/2019/mar/15/move-over-mcdonalds-french-taco-poised-for-global-expansion

    It needs an open mind, and a willingness to encounter French Muslims, so perhaps not for a journalist.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,793
    Leon said:

    I don’t understand why French towns aren’t flooded with brilliant Vietnamese and Cambodian restaurants. The same way Britain has gained so much from Indian and Hong Kong Chinese. It’s one of the “benefits” of the imperial experience

    I presume it’s French exceptionalism again. “Our food is the best in the world we don’t need to learn anything”

    Non, mon ami, YOU REALLY DO

    There are loads of Vietnamese restaurants in France, and Tunisian Couscous places too. They aren't hard to find.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,474
    HYUFD said:

    TOPPING said:

    HYUFD said:

    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    In rural areas some small villages and hamlets no longer even have a pub or shop or school now but they still have a Parish church (even if they only get a service there once a month on rotation). Going to their local church is therefore one of the few ways they meet other members of the village or hamlet reasonably regularly in person
    You obviously don't live in one. Small villages and hamlets all have very lively and active whatsapp and facebook groups and organise all kinds of activities. Moreso if they are smaller. Going to the local church absolutely does bring a small percentage of them together, and activities are often arranged about the church but you are as likely to have gardening groups and arts & crafts and coffee mornings and "Women of...." groups also.

    You should get out more. The church is a teeny tiny part of modern rural life.
    I do now, indeed one with no pub and no post office and no shops now within it (although it still has a church and village hall which does amateur drama and a bit of table tennis). Yes it has a Facebook group but mainly for identifying flooding problems, crime, litter etc in the area.

    There is a horticulture group but based in the next village not this one
    Why would you choose to live in such a lonely asocial place?

    I honestly don’t get it. The only reason I would live in a village is if it had a strong village community. Otherwise what’s the point is isolating yourself so much from human society and all the conveniences of towns and cities - shops and pubs, doctors and theatres, art and commerce

    If you desperately need rural views you could buy an old farmhouse anywhere
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,774
    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    I went to my Birkbeck graduation today. Joan Blackwell, the college President, gave the address - albeit by videolink. I have to say that I hope I’m doing as well as her at 91. She’s understandably retiring from the post this year but she looked like she could carry on!

    I meant of course Joan Bakewell. They’ll probably ask me for my degree back after that error…
    That's a bake mark for you.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,336
    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    I went to my Birkbeck graduation today. Joan Blackwell, the college President, gave the address - albeit by videolink. I have to say that I hope I’m doing as well as her at 91. She’s understandably retiring from the post this year but she looked like she could carry on!

    I meant of course Joan Bakewell. They’ll probably ask me for my degree back after that error…
    Or tart up the degree certificate.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,060
    Leon said:

    I don’t understand why French towns aren’t flooded with brilliant Vietnamese and Cambodian restaurants. The same way Britain has gained so much from Indian and Hong Kong Chinese. It’s one of the “benefits” of the imperial experience

    I presume it’s French exceptionalism again. “Our food is the best in the world we don’t need to learn anything”

    Non, mon ami, YOU REALLY DO

    I've had amazing Vietnamese food in France. Indeed, in smaller towns, the Vietnamese place is often the only one not just reheating stuff from the freezer.
  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 32,047
    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    The Company Shed is better.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,563
    Andy_JS said:

    "Boris Johnson told me he wished he was black, claims journalist

    Afua Hirsch says former PM made ‘problematic remarks’ about her in 2008 in the presence of his then-wife Marina Wheeler

    Amy Gibbons"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2024/04/22/boris-johnson-ex-wife-marina-wheeler-wished-he-was-black/

    Genuine question for the club - why is race fluidity not acceptable?

    We live in an era where people sun tan themselves a darker shade without a thought. Fake tan is all over the place. There are tons of skin lightening products out there.

    I’m quite certain, silly Michael Jackson comments aside, that lots of people have had cosmetic surgery to appear more like a different ethnic group.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,403
    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,991

    Andy_JS said:

    "Boris Johnson told me he wished he was black, claims journalist

    Afua Hirsch says former PM made ‘problematic remarks’ about her in 2008 in the presence of his then-wife Marina Wheeler

    Amy Gibbons"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2024/04/22/boris-johnson-ex-wife-marina-wheeler-wished-he-was-black/

    Genuine question for the club - why is race fluidity not acceptable?

    We live in an era where people sun tan themselves a darker shade without a thought. Fake tan is all over the place. There are tons of skin lightening products out there.

    I’m quite certain, silly Michael Jackson comments aside, that lots of people have had cosmetic surgery to appear more like a different ethnic group.
    The zeitgeist has not gotten to a place of accepting transracialism yet.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,474
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
    No, I really do notice. It’s my job
  • Options
    ChrisChris Posts: 11,138
    Andy_JS said:

    "Boris Johnson told me he wished he was black, claims journalist

    Afua Hirsch says former PM made ‘problematic remarks’ about her in 2008 in the presence of his then-wife Marina Wheeler

    Amy Gibbons"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2024/04/22/boris-johnson-ex-wife-marina-wheeler-wished-he-was-black/

    Of course, the ironic thing about Boris Johnson is that his great-grandfather in the male line was Turkish:
    image
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,403
    HYUFD said:

    TOPPING said:

    HYUFD said:

    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    In rural areas some small villages and hamlets no longer even have a pub or shop or school now but they still have a Parish church (even if they only get a service there once a month on rotation). Going to their local church is therefore one of the few ways they meet other members of the village or hamlet reasonably regularly in person
    You obviously don't live in one. Small villages and hamlets all have very lively and active whatsapp and facebook groups and organise all kinds of activities. Moreso if they are smaller. Going to the local church absolutely does bring a small percentage of them together, and activities are often arranged about the church but you are as likely to have gardening groups and arts & crafts and coffee mornings and "Women of...." groups also.

    You should get out more. The church is a teeny tiny part of modern rural life.
    I do now, indeed one with no pub and no post office and no shops now within it (although it still has a church and village hall which does amateur drama and a bit of table tennis). Yes it has a Facebook group but mainly for identifying flooding problems, crime, litter etc in the area.

    There is a horticulture group but based in the next village not this one
    You will know then that the members of the horticulture group span the closest five villages to where you are. Likewise the other groups. There is a real sense of community, albeit online. Plus the coffee mornings and so forth.

    You live in such a village. How many people (as a percentage of the village) go to church. I would say each week but as like as not your village church doesn't have a service every week but shares its vic with the neighbouring churches.
  • Options
    Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 25,519
    Leon said:

    My usual French food experience so far on this trip

    Traditional Parisian brasserie food: as good as ever. Red velvet banquettes. Steak tartare and chips. Brilliantly warming onion soup with cheesy croutons. Its not going to get noticed but often its all you want and need

    Cheap fast food: same as everywhere - everyone in Paris now goes to Pret A Manger. The symbol of new globalisation. A British sandwich chain with a French name now colonising Paris

    Now I’m in a locally celebrated hotel-restaurant in Brittany. It’s ambitious and a tiny bit fusion. And it’s decidedly meh. Fussy yet under flavoured and you’d almost certainly get better in the British equivalent

    If you're reduced to eating the banquettes, I say get yourself on a flight and back to a civilised country before you starve.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,774
    Leon said:

    HYUFD said:

    TOPPING said:

    HYUFD said:

    Andy_JS said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    I’ve never been to church other than weddings, funerals or christenings but, as someone who is sad that Christianity is no longer going to be the dominant faith in England when my kids are grown up, I feel I should start.

    I won’t though, the same way I like the independent shops in our High St and still order stuff cheaper online. When they’re gone I’ll miss them & complaint that people never used them, as my houses value plummets

    https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/why-are-all-the-pubs-closing-ask-people-who-never-go-to-the-pub-200903051623
    Very true.

    I think it was Peter Hitchens who said we are basking in the afterglow of the old Christian England, but by doing nothing to preserve it we are destroying it.
    The problem is you can't really pretend to believe in something. Going to church when you don't believe in any of it would be slightly ridiculous.
    In rural areas some small villages and hamlets no longer even have a pub or shop or school now but they still have a Parish church (even if they only get a service there once a month on rotation). Going to their local church is therefore one of the few ways they meet other members of the village or hamlet reasonably regularly in person
    You obviously don't live in one. Small villages and hamlets all have very lively and active whatsapp and facebook groups and organise all kinds of activities. Moreso if they are smaller. Going to the local church absolutely does bring a small percentage of them together, and activities are often arranged about the church but you are as likely to have gardening groups and arts & crafts and coffee mornings and "Women of...." groups also.

    You should get out more. The church is a teeny tiny part of modern rural life.
    I do now, indeed one with no pub and no post office and no shops now within it (although it still has a church and village hall which does amateur drama and a bit of table tennis). Yes it has a Facebook group but mainly for identifying flooding problems, crime, litter etc in the area.

    There is a horticulture group but based in the next village not this one
    Why would you choose to live in such a lonely asocial place?

    I honestly don’t get it. The only reason I would live in a village is if it had a strong village community. Otherwise what’s the point is isolating yourself so much from human society and all the conveniences of towns and cities - shops and pubs, doctors and theatres, art and commerce

    If you desperately need rural views you could buy an old farmhouse anywhere
    I was brought up in a town but since marrying have always lived in villages. I like the sense of community. That and the closeness of nature largely compensate for the lack of facilities.

    The strange thing is in every village we've lived in about 50% of the population never get involved in anything at all. For them, I wonder what the attraction is. I understand that some people like to keep to themselves but why choose to live a village? If you want to be anonymous go and live in a nondescript town.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,563
    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    My usual French food experience so far on this trip

    Traditional Parisian brasserie food: as good as ever. Red velvet banquettes. Steak tartare and chips. Brilliantly warming onion soup with cheesy croutons. Its not going to get noticed but often its all you want and need

    Cheap fast food: same as everywhere - everyone in Paris now goes to Pret A Manger. The symbol of new globalisation. A British sandwich chain with a French name now colonising Paris

    Now I’m in a locally celebrated hotel-restaurant in Brittany. It’s ambitious and a tiny bit fusion. And it’s decidedly meh. Fussy yet under flavoured and you’d almost certainly get better in the British equivalent

    Have you tried the French Tacos?, if you fancy something different in the way of fast food, albeit hardly a health food. Nothing to do with Mexican Tacos, and part of understanding modern French street culture.

    If it’s as bad as French “Indian curry” then no ta

    It's a completely different dish.

    https://amp.theguardian.com/world/2019/mar/15/move-over-mcdonalds-french-taco-poised-for-global-expansion

    It needs an open mind, and a willingness to encounter French Muslims, so perhaps not for a journalist.
    Quite a high percentage of French McDonalds are owned by immigrants, incidentally.
  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 32,047
    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Asparagus from our garden. 15 food metres, 15 minutes from harvest to plate.
    Good one

    In the early summer of 2021 - still headfucked by Covid - i did my first post pandemic Gazette assignment. Eating food all along the East Anglian coast. Yes, it’s hard work, but someone etc

    The very first meal was an amazing lunch in Burnham on Crouch where I ate the last of the local asparagus with unctuous hollandaise in a deicious and very English garden

    Yes, English asparagus in England!

    Cold Czech pilsener in a cobbled Bohemian square in the August heat. Perfect

    Salad Nicoise on a blazing summer day in a Provençal town looking down on Nice, itself
    Our local asparagus grower is expecting this years harvest to start shortly.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,774

    Leon said:

    My usual French food experience so far on this trip

    Traditional Parisian brasserie food: as good as ever. Red velvet banquettes. Steak tartare and chips. Brilliantly warming onion soup with cheesy croutons. Its not going to get noticed but often its all you want and need

    Cheap fast food: same as everywhere - everyone in Paris now goes to Pret A Manger. The symbol of new globalisation. A British sandwich chain with a French name now colonising Paris

    Now I’m in a locally celebrated hotel-restaurant in Brittany. It’s ambitious and a tiny bit fusion. And it’s decidedly meh. Fussy yet under flavoured and you’d almost certainly get better in the British equivalent

    If you're reduced to eating the banquettes, I say get yourself on a flight and back to a civilised country before you starve.
    The blanquettes however can be very nice.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,793
    kle4 said:

    Andy_JS said:

    "Boris Johnson told me he wished he was black, claims journalist

    Afua Hirsch says former PM made ‘problematic remarks’ about her in 2008 in the presence of his then-wife Marina Wheeler

    Amy Gibbons"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2024/04/22/boris-johnson-ex-wife-marina-wheeler-wished-he-was-black/

    Genuine question for the club - why is race fluidity not acceptable?

    We live in an era where people sun tan themselves a darker shade without a thought. Fake tan is all over the place. There are tons of skin lightening products out there.

    I’m quite certain, silly Michael Jackson comments aside, that lots of people have had cosmetic surgery to appear more like a different ethnic group.
    The zeitgeist has not gotten to a place of accepting transracialism yet.
    It has.

    We have lots of cross cultural pollination, and it's not even new. Two Tone for example, but white reggae stars, Asian rappers etc.
  • Options
    WaterfallWaterfall Posts: 96
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
    A city can be in decline but still a decent place to visit. Paris after all starts from a very high base so it will be a long time before it turns into Mogadishu.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,474
    rcs1000 said:

    Leon said:

    I don’t understand why French towns aren’t flooded with brilliant Vietnamese and Cambodian restaurants. The same way Britain has gained so much from Indian and Hong Kong Chinese. It’s one of the “benefits” of the imperial experience

    I presume it’s French exceptionalism again. “Our food is the best in the world we don’t need to learn anything”

    Non, mon ami, YOU REALLY DO

    I've had amazing Vietnamese food in France. Indeed, in smaller towns, the Vietnamese place is often the only one not just reheating stuff from the freezer.
    Indeed but they are nowhere near as prevalent as Indian in the uk

    Example. I am in Douarnanez in Cornouaille, a slightly run down but still oddly charming fishing town at the end of Brittany. Population 15,000. I just checked: the nearest Vietnamese is 20 miles away

    Compare with Penzance in Cornwall. A slightly run down but etc etc. Population 15,000. At least four Indian restaurants

    The French need the Vietnamese to hurry up and invigorate their cuisine. On the upside the Vietnamese abd Cambodians might just be the best cooks on earth
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,403
    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
    No, I really do notice. It’s my job
    It's your job to write 1,000 entertaining words about something or other. It's no wonder that there has to be a bit of creative liberty taken with the contents.

    Paris is fine. Just as it's always been. No huge change. But I look forward to reading your piece on it, you super-noticer, you.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,563
    kle4 said:

    Andy_JS said:

    "Boris Johnson told me he wished he was black, claims journalist

    Afua Hirsch says former PM made ‘problematic remarks’ about her in 2008 in the presence of his then-wife Marina Wheeler

    Amy Gibbons"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2024/04/22/boris-johnson-ex-wife-marina-wheeler-wished-he-was-black/

    Genuine question for the club - why is race fluidity not acceptable?

    We live in an era where people sun tan themselves a darker shade without a thought. Fake tan is all over the place. There are tons of skin lightening products out there.

    I’m quite certain, silly Michael Jackson comments aside, that lots of people have had cosmetic surgery to appear more like a different ethnic group.
    The zeitgeist has not gotten to a place of accepting transracialism yet.
    Should I pencil in next Tuesday, then?

    The bit I find interesting is the very widespread, low level version. Having a tan etc… Yet the implication of the desirability of the look is ignored.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,774
    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
    No, I really do notice. It’s my job
    Can you honestly say you don't go with an agenda? Bad news sells after all.
  • Options
    turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 15,296
    Foxy said:

    kle4 said:

    Andy_JS said:

    "Boris Johnson told me he wished he was black, claims journalist

    Afua Hirsch says former PM made ‘problematic remarks’ about her in 2008 in the presence of his then-wife Marina Wheeler

    Amy Gibbons"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2024/04/22/boris-johnson-ex-wife-marina-wheeler-wished-he-was-black/

    Genuine question for the club - why is race fluidity not acceptable?

    We live in an era where people sun tan themselves a darker shade without a thought. Fake tan is all over the place. There are tons of skin lightening products out there.

    I’m quite certain, silly Michael Jackson comments aside, that lots of people have had cosmetic surgery to appear more like a different ethnic group.
    The zeitgeist has not gotten to a place of accepting transracialism yet.
    It has.

    We have lots of cross cultural pollination, and it's not even new. Two Tone for example, but white reggae stars, Asian rappers etc.
    Tim Westwood at the start.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,474
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
    No, I really do notice. It’s my job
    It's your job to write 1,000 entertaining words about something or other. It's no wonder that there has to be a bit of creative liberty taken with the contents.

    Paris is fine. Just as it's always been. No huge change. But I look forward to reading your piece on it, you super-noticer, you.
    Remember how I noticed the necklace. And think on that
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,403

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
    No, I really do notice. It’s my job
    Can you honestly say you don't go with an agenda? Bad news sells after all.
    I think it was Jay Rayner, or Adrian Gill, or one of them perhaps Giles Coren, who said that their bad restaurant reviews (restaurant bad, not the review...) were hugely more popular than their good ones. They said it was tempting to make them all bad.
  • Options
    turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 15,296
    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
    No, I really do notice. It’s my job
    It's your job to write 1,000 entertaining words about something or other. It's no wonder that there has to be a bit of creative liberty taken with the contents.

    Paris is fine. Just as it's always been. No huge change. But I look forward to reading your piece on it, you super-noticer, you.
    Remember how I noticed the necklace. And think on that
    Is the any evidence that you are correct in the necklace claim?
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,336
    Leon said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Leon said:

    I don’t understand why French towns aren’t flooded with brilliant Vietnamese and Cambodian restaurants. The same way Britain has gained so much from Indian and Hong Kong Chinese. It’s one of the “benefits” of the imperial experience

    I presume it’s French exceptionalism again. “Our food is the best in the world we don’t need to learn anything”

    Non, mon ami, YOU REALLY DO

    I've had amazing Vietnamese food in France. Indeed, in smaller towns, the Vietnamese place is often the only one not just reheating stuff from the freezer.
    Indeed but they are nowhere near as prevalent as Indian in the uk

    Example. I am in Douarnanez in Cornouaille, a slightly run down but still oddly charming fishing town at the end of Brittany. Population 15,000. I just checked: the nearest Vietnamese is 20 miles away

    Compare with Penzance in Cornwall. A slightly run down but etc etc. Population 15,000. At least four Indian restaurants

    The French need the Vietnamese to hurry up and invigorate their cuisine. On the upside the Vietnamese abd Cambodians might just be the best cooks on earth
    Ah, the setting of Nevil Shute's wartime thriller Most Secret.
  • Options
    ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 2,959
    Waterfall said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
    A city can be in decline but still a decent place to visit. Paris after all starts from a very high base so it will be a long time before it turns into Mogadishu.
    I remember hearing an elderly French diplomat talking about modern France.

    "We are old enough, and rich enough, to sink with grace".
  • Options
    dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 27,995
    edited April 22
    Foxy said:

    kle4 said:

    Andy_JS said:

    "Boris Johnson told me he wished he was black, claims journalist

    Afua Hirsch says former PM made ‘problematic remarks’ about her in 2008 in the presence of his then-wife Marina Wheeler

    Amy Gibbons"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2024/04/22/boris-johnson-ex-wife-marina-wheeler-wished-he-was-black/

    Genuine question for the club - why is race fluidity not acceptable?

    We live in an era where people sun tan themselves a darker shade without a thought. Fake tan is all over the place. There are tons of skin lightening products out there.

    I’m quite certain, silly Michael Jackson comments aside, that lots of people have had cosmetic surgery to appear more like a different ethnic group.
    The zeitgeist has not gotten to a place of accepting transracialism yet.
    It has.

    We have lots of cross cultural pollination, and it's not even new. Two Tone for example, but white reggae stars, Asian rappers etc.
    The Rolling Stones played the blues.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,403

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
    No, I really do notice. It’s my job
    It's your job to write 1,000 entertaining words about something or other. It's no wonder that there has to be a bit of creative liberty taken with the contents.

    Paris is fine. Just as it's always been. No huge change. But I look forward to reading your piece on it, you super-noticer, you.
    Remember how I noticed the necklace. And think on that
    Is the any evidence that you are correct in the necklace claim?
    YES HE IS.

    But that's like "noticing" gang colours or finding Wally. Noticing a whole sea change of a capital city over a third of a day spent there is something else. It's almost too much to ask of someone so naturally a bit of creativity comes into play.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,474

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
    No, I really do notice. It’s my job
    It's your job to write 1,000 entertaining words about something or other. It's no wonder that there has to be a bit of creative liberty taken with the contents.

    Paris is fine. Just as it's always been. No huge change. But I look forward to reading your piece on it, you super-noticer, you.
    Remember how I noticed the necklace. And think on that
    Is the any evidence that you are correct in the necklace claim?
    Yes
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,793
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
    No, I really do notice. It’s my job
    It's your job to write 1,000 entertaining words about something or other. It's no wonder that there has to be a bit of creative liberty taken with the contents.

    Paris is fine. Just as it's always been. No huge change. But I look forward to reading your piece on it, you super-noticer, you.
    I haven't been in a few years, but I think it isn't that Paris has become dirtier and more gritty, nor Rome or New York, its that the centre of London has become less dirty and gritty, so we notice the contrast more.
  • Options
    turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 15,296
    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
    No, I really do notice. It’s my job
    It's your job to write 1,000 entertaining words about something or other. It's no wonder that there has to be a bit of creative liberty taken with the contents.

    Paris is fine. Just as it's always been. No huge change. But I look forward to reading your piece on it, you super-noticer, you.
    Remember how I noticed the necklace. And think on that
    Is the any evidence that you are correct in the necklace claim?
    YES HE IS.

    But that's like "noticing" gang colours or finding Wally. Noticing a whole sea change of a capital city over a third of a day spent there is something else. It's almost too much to ask of someone so naturally a bit of creativity comes into play.
    Evidence not just assertion by another poster?
  • Options
    legatuslegatus Posts: 87
    The West Midlands Mayoral election reminds me somewhat of Livingstone losing the London mayoral election to Johnson in 2008. At that time Livingstone was still quite well regarded - in a way that had ceased to be true by 2012 when he lost again much more narrowly - but he was dragged down by the national unpopularity of Labour and Brown's Government - indeed it was the same month that Labour lost the Crewe & Nantwich by election to the Tories.
  • Options
    turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 15,296
    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    TOPPING said:

    Leon said:

    Something more cheerful - that thread on drinks and food in their natural surroundings

    It’s true, a Philp’s Cornish pasty, fresh and warm and peppery from the bakery in Hayle, eaten on the sea wall, gazing at the waves, after a vigorous cliff top hike, is an absolute thing of beauty. Eaten at home for supper, hmm no. I mean, it’s OK. But you need that working man’s appetite, the salty sea air, the soft crust in your hand, the aaaahhhhh

    A peaty Islay malt in front of a roaring fire in a baronial hotel somewhere in Hebrides after a day in the sad and misty loveliness, yes indeed

    Maldon Oysters at the Maldon oyster shack on Mersea island, right on the River Blackwater where they have been gathered since Roman times, and celebrated

    “The only good thing to come out of Britain is oysters” - Pliny

    Oh btw. Your wrong. And right.

    A day spent in a colder than usual Paris certainly its fair share of yuk including the gentleman lying in his own vomit outside GdN. Coming into town on the Metro no particular issues could have been the Central line if the Central line were roomier and less ghastly. A gang of African youths apologising profusely to the older woman they had inadvertently bumped into while chatting.

    Emerging at Argentine to make my way to my hotel I was met by nothing more or less than a bustling capital city with all that that entails, and then, closer to my hotel the magic arose. Higgledy Piggledy bars and cafes, spilling out onto the streets as they do, full of seemingly attractive people, moreso than you'd find in Dalston, and going to the most bog standard of bog standard brasseries for supper and it being fantastic, good burger, phenomenal chips and the patron brought over a liqueur to aid sleep. Then walking out into the mid-evening sunshine whereunder everything was given a further golden sheen.

    Lovely.
    So utterly predictable. You have to go out and NOTICE

    You took one metro line to a brasserie you know in a nice neighbourhood you like. Brilliant. Your Pulitzer Prize awaits
    I didn't know the brasserie just walked in off the street. Never been to it before in my life. But fantastic burger and chips I eschewed the french onion soup. Had walked there, let's say 20 mins from my hotel. And yes it's around Ternes but weren't you yesterday saying how even the nice neighbourhoods were shite. I believe you were. And they aren't.

    And I was doing a lot of noticing tyvm. But normal, out and about aware noticing, not professional noticing whereby you conjure up things that aren't there so that you can notice them and then write about them.
    I forgive you. I presume you are in Paris for work and you have people to meet and things to do. You don’t want to go somewhere nasty just for the sake of it. And You can’t spend an entire weekend wandering around central Paris - walking 7-8 hours a day - taking photos and notes. I can, because that’s exactly my job
    Which is my point. Paris is fine. More than fine. Chic. I like it a lot I like the cafe culture which we never managed to recreate in the UK and which is so effortless in Paris and for some reason the people there seem super attractive. I like just walking around (I like just walking around in London also).

    But the danger you run is that you walk around for 7-8 hours a day and after hour 5.5 you think fuck. This is just a normal capital city which has its good bits and its bad bits. I don't have a story, you think. So let me try to create some kind of narrative. That will keep them reading until the end, so you say Paris is shit. Used to be city of romance now is city of needles and tent cities and crap. Much better story but you also know that it isn't *exactly* the case as you walk around. There's no real story and your undoubted art is that you can make a story out of no real story. But it's only a story. Not the reality.
    No, I really do notice. It’s my job
    It's your job to write 1,000 entertaining words about something or other. It's no wonder that there has to be a bit of creative liberty taken with the contents.

    Paris is fine. Just as it's always been. No huge change. But I look forward to reading your piece on it, you super-noticer, you.
    Remember how I noticed the necklace. And think on that
    Is the any evidence that you are correct in the necklace claim?
    Yes
    Well what is it then? Saying ‘yes’ is NOT evidence.
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