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Shall he dwindle, peak, and pine? – politicalbetting.com

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  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,273
    Dura_Ace said:

    What the fuck does he have to be ready for? Getting driven to the races in a Bentley or grinning inanely while foreign childern caper in the dust in front of him?

    He's got a staff of a hundred arse-lickers. They'll pump him full of SSRIs, wheel him out and he'll be fine. He's probably going to get to marry his mistress, who is already being soft-launched on us, so swings and roundabouts, etc.
    I think William will be fine.

    He clearly doesn't have his father or grandmother's work ethic, so will take more of a back seat, but will be fine with the set pieces.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,321
    Leon said:

    The mild vegetable curries of Gujarat make a wonderful breakfast with fresh pressed juices and black tea
    Dhokla is also originally from Gujarat, one of my favorite 'breakfast' snacks, hard to find in Germany. You can get it at Indian sweet shops in the UK.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087
    Sean_F said:

    I have a lot of time for Forbes, but the SNP would not want the support of people like me. I think she'd be a bad fit as leader, because of the way the SNP have positioned themselves as the most left wing of Scotland's big parties. If they moved rightwards, I think they'd lose much support.
    They do not have the luxury of picking and choosing, they need every vote they can get. Salmond managed to keep left and right onboard. They need to purge the pygmies and get some intelligent people running the show and concentrate on their main purpose as opposed to all the weirdo identity/gender crap that no-one is interested in.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,011
    Muesli said:

    You’re thinking of the Daily Star. The Express heralds every announcement or initiative farted out by the Sunak government as if it was the Magna Carta.
    That's OK. Noone reads it
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277

    Is that the sound of someone belatedly checking the cards they actually hold? I can understand the Greens being seriously narked, but they can't actually want an election, can they?
    They won’t vote no confidence in the government just the leader so an election is very unlikely. Given today’s comments from Slater I suspect the Greens are going to change their minds on the vote . Aswell as that do they want to precipitate Forbes getting the FM post .
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,011

    I think William will be fine.

    He clearly doesn't have his father or grandmother's work ethic, so will take more of a back seat, but will be fine with the set pieces.
    It's a pity the King can't send people to the Tower. Dura Ace would be amongst the first on his list tobe locked up on bread and gruel
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,685

    It's a pity the King can't send people to the Tower. Dura Ace would be amongst the first on his list tobe locked up on bread and gruel
    Can you imagine TSE's indignation at being put in something as French as an oubliette?
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    Leon said:

    Yes, exactly. The authentic handmade journalism will become aspirational and expensive and much prized. So someone like me with a distinct style aimed at quite affluent travelers could actually thrive (sorry, @foxy) but the poor bloody infantry of writing - the copywriters, guide book writers, text book writers, many subeditors, many editors - gone in a few short years

    I am so glad I am out of it all. The late Boomer/Early Gen X demographic is the most blessed there has ever have been. The combination of the breadth and the depth of the opportunities we had and a world that was comparatively stable is not coming again for a very long time.

  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    malcolmg said:

    You halfwit all politician's have their own views on subjects /topics. I see no whinging when it is an English Anglican, Hindu, muslim , etc.
    Bunch of bigoted arseholes just because she is Scottish.
    I see you’ve started the day with your lovely warm welcoming tone ! I’m well aware that politicians have their own views , the problem is putting them out there . If Sunak said he was against abortion and same sex marriage do you think that might become an issue for him politically.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,251
    ...
    MattW said:

    I'm still amused by the "Sunak is 6ft 2in" bill.
    That's factually flawed. In fact it's a lie. They couldn't get away with that. However the Sunak is a very, very tall man bill could work if someone of the height of say Warwick Davis is your term of reference.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087
    edited April 2024
    TimS said:

    The discussion was about being able to commute from “low tax” England to “high tax” Scotland, and the fact there’s not been an exodus.

    Last time I checked the highlands aren’t yet a special economic zone with low personal taxes.
    All bollox given the train fares alone would outstrip the tax savings and likely property be more expensive. Far more efficient to just stick more in your pension.
    PS: Moving to Ayrshire countryside would mean much more savings with bigger property at much lower prices.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Taz said:

    Ask Anabobz. He seems a little obsessed with Truss, or is it TRUSS , she is almost as much an obsession as cash.
    TRUSS
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,680
    .
    Carnyx said:

    Only one specific kind and only mitigation, on that report, though.
    Note the PII trial was in pretty sick patients who will have had compromised immune systems.

    It will be a year or two before we have a better idea how effective the therapy is. Premature to call it a 'cure', though. (And the therapy is tailored to the individual's cancer, not the individual, to be a necessary pedant.)
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,789
    edited April 2024
    Fresh from the shocker of a Giles Coren article in the Saturday Times (on smacking kids) that didn't make my buttocks clench I now stumble across a piece in UnHerd that isn't too ghastly for words. It takes the piss out of Donald Trump - therefore much consternation amongst the fanboys BTL:
    https://unherd.com/2024/04/the-mythical-masculinity-of-donald-trump/?tl_inbound=1&tl_groups[0]=18743&tl_period_type=3&utm_source=UnHerd+Today&utm_campaign=ea15dd1dcc-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2024_04_24_10_10&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_79fd0df946-ea15dd1dcc-[LIST_EMAIL_ID]
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,394
    malcolmg said:

    Massie is the Fanny of Fannies
    I´m sure he speaks well of you too.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,011
    carnforth said:

    Can you imagine TSE's indignation at being put in something as French as an oubliette?
    He'd have to take off those enormous shoes first.. oubliettes are v narrow iirc
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087

    She'd be their Tim Farron.
    FFS, the Scotch Experts have awoken
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087
    geoffw said:

    Never bumped into him here

    Lucky man
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,616
    edited April 2024
    Foxy said:

    Yes, that is an interesting piece. Despite her private GP and Psychiatrist it was turning up in crisis at the NHS that started on the road to recovery. The NHS isn't just for other people.
    I think the NHS experience would be a punctuation mark - a sudden encounter with reality / metanoia. Going in an ambulance is like that; illusions get stripped away dramatically. To borrow a phrase .. castles built in the air just melt away.

    Having read a little further, she has a lot of sympathy for me having seemingly been fucked over quite so ruthlessly by Johnson.

    The long affair involving a promise of leaving his wife for her, and both an abortion and a miscarriage. Johnson is now - 20+ years later - ensconced with a new wife he married at the age that Wyatt was when this all happened, and three young children. For someone mentally going round in circles about regret over being childless, that may be very difficult indeed.
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,979
    Sean_F said:

    I have a lot of time for Forbes, but the SNP would not want the support of people like me. I think she'd be a bad fit as leader, because of the way the SNP have positioned themselves as the most left wing of Scotland's big parties. If they moved rightwards, I think they'd lose much support.
    Surely you'd just see a reshuffling of the pack. Liberal/lefty indy supporters could transfer their affections to the Greens. People like Mhairi Black for instance.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited April 2024
    Leon said:
    Yuri Bezmenov was right 40 years ago, that it was a long-term project to destroy American and Western society, and that they were destined to achieve their goals at some point.
    https://bigthink.com/the-present/yuri-bezmenov/
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087

    I think William will be fine.

    He clearly doesn't have his father or grandmother's work ethic, so will take more of a back seat, but will be fine with the set pieces.
    Who gives a F**k what the parasites do. They will continue grifting and pillaging as much loot as they can, make the Mafia look like amateurs.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,251

    I think William will be fine.

    He clearly doesn't have his father or grandmother's work ethic, so will take more of a back seat, but will be fine with the set pieces.
    His father's work ethic?
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087
    nico679 said:

    I see you’ve started the day with your lovely warm welcoming tone ! I’m well aware that politicians have their own views , the problem is putting them out there . If Sunak said he was against abortion and same sex marriage do you think that might become an issue for him politically.
    She never said it like that though, she said she personally was not in favour but that was only her personal opinion and not one she would force in her political sphere. Fact she has some principles as opposed to your example of Sunak is much more important.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087
    nico679 said:

    I see you’ve started the day with your lovely warm welcoming tone ! I’m well aware that politicians have their own views , the problem is putting them out there . If Sunak said he was against abortion and same sex marriage do you think that might become an issue for him politically.
    Sun beating down here, makes me munificent.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087

    His father's work ethic?
    I only just got up off the floor after reading that, cannot stop ;laughing.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,612

    I love Jodie Whittaker. Fabulous actor who has played some absolutely brilliant and spellbinding roles. It wasn't her being boring, it was Chibnall's writing.
    Chibnall didn't write every episode and the character was developed with her input as well.

    She was dull in the role. She's a charisma bypass. You're a fan of her, which is nice. I have only seen her in a few things. She has been okay in them. Not brilliant, but not poor. Soap actress really. Can't say I had seen much of her before she took on the role.

    At the time there was also talk Michaela Coel was in line for the role. She would have been a far better choice IMHO.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,612
    Leon said:

    A cure for cancer may not be far away

    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2024/apr/26/cancer-mrna-vaccine-melanoma-trial?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
    Bloody big pharma.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    malcolmg said:

    She never said it like that though, she said she personally was not in favour but that was only her personal opinion and not one she would force in her political sphere. Fact she has some principles as opposed to your example of Sunak is much more important.
    I get that . But you know the score re politics. It will hurt her if she becomes FM .
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087

    Surely you'd just see a reshuffling of the pack. Liberal/lefty indy supporters could transfer their affections to the Greens. People like Mhairi Black for instance.
    Black is like Sturgeon , she only has feelings for herself and wil l morph into whatever required to stay at the trough.
    Also the weirdo Greens have no interest in Independence.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,612

    The acid test will be if he can run away properly...
    Usually down a corridor......
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,143
    edited April 2024

    I love Jodie Whittaker. Fabulous actor who has played some absolutely brilliant and spellbinding roles. It wasn't her being boring, it was Chibnall's writing.
    Jodie Whittaker's Doctor had many failings. Chibnall's writing was one. The production team's cowardice and lack of faith in a female lead meant surrounding her with a whole posse which limited everyone's screen time, and remember that under Moffatt they'd been testing the water with a lady master and the whole River nonsense. Whittaker gabbled her lines which meant my continental Whovian friends struggled to understand, whereas they'd had no difficulty with Jodie in Broadchurch where she spoke normally. And as we've said, Chibnall.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,731
    edited April 2024

    I am so glad I am out of it all. The late Boomer/Early Gen X demographic is the most blessed there has ever have been. The combination of the breadth and the depth of the opportunities we had and a world that was comparatively stable is not coming again for a very long time.

    I am so glad I am out of it all. The late Boomer/Early Gen X demographic is the most blessed there has ever have been. The combination of the breadth and the depth of the opportunities we had and a world that was comparatively stable is not coming again for a very long time.

    I was in a little Breton town the other day, feeling exultant after a lovely free oyster lunch, as the sun dappled on the Odet river, and I thought: Ooh I want a souvenir - I now have an enormous number of souvenirs simply because. They’re fun to use/admire when I’m not travelling - each one infused with a memory

    Usually I buy something either consumable or actually useful. This time I decided: pottery. I need a small sided dish for my laksa chili sauce dip

    So I began looking in local souvenir shops (there are plenty in Bretagne). But everywhere was either Chinese tat or expensive Chinese tat - all the pottery was obviously machine made

    At this point I became obsessed with buying an authentic handmade piece of pottery. I wanted the human touch. I still want it, haven’t found my souvenir yet

    AI will take 80%+ of cognitive job including the arts. But we will always seek out the human - indeed I believe we will prize it more and pay more - because it is human. The skilled artisans will actually prosper. So I’ll be fine - in case you were worried

    It’s everyone else - including my daughters, our kids - that I worry about
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    ...

    That's factually flawed. In fact it's a lie. They couldn't get away with that. However the Sunak is a very, very tall man bill could work if someone of the height of say Warwick Davis is your term of reference.
    Just need to redefine the foot and inch, in the old mediaeval manner of using the royal body as the standard ell etc. The inch shall be 1/12 of the foot and 74 inches will be the height of the Prime Minister in his trainers.

    Nobody sane uses them these days for anything important anyway.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087
    nico679 said:

    They won’t vote no confidence in the government just the leader so an election is very unlikely. Given today’s comments from Slater I suspect the Greens are going to change their minds on the vote . Aswell as that do they want to precipitate Forbes getting the FM post .
    Not far fetched to see Useless being stupid and getting thrashed and then the Tories and Labour horse trading as to which sock puppet they put up for FM.
    Any replacement needs vote of parliament to be crowned.
  • DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    https://www.aljazeera.com/program/newsfeed/2024/4/24/escaped-horses-in-central-london-injure-four-people

    ^ Al Jazeera blurs out most of the blood on the white horse, but at 0:19 you can see a small patch above its right leg that doesn't appear in the many clips published elsewhere that show it only from its left side.

    These are military trained horses.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087
    nico679 said:

    I get that . But you know the score re politics. It will hurt her if she becomes FM .
    Well has Humza running muslim prayers from Bute House or promoting Gaza seen much rancour. I cannot see it being an issue personally. I think it would be well down the list of issues people are concerned about, way down.
    However you could be right , there are a lot of stupid people roaming the streets.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,513
    kinabalu said:

    Fresh from the shocker of a Giles Coren article in the Saturday Times (on smacking kids) that didn't make my buttocks clench I now stumble across a piece in UnHerd that isn't too ghastly for words. It takes the piss out of Donald Trump - therefore much consternation amongst the fanboys BTL:
    https://unherd.com/2024/04/the-mythical-masculinity-of-donald-trump/?tl_inbound=1&tl_groups[0]=18743&tl_period_type=3&utm_source=UnHerd+Today&utm_campaign=ea15dd1dcc-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2024_04_24_10_10&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_79fd0df946-ea15dd1dcc-[LIST_EMAIL_ID]

    Trump appears aged and shrunken in court and certainly not the man he was eight years ago.

    He now brings to mind another old, vulnerable Don:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gCdXiOssbM0
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,181
    a
    Donkeys said:

    https://www.aljazeera.com/program/newsfeed/2024/4/24/escaped-horses-in-central-london-injure-four-people

    ^ Al Jazeera blurs out most of the blood on the white horse, but at 0:19 you can see a small patch above its right leg that doesn't appear in the many clips published elsewhere that show it only from its left side.

    These are military trained horses.

    Which doesn't mean much - a bit of anti-noise training and practice at walking on tarmac.

    They are pretty average nags, to be honest.

    Police horses get lots of training and are very carefully picked. Also the riders get more than a 16 week Zero-To-Hero course.

    It's a long, long time since war horses were trained - these days you get the RSPCA on your case for thinking about that loudly.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,492
    MattW said:

    I think the NHS experience would be a punctuation mark - a sudden encounter with reality / metanoia. Going in an ambulance is like that; illusions get stripped away dramatically. To borrow a phrase .. castles built in the air just melt away.

    Having read a little further, she has a lot of sympathy for me having seemingly been fucked over quite so ruthlessly by Johnson.

    The long affair involving a promise of leaving his wife for her, and both an abortion and a miscarriage. Johnson is now - 20+ years later - ensconced with a new wife he married at the age that Wyatt was when this all happened, and three young children. For someone mentally going round in circles about regret over being childless, that may be very difficult indeed.
    Despite the disappearance of old taboos, it’s quite reasonable to call someone out as a pig, for the way they treat others in their personal lives.

    Johnson is a pig, as indeed are a number of adulterous MP’s.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,395
    Hasn't been released in the UK yet, but I can heartily recommend "The Fall Guy" - two stars at the top of their game and more crazy chases than you could shake a traffic cop at. Classic popcorn movie. Stay for the credits for a surprise cameo.

    https://youtu.be/j7jPnwVGdZ8?si=5qaAIKxj4M4WQxhe
  • DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    edited April 2024
    malcolmg said:

    Well has Humza running muslim prayers from Bute House or promoting Gaza seen much rancour. I cannot see it being an issue personally. I think it would be well down the list of issues people are concerned about, way down.
    However you could be right , there are a lot of stupid people roaming the streets.
    Be fair, though - a stupid Scotsman is worth 10 times more than a stupid Englishman any day of the week, as all doublewits are aware.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,143
    malcolmg said:

    Westminster is irrelevant as the English will never give up their last colony willingly, she could start really sorting out for independence and easily get landslide in 2026 at Holyrood where it really counts.
    I've no idea what's going on up there. I've previously suggested to Stuart when he posted here that rather than pursue the colonial angle, in his case with an anti-English slant, a better case for Scottish independence might be that most of the English just don't care.

    In decades past, I knew whole groups of couples from London who'd honeymooned in Scotland, often Fort William, but cheap European travel has come at the expense of Scotland. That personal link is dying out and trips to the Edinburgh Festival do not replace it.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,880
    Cookie said:

    German style breakfasts are almost as disappointing as French ones. Truly, I have never had a great breakfast outside the English-speaking world.
    British hotel breakfasts are great. I would probably put Turkey no 1 then the British Isles including Ireland etc.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    Unpopular said:

    We're getting into fantasy politics a bit, but say William refuses, and also does so on behalf of his line, and Harry does likewise, is Andrew next? That's a chilling prospect.
    No as the Accession Council would refuse to approve Andrew. Most likely they would choose Edward or Anne instead.

    However William has already spoken about what he will do as King so it is a theoretical question only. Plus if he didn't George would be King with maybe a Regent until he reached 18.

    Meghan would also be straight back to the UK like a shot if she knew she could be Queen
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,616
    edited April 2024
    Carnyx said:

    Just need to redefine the foot and inch, in the old mediaeval manner of using the royal body as the standard ell etc. The inch shall be 1/12 of the foot and 74 inches will be the height of the Prime Minister in his trainers.

    Nobody sane uses them these days for anything important anyway.
    I made no claim about "facts" :smile: .

    (And with one bound ... he was free.)
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Sean_F said:

    Despite the disappearance of old taboos, it’s quite reasonable to call someone out as a pig, for the way they treat others in their personal lives.

    Johnson is a pig, as indeed are a number of adulterous MP’s.
    That's grossly unfair and horribly cruel. To Large Whites, Old Spots and Saddlebacks.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,251
    edited April 2024

    Hasn't been released in the UK yet, but I can heartily recommend "The Fall Guy" - two stars at the top of their game and more crazy chases than you could shake a traffic cop at. Classic popcorn movie. Stay for the credits for a surprise cameo.

    https://youtu.be/j7jPnwVGdZ8?si=5qaAIKxj4M4WQxhe

    Well you do surprise me Carlotta.

    Would it be a Six Million Dollar cameo?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited April 2024
    MattW said:

    I made no claim about "facts" :smile: .
    "factually", "lie" - but it's pointless to worry about facts anyway, as Parliament can define anything as anything these days, vide Rwanda. And, as we see right this moment on PB, the notion that the Sovereign is somehow divinely ordained to rule.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,492
    Carnyx said:

    That's grossly unfair and horribly cruel. To Large Whites, Old Spots and Saddlebacks.
    True, they are charming creatures.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205

    I am so glad I am out of it all. The late Boomer/Early Gen X demographic is the most blessed there has ever have been. The combination of the breadth and the depth of the opportunities we had and a world that was comparatively stable is not coming again for a very long time.

    Certainly we did well on the economic front, and had the best music too, but the Milenials and Gen Z are OK. Many things have got better since I were their age. Not least the prospect of nuclear obliteration.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,395

    Well you do surprise me Carlotta.

    Would it be a Six Million Dollar cameo?
    Quite possibly.....
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    nico679 said:

    The biggest surprise over the last year has been how well the pro independence polling has held up inspite of all the SNP drama.

    Still not ahead though and not much use if as likely on current polls there is a Labour Unionist FM again after the next Holyrood election
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,135
    edited April 2024
    geoffw said:

    Never bumped into him here

    He's nearer me than you, oddly enough.

    Quite a mix down here - I've bumped into Robertson, Davidson, Yousaf, Starmer (pavement parker) and Lorna Slater.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited April 2024
    HYUFD said:

    Still not ahead though and not much use if as likely on current polls there is a Labour Unionist FM again after the next Holyrood election
    Not true. Last but one poll was for Yes. You might as well be accurate.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205

    Trump appears aged and shrunken in court and certainly not the man he was eight years ago.

    He now brings to mind another old, vulnerable Don:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gCdXiOssbM0
    Notable that no family members appear in court for support.
  • DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    edited April 2024
    Carnyx said:

    Just need to redefine the foot and inch, in the old mediaeval manner of using the royal body as the standard ell etc. The inch shall be 1/12 of the foot and 74 inches will be the height of the Prime Minister in his trainers.

    Nobody sane uses them these days for anything important anyway.
    300 dpi resolution
    34" waist
    16" collar
    17" monitor
    26" bicycle wheel
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,088
    geoffw said:

    Never bumped into him here

    I think he's from the Borders
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    Leon said:

    I was in a little Breton town the other day, feeling exultant after a lovely free oyster lunch, as the sun dappled on the Odet river, and I thought: Ooh I want a souvenir - I now have an enormous number of souvenirs simply because. They’re fun to use/admire when I’m not travelling - each one infused with a memory

    Usually I buy something either consumable or actually useful. This time I decided: pottery. I need a small sided dish for my laksa chili sauce dip

    So I began looking in local souvenir shops (there are plenty in Bretagne). But everywhere was either Chinese tat or expensive Chinese tat - all the pottery was obviously machine made

    At this point I became obsessed with buying an authentic handmade piece of pottery. I wanted the human touch. I still want it, haven’t found my souvenir yet

    AI will take 80%+ of cognitive job including the arts. But we will always seek out the human - indeed I believe we will prize it more and pay more - because it is human. The skilled artisans will actually prosper. So I’ll be fine - in case you were worried

    It’s everyone else - including my daughters, our kids - that I worry about
    If AI takes those jobs without replacing them then a UBI funded by a robot tax is inevitable and no government would ever get elected without backing a Universal Basic Income
  • malcolmg said:

    Evidence is that the union has all the powers and England makes the decisions. What bit of that is hard to understand.
    Just so we are clear - you are saying that decisions made in the Scottish Parliament by the Scottish government run by the Scottish National Party are where "England makes the decisions"?

    So the Hate law was the English? The Deposit Return Scheme? Ferries? The Bute House Agreement?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205
    Sean_F said:

    Despite the disappearance of old taboos, it’s quite reasonable to call someone out as a pig, for the way they treat others in their personal lives.

    Johnson is a pig, as indeed are a number of adulterous MP’s.
    The carnage that Johnson leaves in his wake, but he never looks in the rear view mirror.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,789
    edited April 2024

    Trump appears aged and shrunken in court and certainly not the man he was eight years ago.

    He now brings to mind another old, vulnerable Don:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gCdXiOssbM0
    De Niro looks like the guy in Sparks there.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,135
    HYUFD said:

    If AI takes those jobs without replacing them then a UBI funded by a robot tax is inevitable and no government would ever get elected without backing a Universal Basic Income
    AI is just another economic revolution that is going to cause huge amounts of economic growth and massive disruption to the labour market.

    I have decided that it will just be like the Highland Clearances - we'll all end up as fishermen or emigrate to Canada.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,622
    Foxy said:

    I think this a likely analysis. Straight to non-surgical treatment means either lymphoma/leukemia or advanced disease. Lymphoma could be an incidental finding, leukemia more likely to be picked up on routine bloods. A further possibility would be bladder cancer operated on at the time of the prostate op.

    Keeping the funeral plans updated seems a wise precaution. A long reign into his nineties looks unlikely.
    The reports from outside the UK are pancreatic cancer. No idea if accurate. Updating the funeral plans is wise in any event with a new monarch in his 70's but that doesn't preclude an increased focus owing to the diagnosis.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010

    William does not give the impression of being even remotely ready to be King. He needs his Dad to hold on for a few more years.

    He is almost twenty years older than his grandmother was when she became monarch and about the same age as the PM.

    In medieval and Tudor times monarchs regularly took the throne in childhood or their teens or twenties. They were effectively absolute monarchs not a constitutional monarch like he will be
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,680
    HYUFD said:

    If AI takes those jobs without replacing them then a UBI funded by a robot tax is inevitable and no government would ever get elected without backing a Universal Basic Income
    What do you do when the next President abolishes democracy, and won't tax the assets of the wealthy ?
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,135
    Does the AI ban apply to everyone or just Leon?
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,156
    Unpopular said:

    We're getting into fantasy politics a bit, but say William refuses, and also does so on behalf of his line, and Harry does likewise, is Andrew next? That's a chilling prospect.
    Parliament would choose Edward or Anne over Andrew. Both of them would be at least okay. The question mark is over whether their respective children would adjust.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,622
    nico679 said:

    I’m a bit confused re the Kings cancer . Wouldn’t he have been regularly screened so any cancer would have been caught early ?

    Screening is not possible for all cancers (as far as I know) and some that are aggressive can arise relatively quickly - how often do you intend to scan? And by what method? Routine colonoscopy every few years is useful for bowel cancer, mammograms for breast (mainly, but not exclusively for women) and cervical smears too. Keeping an eye on moles is useful for melanoma. If its pancreatic then I am not aware of a routine screen that would show it other than PET scanning enhanced with contrast agents. I'm not sure that peripheral/routine bloods would show anything.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,513
    HYUFD said:

    If AI takes those jobs without replacing them then a UBI funded by a robot tax is inevitable and no government would ever get elected without backing a Universal Basic Income
    You're going to need a lot of robots to tax then.

    What happens if they're all based in other countries.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited April 2024
    Sir Wyn is attending in person today at the PO inquiry.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhwYjrKDFOk
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,622
    Leon said:

    Similarly, you can wait years for a new sovereign. And then suddenly….

    Jeez the royal family suddenly looks very small. Harry needs to shape up

    This is not idle speculation. The foreign press is sounding the alarum over our king - and they are quite often correct. This makes me sad, I rather like KCIII, I agree with him entirely about architecture. I wish he could design every new build in the country

    I hope it’s all wrong and he’ll be apples but hmmmmmmmm
    I like him a lot more now he is King. I don't think he is a particularly intelligent chap (FOAF stories of tutoring him from long ago) but his instincts seem mostly correct. And as King he can exert influence that he could not as PoW. I wish him well and hope he has many years. He waited long enough for the gig.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,731
    Foxy said:

    Certainly we did well on the economic front, and had the best music too, but the Milenials and Gen Z are OK. Many things have got better since I were their age. Not least the prospect of nuclear obliteration.
    "Not least the prospect of nuclear obliteration"

    Errrrr
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087
    Donkeys said:

    Be fair, though - a stupid Scotsman is worth 10 times more than a stupid Englishman any day of the week, as all doublewits are aware.
    Never a truer word said. ;)
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,622
    Scott_xP said:

    ...
    Eerily reminiscent of "if anything is wrong, its all the fault of the EU" and "if anything is wrong, its all the fault of Brexit" mentalities.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,088
    @nickeardleybbc

    Scottish Govt sources adamant Humza Yousaf is going to fight on and do what he can to persuade MSPs to back him in vote next week.

    Expect to hear that argument from him at some point today.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,255

    Quite possibly.....
    Well they do have the technology... :)
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087

    Just so we are clear - you are saying that decisions made in the Scottish Parliament by the Scottish government run by the Scottish National Party are where "England makes the decisions"?

    So the Hate law was the English? The Deposit Return Scheme? Ferries? The Bute House Agreement?
    I am talking about the real powers , not those demented clowns local pecadilo's.
    Fact is that almost all relevant powers of Government are held by Westminster and anyone who pretends otherwise is lying.
    Not to say these clowns cannot cause trouble and local chaos, waste what money they do get etc.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,789
    HYUFD said:

    If AI takes those jobs without replacing them then a UBI funded by a robot tax is inevitable and no government would ever get elected without backing a Universal Basic Income
    AI will be a boon to productivity and the challenge is to ensure the benefits do not go the Few at the expense of the Many. This will require intelligent enlightened interventionist governments in power around the world. So there's nothing to worry about.
  • eristdooferistdoof Posts: 5,076
    HYUFD said:

    He is almost twenty years older than his grandmother was when she became monarch and about the same age as the PM.

    In medieval and Tudor times monarchs regularly took the throne in childhood or their teens or twenties. They were effectively absolute monarchs not a constitutional monarch like he will be
    Also being monarch is a "God bestowed duty". You start at the role as soon as the King/Queen Dies and arry on until your own death. How old you actually are is irrelevant.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,622

    I love Jodie Whittaker. Fabulous actor who has played some absolutely brilliant and spellbinding roles. It wasn't her being boring, it was Chibnall's writing.
    Tend to agree. Chibnall wrote terrible stories and committed the cardinal sin for Dr Who of having too many companions. Having the Doctor plus three others worked the slow paced era of the 1960's, but not in 45 minute , fast paced 2020's Dr Who. Plus all the companions seemed to become mini-doctors - able to do things far beyond what they should have been able to do. The role of the companion is to place the audience in the story, not to be the hero (aside of great moments, such as Catherine Tate's companion realising the colony had been their only a few weeks and that the eternal war was less than a month old (the Doctor's Daughter). Whittaker is a fine actor and was playing the role that was (badly) created for her.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,087

    I've no idea what's going on up there. I've previously suggested to Stuart when he posted here that rather than pursue the colonial angle, in his case with an anti-English slant, a better case for Scottish independence might be that most of the English just don't care.

    In decades past, I knew whole groups of couples from London who'd honeymooned in Scotland, often Fort William, but cheap European travel has come at the expense of Scotland. That personal link is dying out and trips to the Edinburgh Festival do not replace it.
    Impossible to ignore the colonial angle given England decides what Scotland gets, easier to dismiss from down south I grant you. I am not anti-English but am anti England ruling Scotland, huge difference. Majority are the same.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,622
    Leon said:

    A cure for cancer may not be far away

    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2024/apr/26/cancer-mrna-vaccine-melanoma-trial?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
    50 % improvement is not to be sniffed at, although this is the start of Phase II trials.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,492
    kinabalu said:

    AI will be a boon to productivity and the challenge is to ensure the benefits do not go the Few at the expense of the Many. This will require intelligent enlightened interventionist governments in power around the world. So there's nothing to worry about.
    As opposed to the world of Judge Dredd, with 90% unemployment.
  • eristdooferistdoof Posts: 5,076
    Foxy said:

    Certainly we did well on the economic front, and had the best music too, but the Milenials and Gen Z are OK. Many things have got better since I were their age. Not least the prospect of nuclear obliteration.
    The early boomers had it better for music (British invasion and seventies rock), but it was fairly easy to tap into the later stages of that genere. We definitely had the short straw when it comes to politics: Strikes, Winter of discontent followed by a decade of Thatcher. What was great for our generation was the comedy, which seemed to explode once Not the nine O'clock news started.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,156
    eristdoof said:

    Also being monarch is a "God bestowed duty". You start at the role as soon as the King/Queen Dies and arry on until your own death. How old you actually are is irrelevant.
    Well, that might be the issue. Does William have faith in God? Or is his sense of duty more at the level of it being something he's always been told he must do?

    When Pa and Grandma are no longer around to disappoint, how important will that duty feel to him?

    Harry decided there were things more important than duty. William might decide the same. Who can tell?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,680
    .

    Screening is not possible for all cancers (as far as I know) and some that are aggressive can arise relatively quickly - how often do you intend to scan? And by what method? Routine colonoscopy every few years is useful for bowel cancer, mammograms for breast (mainly, but not exclusively for women) and cervical smears too. Keeping an eye on moles is useful for melanoma. If its pancreatic then I am not aware of a routine screen that would show it other than PET scanning enhanced with contrast agents. I'm not sure that peripheral/routine bloods would show anything.
    Lots of research going on in blood biomarker screening for cancers, though.

    Very early detection & immunotherapy is the ideal - but as you suggest, that's some ways off. Probably too late for Leon and me, but not for our kids.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    You're going to need a lot of robots to tax then.

    What happens if they're all based in other countries.
    A lot of government revenue, most of it in fact, comes from labour income one way or another. Capital income tends to be hard to tax. And most AIs will claim domicile in the US, China or some low tax jurisdiction. The fact that most technological change in recent years is in the shape of zero marginal cost computing activity that is delivered free to the end user already poses huge challenges to the tax authorities. AI is just a continuation, and an acceleration, of that trend. An economy without physical stuff, without workers, and with the capital based overseas, is not one that lends itself to tax and spend. UBI will be a challenge.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,680
    Today should be worth watching.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/business-68893655
    ...Angela van den Bogerd was right at the centre of this scandal but you wouldn’t have got that impression if you’d listened to her evidence yesterday.

    She distanced herself from the big decisions being made.

    For instance, when Post Office IT specialist Simon Baker sketched out a plan to sack independent investigators Second Sight - who were getting to the truth - van den Bogerd told the inquiry she’d no idea this was the strategy, despite having worked with Baker for more than a year.

    "Can you tell us what you did do?" asked Jason Beer KC, one of the inquiry's counsel.

    Today, we’re likely to hear more about her personal involvement with sub-postmaster and postmistresses.

    Martin Griffiths took his own life in 2013 after being hounded for £100,000 worth of losses, which didn’t exist, at his Ellesmere Port branch.

    Van den Bogerd is accused of pressuring his widow, Gina, to accept what Second Sight investigator Ron Warmington described as a "pistol to the head" deal, valid for one day only along with a gagging clause to prevent her from speaking about his case...
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,680
    Great thread/

    I'm lo-key fascinated by photos of bands where one hasn't fully committed to the image - anyone got anything better than the The Exploited 1990?
    https://twitter.com/BillyReevesOK/status/1782782246056857663
  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 10,033
    Carnyx said:

    "factually", "lie" - but it's pointless to worry about facts anyway, as Parliament can define anything as anything these days, vide Rwanda. And, as we see right this moment on PB, the notion that the Sovereign is somehow divinely ordained to rule.
    I suppose everybody has noted this before, but it's only just occurred to me that 'using the royal body as the standard' explains why we call a measuring stick a 'ruler'.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,513

    A lot of government revenue, most of it in fact, comes from labour income one way or another. Capital income tends to be hard to tax. And most AIs will claim domicile in the US, China or some low tax jurisdiction. The fact that most technological change in recent years is in the shape of zero marginal cost computing activity that is delivered free to the end user already poses huge challenges to the tax authorities. AI is just a continuation, and an acceleration, of that trend. An economy without physical stuff, without workers, and with the capital based overseas, is not one that lends itself to tax and spend. UBI will be a challenge.
    The only things left to tax would be consumption and property.
  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 10,033
    Biden closes gap in presidential poll
    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/biden-closes-gap-in-presidential-poll-as-rival-trump-is-stuck-in-court/ar-AA1nFFuY?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=81345f54c893439298a6e9b37d01819a&ei=4
    "It found that Mr Biden is ahead of Mr Trump by 287 Electoral College votes to 251, but has only a narrow margin in key swing states including Arizona, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin."
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,560
    Andy_JS said:

    Sir Wyn is attending in person today at the PO inquiry.

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

    Doesn’t he normally? I would have expected, since he’s going to be responsible for the report, that he’d be there 90% at least.
    Of course ‘responsible’ means something different when one is dealing with the Post Office!
  • Alphabet_SoupAlphabet_Soup Posts: 3,587
    Leon said:

    "Not least the prospect of nuclear obliteration"

    Errrrr
    You were asking about Breton souvenirs upthread. Have you seen the Henriot pottery in Quimper?

    https://www.henriot-quimper.com

    Very popular with Americans, apparently. Not sure I'd want to stack the kitchen with it as some do, but an egg cup or coaster might suit.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,560

    Well, that might be the issue. Does William have faith in God? Or is his sense of duty more at the level of it being something he's always been told he must do?

    When Pa and Grandma are no longer around to disappoint, how important will that duty feel to him?

    Harry decided there were things more important than duty. William might decide the same. Who can tell?
    Catherine will be severely disappointed not to be Queen!
  • Alphabet_SoupAlphabet_Soup Posts: 3,587

    The only things left to tax would be consumption and property.
    Quite hard to tax property if the owners are as broke as everyone else.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,612

    Jodie Whittaker's Doctor had many failings. Chibnall's writing was one. The production team's cowardice and lack of faith in a female lead meant surrounding her with a whole posse which limited everyone's screen time, and remember that under Moffatt they'd been testing the water with a lady master and the whole River nonsense. Whittaker gabbled her lines which meant my continental Whovian friends struggled to understand, whereas they'd had no difficulty with Jodie in Broadchurch where she spoke normally. And as we've said, Chibnall.
    But when she was on her own, with Yaz, it was no better either.

    When Davison's Doctor was shorn of Adric the character and the dynamics really improved.

    In this case it didn't. It was just more of the same. She was trying to be quirky and idiosynchratic and just came over as contrived.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,612
    ‘Fiery rhetoric, actually cautious’: Why Iran needs Israel | Defence in Depth

    Interesting analysis here from the Telegraph.

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/fiery-rhetoric-actually-cautious-why-iran-needs-israel-defence-in-depth/vi-AA1nHaTs?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=3bb5fda0eb794a12de7743599b318990&ei=11
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,254

    A lot of government revenue, most of it in fact, comes from labour income one way or another. Capital income tends to be hard to tax. And most AIs will claim domicile in the US, China or some low tax jurisdiction. The fact that most technological change in recent years is in the shape of zero marginal cost computing activity that is delivered free to the end user already poses huge challenges to the tax authorities. AI is just a continuation, and an acceleration, of that trend. An economy without physical stuff, without workers, and with the capital based overseas, is not one that lends itself to tax and spend. UBI will be a challenge.
    If the AIs are as powerful as expected then in the first instance, why will their owners accept democracy?

    And shortly afterwards, why will the AI accept their owners?
This discussion has been closed.