Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

Could the provinces save Sunak? – politicalbetting.com

1235

Comments

  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154
    Leon said:

    My best ever relationship - my greatest love - was with someone 32 years younger than me. We only broke up because of differing desires re children (due to age). We never argued, we had amazing sex, we were very happy, we still miss each other

    Crucially, we had an identical and highly evolved/insistent sense of humour. We constantly made each other laugh which is quite fundamental to getting on

    True story. It can happen, it’s rare but it can happen. Love is where it falls
    I’m sort of the opposite to you. My last three long relationships have been with women 5 years older x2 then 7 years older (I’ve just messaged her which will go down really well). They are all beautiful, could pass for many years younger physically and from a fun and enjoying life perspective. What they have however is the understanding and confidence in who they are. They are beautiful, they have lived life, they know what they won’t put up with, they know what makes them tick mentally and sexually.

    They can be your best friend because they can understand your cultural reference points and you were both raving to the same music and watching the same films but they can also be the best lover you will ever have because they are happy with themselves and not feeling the need to play a role.

    It’s best mates who fancy the shit out of each other with a physical edge. Every one of my last three partners was physically in better shape than a lot of women I see around in their twenties and thirties - the world has changed where you can have Liz Hurley and salma hyek or rebel Wilson who is two decades younger.
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,400

    Another good day walking. Just over 45km today

    I'm in a very flat, and quite dull scenery wise, period of the Camino, so I'm trying to get loads done each day

    I've got to a village called Bercianos del Real Camino. I got a room for 25€. The room has a lock but I don't have a key, and I have to share a bathroom

    I've found a little bar/restaurant and am now eating calamari and chips with quite a nice local red


    Very impressed with your turn of speed, between St. Jean PdP and Santiago I averaged only about 26Km a day. Mostly starting at 6 then stopping around 1pm, taking a siesta and exploring the stop. I could have done it maybe a week quicker, but met people along the way and git into the same rhythm. Terrific experience though. Mind you only 25,000 did it in 2000, so totally different from the more than 300,000 doing it each year now.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,240

    By my count (and not suggesting there's anything nefarious going on) she's still very far behind "The Complete Air Fryer Cookbook".
    So how long does it take to air-fry a head of lettuce?

    3-5 minutes it seems.

    https://forktospoon.com/air-fryer-romaine-lettuce/
  • RattersRatters Posts: 1,300
    rcs1000 said:

    Quite.

    If the current management of Thames Water thinks the business is insolvent, they need to be calling the administrators, not lobbying the government for a bail out.

    (That said, I think it is more likely the debt holders than the shareholders who are arguing for nationalisation. If it were nationalized it would be for £1. But if it was, the government would take on the entire liabilities - i.e. all the debt. The correct thing is for the administrators to come in, find a new owner for the business, and say "sorry folks, you're getting 40 pence in the pound" to all the bond holders.)
    As I understand it there are around 4 layers of seniority or equity and debt interest.

    1) Shareholders: who own the regulated Thames Water entity. They have already defaulted on the debt owed to group 2, and will likely be wiped out.

    2) High yield bond holders outside the regulated Thames Water entity. Interest payments have already been missed on this debt and it is trading at pennies in the pound. There is no way to service this debt without dividend payments from the regulated entity, which looks highly unlikely. Bleak prospect.

    3 and 4) Junior and Senior bondholders within the regulated entity, which is structured as a whole business securitisation. Assuming a zero debt Thames Water entity has some value, group 4 should be getting at least some money back.

    The trouble is that the level of uncertainty over the future amount of investment needed vs. bill increases permitted makes valuing the entity near impossible.

    Which is also why it probably shouldn't have been privatised in the first place.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    edited April 2024

    Just realised two things: (a) I might have overshared, and, (b) I'm really glad my wife doesn't have a pb.com account.

    And on that note, I think I'll call it a night!

    Well you were very complimentary about your wife . So even if she read what you said I’m sure she’d be okay with it .
  • WillGWillG Posts: 2,366

    If a coach travels from Dublin to Glasgow via Belfast, at what point do UK Border Force check whether the people on board have visas or passports?
    When they arrive at Glasgow, I believe.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    rcs1000 said:

    Quite.

    If the current management of Thames Water thinks the business is insolvent, they need to be calling the administrators, not lobbying the government for a bail out.

    (That said, I think it is more likely the debt holders than the shareholders who are arguing for nationalisation. If it were nationalized it would be for £1. But if it was, the government would take on the entire liabilities - i.e. all the debt. The correct thing is for the administrators to come in, find a new owner for the business, and say "sorry folks, you're getting 40 pence in the pound" to all the bond holders.)
    It seems fairly clear that the systemic policy (Treasury, Foreigners Office*) is for a bailout to protect bond holders.

    *See foreign pension funds
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,330

    One of the pleasures of reaching middle age is that while one still fancies the hot twenty-something, their mother also catches the eye.

    Making love to a hot twenty-something is like making love to their mum. Or even better their step-mom.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,838
    JK Rowling vs Billy Bragg, Part 1:

    https://x.com/jk_rowling/status/1784586797525184794

    This comment by @billybragg perfectly sums up what left wing women have taken from left wing men over the last few years. The problem isn’t whether Julie Bindel and I are correct on the issues, but that certain right-wingers agree with us.

    If you’ve spent any time at all on the left of politics, you’re familiar with the progressive male class warrior, usually middle-class himself, whose interest in women’s issues begins and ends with sex work, stripping and abortions. He might claim to be a feminist ally and mutter vaguely about ‘equality’ if the need arises, but when a genuine assault on women’s rights erupted under his nose, he cut left wing women adrift without a second thought. He expected us to be so blindly tribal that we’d surrender single sex spaces, jettison the very language we use to describe ourselves, give up fair sport, agree rapists should be locked up in women’s prisons and that lesbians are bigots for not wanting to sleep with the penis-ed, because (horrors!) some people on the right thought these things were wrong, too.

  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    @PeterAdamSmith

    Humza Yousaf said he thinks he could carry on as FM propped up by Alba - that it would be a credible position.

    SNP source points out, “Does he imagine Nicola Sturgeon would turn up to vote for that?”

    Likely Swinney, Robertson also struggle to back that outcome. He’d still lose
  • maxhmaxh Posts: 1,581
    boulay said:



    I’m sort of the opposite to you. My last three long
    relationships have been with women 5 years older
    x2 then 7 years older (I’ve just messaged her
    which will go down really well). They are all
    beautiful, could pass for many years younger physically and from a fun and enjoying life
    perspective. What they have however is the
    understanding and confidence in who they are.They are beautiful, they have lived life, they
    know what they won’t put up with, they know what
    makes them tick mentally and sexually.



    They can be your best friend because they can
    understand your cultural reference points and you
    were both raving to the same music and watching
    the same films but they can also be the best lover
    you will ever have because they are happy withthemselves and not feeling the need to play a role.



    It’s best mates who fancy the shit out of each
    other with a physical edge. Every one of my last
    three partners was physically in better shape than
    a lot of women I see around in their twenties and
    thirties - the world has changed where you can
    have Liz Hurley and salma hyek or rebel Wilson
    who is two decades younger.
    I think both positions can be true i.e. someone at peak fertility might always be most physically attractive, and yet there are more rewarding relationships to be had with older women as you yourself get older.

    I can't imagine, for example, wanting to have sex with anyone except my wife, for the simple reason that noone else would know what gets me off, what my kinks are, and vice versa. Plus we both have a sexual confidence that feeds off each other and which I've never had with a short-term partner (perhaps ive just been unlucky). I've never really understood the desire for newness in sexual partners - aside from the thrill of the chase and conquest, the sex itself is always a bit awkward and dissatisfying in comparison with someone with whom you have no shame and no secrets.

  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884
    .
    rcs1000 said:

    Quite.

    If the current management of Thames Water thinks the business is insolvent, they need to be calling the administrators, not lobbying the government for a bail out.

    (That said, I think it is more likely the debt holders than the shareholders who are arguing for nationalisation. If it were nationalized it would be for £1. But if it was, the government would take on the entire liabilities - i.e. all the debt. The correct thing is for the administrators to come in, find a new owner for the business, and say "sorry folks, you're getting 40 pence in the pound" to all the bond holders.)
    AIUI everyone expects the holding company to be wiped out, but not the operating company. And for reasons I don't understand it would be a disaster if it was. The same people think the regulator totally screwed up and the companies should never have been allowed to pile up the debt in that way.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,530
    George Mann
    @sgfmann
    ·
    2m

    The i: Sunak to resist early election as Tory rebels on manoeuvres

    https://twitter.com/sgfmann
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564

    One of the pleasures of reaching middle age is that while one still fancies the hot twenty-something, their mother also catches the eye.

    Truly the sign of maturity as well, rather than the Leonardo di Caprio approach.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,079
    WillG said:

    When they arrive at Glasgow, I believe.
    You don't need a passport to get from Ireland to the UK. I regularly travel back and forth by car ferry and I've never once been asked for my passport, or indeed for any identification. I'm just waved through.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    edited April 2024

    Woodford Green is in Redbridge, Chingford is in Waltham Forest.

    (waves from da North Ilford Ghetto)
    Some slivers of Woodford Green are in Waltham Forest.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,530
    Beth Rigby
    @BethRigby
    ·
    50m
    PM says success is “stopping the boats”. The number of migrants who’ve crossed by this small boats in the first four months of the year is at highest ever level. 7,167 people have arrived on small boats btwn Jan 1 & April 27 April, against 5,745 same period ‘23 & 6,691 ‘22

    https://twitter.com/BethRigby/status/1784682597869568452
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884
    FF43 said:

    .

    AIUI everyone expects the holding company to be wiped out, but not the operating company. And for reasons I don't understand it would be a disaster if it was. The same people think the regulator totally screwed up and the companies should never have been allowed to pile up the debt in that way.
    There's a possible explanation here. My interpretation is that financing within the ring fenced institution came with an assumption of low risk - that was the whole point of the ring fencing. While you could argue the investors should have been more diligent, if they had been they would have charged much more for the credit from the off, and will do so across the board if those Thames Water investments default now. The increased cost of future credit will be more than the taxpayer saves in not taking on the debt and this ultimately falls on the taxpayer in the form of higher water charges.

    https://blog.twentyfouram.com/insights/thames-water-a-fluid-situation
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,240
    edited April 2024

    Beth Rigby
    @BethRigby
    ·
    50m
    PM says success is “stopping the boats”. The number of migrants who’ve crossed by this small boats in the first four months of the year is at highest ever level. 7,167 people have arrived on small boats btwn Jan 1 & April 27 April, against 5,745 same period ‘23 & 6,691 ‘22

    https://twitter.com/BethRigby/status/1784682597869568452

    500 arrivals in the last two days. Looks like Rwanda as a deterrent is sub-optimal.

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/migrants-detected-crossing-the-english-channel-in-small-boats/migrants-detected-crossing-the-english-channel-in-small-boats-last-7-days
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,626
    Foxy said:

    500 arrivals in the last two days. Looks like Rwanda as a deterrent is sub-optimal.

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/migrants-detected-crossing-the-english-channel-in-small-boats/migrants-detected-crossing-the-english-channel-in-small-boats-last-7-days
    I see the French police have finally started popping the inflatable boats…
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    The Tories have decided that cruelty is a vote winner and will pull benefits from those suffering from depression .

    Wtf is happening to this country !
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    So it looks like the maximum time before Humza goes as first minister is about 65 hours.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,240

    I see the French police have finally started popping the inflatable boats…
    I have long said that the key to breaking the gangs is tracing the boat sales. There isn't much demand for such large inflatables for legitimate uses.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,350
    nico679 said:

    The Tories have decided that cruelty is a vote winner and will pull benefits from those suffering from depression .

    Wtf is happening to this country !

    Given how many Conservative politicians are about to lose their jobs and are probably depressed and anxious about that... is that wise?

    Meanwhile, The Mail have woken up to the fact that lots of people are getting into the UK as visa overstayers;

    https://www.tomorrowspapers.co.uk/daily-mail-front-page-2024-04-29/


    #notjustboats
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277

    Given how many Conservative politicians are about to lose their jobs and are probably depressed and anxious about that... is that wise?

    Meanwhile, The Mail have woken up to the fact that lots of people are getting into the UK as visa overstayers;

    https://www.tomorrowspapers.co.uk/daily-mail-front-page-2024-04-29/


    #notjustboats
    I’m surprised it’s taken so long for the issue of visa overstayers to be highlighted.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,330

    JK Rowling vs Billy Bragg, Part 1:

    https://x.com/jk_rowling/status/1784586797525184794

    This comment by @billybragg perfectly sums up what left wing women have taken from left wing men over the last few years. The problem isn’t whether Julie Bindel and I are correct on the issues, but that certain right-wingers agree with us.

    If you’ve spent any time at all on the left of politics, you’re familiar with the progressive male class warrior, usually middle-class himself, whose interest in women’s issues begins and ends with sex work, stripping and abortions. He might claim to be a feminist ally and mutter vaguely about ‘equality’ if the need arises, but when a genuine assault on women’s rights erupted under his nose, he cut left wing women adrift without a second thought. He expected us to be so blindly tribal that we’d surrender single sex spaces, jettison the very language we use to describe ourselves, give up fair sport, agree rapists should be locked up in women’s prisons and that lesbians are bigots for not wanting to sleep with the penis-ed, because (horrors!) some people on the right thought these things were wrong, too.

    It’s always repeats on a Sunday.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884

    JK Rowling vs Billy Bragg, Part 2:

    Over the last few years, a huge number of PMCWs have become men’s rights activists in all but name, and it’s been profoundly depressing, if not entirely unexpected, to see how enjoyable they’ve found it. Even while attacking women for finding themselves on the same side as right-wingers, the PMCWs stampeded to join the team that was threatening women with rape and violence, harassing women’s conferences, attempting to block access to gender critical events and physically assaulting female demonstrators. PMCWs are everywhere online, lecturing women reliant on state-run services for not welcoming the male-bodied into communal changing rooms and rape crisis shelters, presuming to police women’s language and tone, turning a blind eye to all statistics on male sexual violence that might contradict the ‘you’re all scaremongering bigots’ narrative and demonstrating that their deepest empathy will always be reserved for those who were born with a penis.

    The truth is that the left has fucked up monumentally on gender identity ideology and until it owns the mistake, it will continue to hand the right valid talking points. As more and more PMCWs realise this, they’ll take shameless refuge in accusations that we, the women criticising the injustice and insanity of gender identity ideology, were enabling the far-right. The fact is that they’ve done exactly that, by refusing to accept that there was anything wrong with a movement that was causing serious harm to troubled young people, trampling all over women’s rights and seeking to remove single-sex services for the most vulnerable.

    The sense of betrayal women on the left feel towards men like Bragg will take a long time to disappear, if it ever does. I think we all take some grim satisfaction, though, in the fact that evidence of the PMCWs’ misogyny and complicity is a matter of public record, because the panicky back-pedalling and whitewashing that’s just begun is quite something to behold.

    Rowling says far more, and at great length, about herself than about Billy Bragg, I feel.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    @alexmassie

    If I were advising Anas Sarwar, I'd suggest he make sure one - or even two - of his MSPs miss next week's confidence votes. Very sad that they should be unwell but there you have it. Better to keep Humza in office but not in power.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    "Inside the fight for smartphone-free childhoods
    A rising number of parents want to ban under-16s from owning smartphones: “If it’s impossible for adults to regulate their emotions around phones, how can a 12-year-old?”

    By Pippa Bailey"

    https://www.newstatesman.com/the-weekend-report/2024/04/inside-fight-smartphone-free-childhoods
  • MJWMJW Posts: 2,012
    legatus said:

    I suspect the electorate is far less Thatcherite today than was the case in 1997 - much less likely to approve of privatisation and much more open minded about nationalisation and state intervention more generally. Returning Energy and the Water Industries to Public Control would now be well received. Even in 1997 the electorate was ready to see the Railways to State control - though Blair was too timid to take that step.
    Re- Thames Water - Why not let it go'bust' - and then renationalise for almost nothing? Ditto re-Royal Mail.
    This makes the mistake of assuming the electorate of 2024 is that of 2016. The electorate *now* wouldn't vote again for Brexit. Polls predict 'remain' would win by a landslide and even rejoin would start a referendum campaign as favourite. We've also really reached a point where the public realm's decay is much more visible than under Cameron - something that's shifted the electorate left.

    Little evidence too that the electorate is now more right-wing *now*. Despite all the noise around small boats it doesn't seem to be shifting any votes, ditto any of Sunak's performatively right wing flourishes.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    dixiedean said:

    Well.
    I've been put on half pay due to having too much time off work, because of being assaulted at work. It's policy to save money on the education budget.
    So. Fuck this Tory government.
    I'll walk through fire to see them humiliated.
    The funding for a special needs child was set at £10k in 2010. It's still £10k today. Whilst all external agency expert support has disappeared.
    It isn't moral or clever. It's a scandal. I'll be voting to strike.

    That seems unjust. Have you checked this with an employment lawyer or your union?

    Best wishes anyway.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,644
    Andy_JS said:

    "Inside the fight for smartphone-free childhoods
    A rising number of parents want to ban under-16s from owning smartphones: “If it’s impossible for adults to regulate their emotions around phones, how can a 12-year-old?”

    By Pippa Bailey"

    https://www.newstatesman.com/the-weekend-report/2024/04/inside-fight-smartphone-free-childhoods

    Does the article suggest "don't give your < 16yr old a smartphone"?
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    @euanmccolm

    have had three separate “he’s going in the morning messages” from normally solid sources. worry, of course, is that they’ve all spoken to the same person and that person is wrong.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073
    Foxy said:

    500 arrivals in the last two days. Looks like Rwanda as a deterrent is sub-optimal.

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/migrants-detected-crossing-the-english-channel-in-small-boats/migrants-detected-crossing-the-english-channel-in-small-boats-last-7-days
    No. As usual you are not paying attention to what is actually happening. Unlike the old Rwanda narrative, the attention now is shifted onto the potential of the Rwanda Scheme to work, and this optimism neutralises what should be very negative narrative for the Tories in what is becoming record boat crossings. The Tories have cleverly shifted focus from what has happened and is happening, onto the future potential of their scheme to finally stop the boats, completely. Additionally the Labour Parties mistake in pledging to bin the scheme on day 1, wasting all the time and costs getting here as it’s binned despite being unproven the scheme has failed and won’t work, is actually making this into a General Election vote winner for the conservatives.

    Truth is, in the minds eye of every voter they can see the Tories magic bullet to stop illegal migration, but they can’t see Labours. If Labour are taking 5 minutes to explain why the Rwanda Policy won’t work to justify why they are junking it, and a further 5 minutes to explain what they will do differently and why it will deliver better results, then Labour have already lost on this one.

    Labour have been outmanoeuvred on boats. Labour are about to be outmanoeuvred on the main reason to change government - management of the economy.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,644
    Cyclefree said:

    PB men discussing their sex lives = PB at its dullest.

    Have you ever thought about the merits of differing rail gauges?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    Cyclefree said:

    That seems unjust. Have you checked this with an employment lawyer or your union?

    Best wishes anyway.
    First thing tomorrow. I keep being told that I've exceeded the permitted time off. However, they had me down as absent for the whole of December and on SSP when I was actually at work.
    Computer says no.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111

    Labour have been outmanoeuvred on boats.

    WTF are you talking about?

    Has Richi "stopped the boats" ?

    Beth Rigby
    @BethRigby
    ·
    50m
    PM says success is “stopping the boats”. The number of migrants who’ve crossed by this small boats in the first four months of the year is at highest ever level. 7,167 people have arrived on small boats btwn Jan 1 & April 27 April, against 5,745 same period ‘23 & 6,691 ‘22

    https://twitter.com/BethRigby/status/1784682597869568452

    That's a NO, then...
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    ...
  • Scott_xP said:

    ...

    Beat me to it. Looks like the Era of Gilruth is upon us, or some other continuity Sturgeonite.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,675
    dixiedean said:

    I've been bitten, drawing blood, twice this year. They're deducting the time for appointments to have Hep B injections (which I had to fight to get).
    Slapped, punched, pissed on, faeces thrown over me. Accused of being a paedophile on a weekly basis.
    And you don't know what the TA's put up with for £1500 a month.
    Still. We're just bone idle public sector drags on the economy.
    All good wishes in fighting that - it sounds utterly unfair. And I think the Government is vanishing before our eyes.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    I know it doesn't pay the bills, and I wouldn't blame you for not darkening the door of your place ever again, but thank you for all you do.

    The degree to which everything is being knocked over to pretend to fund tax cuts is pretty unforgivable. And if that isn't coming from Number Ten, Rishi is an even more pathetic so-called leader than I think he is.

    Hope you are better soon.
    I'm OK. It's just another kick in the crotch. Had 4 days off since Xmas. Don't get to post on PB, make doctors or dentists appointments or talk to utility companies or arrange repairs during working hours, or book holidays.
    Have to stand on a railway platform and block a kid from throwing themselves under a train. Be threatened with knives and scissors.
    Just another bone idle public sector worker who's pay needs docking.
    To teach me summat.
  • DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    edited April 2024

    Mine's bigger than yours!


    Is there something cool about those market houses?

    For fans of wood, this building connects with a high-noom hilltop (shown in the photo) and also has some sexual history:

    image
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    edited April 2024
    Tribunal awards *exemplary damages* against Social Work England for its harassment of gender critical social worker Rachel Meade.

    Is the message getting though yet?


    https://x.com/mforstater/status/1784685462717689952

    This is a huge deal. Exemplary damages are very rare in the employment tribunal. Theyre used to signal extreme disapproval of egregious behaviour, in this case by Social Work England, the regulator. Whoever gave SWE legal advice that didn't consist of "you've massively screwed up, apologise immediately, offer a decent settlement and undertake to get proper training in belief discrimination" really doesn't deserve to get further work. They're a very costly liability to clients.

    https://x.com/hjoycegender/status/1784686943197950361
  • DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    edited April 2024
    Scott_xP said:

    @euanmccolm

    have had three separate “he’s going in the morning messages” from normally solid sources. worry, of course, is that they’ve all spoken to the same person and that person is wrong.

    Perhaps they've heard he'll be making a short-notice announcement to the nation about something utterly boring, and spreading the rumour that he's going will let them (or even just one clever person) cash in on some market or other - between the announcement and the appearance.

    Or he could be going.
  • legatuslegatus Posts: 126
    dixiedean said:

    I've been bitten, drawing blood, twice this year. They're deducting the time for appointments to have Hep B injections (which I had to fight to get).
    Slapped, punched, pissed on, faeces thrown over me. Accused of being a paedophile on a weekly basis.
    And you don't know what the TA's put up with for £1500 a month.
    Still. We're just bone idle public sector drags on the economy.
    May I ask whether you have considered taking legal action against those who abused you in this way? Where a criminal offence has been committed - as is clear in your case - you could surely make a formal complaint to the police re- the individuals concerned. Beyond that the LEA is likely to have failed in its duty of care to you.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    legatus said:

    May I ask whether you have considered taking legal action against those who abused you in this way? Where a criminal offence has been committed - as is clear in your case - you could surely make a formal complaint to the police re- the individuals concerned. Beyond that the LEA is likely to have failed in its duty of care to you.
    Yeah I know.
    It's part of the job. And the quid pro quo has always been we get paid in full.
    But that seems to have ended to make up for the teachers pay rise.
    I fucking love it really too.
    It's a specialist role that gives us a buzz.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,317
    Tony Blair saying asylum seekers are really economic migrants playing the system

    https://x.com/maxtempers/status/1784564827165261985?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,296
    ...

    No. As usual you are not paying attention to what is actually happening. Unlike the old Rwanda narrative, the attention now is shifted onto the potential of the Rwanda Scheme to work, and this optimism neutralises what should be very negative narrative for the Tories in what is becoming record boat crossings. The Tories have cleverly shifted focus from what has happened and is happening, onto the future potential of their scheme to finally stop the boats, completely. Additionally the Labour Parties mistake in pledging to bin the scheme on day 1, wasting all the time and costs getting here as it’s binned despite being unproven the scheme has failed and won’t work, is actually making this into a General Election vote winner for the conservatives.

    Truth is, in the minds eye of every voter they can see the Tories magic bullet to stop illegal migration, but they can’t see Labours. If Labour are taking 5 minutes to explain why the Rwanda Policy won’t work to justify why they are junking it, and a further 5 minutes to explain what they will do differently and why it will deliver better results, then Labour have already lost on this one.

    Labour have been outmanoeuvred on boats. Labour are about to be outmanoeuvred on the main reason to change government - management of the economy.
    Thank you for the tip. I will bet accordingly. Con majority is now out at 35/1 on Oddschecker It was 12/1 not long ago, so I am planning on topping up on your advice.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    Aggravated damages are highly unusual in an employment tribunal

    Exemplary damages are so rare some practitioners were beginning to doubt their existence

    The gender Borg have just got Social Work England both

    That’s how bad at law they are

    Leave @stonewalluk schemes now


    https://x.com/Jebadoo2/status/1784708028974960751

  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Could the SNP select a new leader capable of getting the Greens back on board?
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154
    dixiedean said:

    I've been bitten, drawing blood, twice this year. They're deducting the time for appointments to have Hep B injections (which I had to fight to get).
    Slapped, punched, pissed on, faeces thrown over me. Accused of being a paedophile on a weekly basis.
    And you don't know what the TA's put up with for £1500 a month.
    Still. We're just bone idle public sector drags on the economy.
    That’s just fucking disgraceful. You can be a righty like me and know that it’s wrong. Every right wing/tory should be protecting and supporting teachers and it’s infuriating that you are suffering this. You should be allowed a taser in the classroom. How on god’s earth can they penalise you financially for something that isn’t your fault.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    Cyclefree said:

    That sounds wrong to me. Your employer has a duty of care to you. Injuries to you while at work are their responsibility. I'd get advice. But not from an anonymous internet lawyer but someone who really knows employment law as it affects schools. You should not have to put up with this.

    Take care of yourself.
    Yes. Get an employment lawyer.

    Two of my wife’s sister had issues at work - both cases the lawyer turned the situation around.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073
    Scott_xP said:

    WTF are you talking about?

    Has Richi "stopped the boats" ? That's a NO, then...
    Ha. How embarrassing for you. Can you try reading this site rather than just posting to it?

    I was actually in reply to same bit of Beth you just posted and Foxy commented on !

    Unless the explanation I gave - why what Beth is pushing here will not get any media or political traction now this side of the election - couldn’t get round the blinkers you are wearing.

    Can you actually read the argument I made and reply to it?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    boulay said:

    That’s just fucking disgraceful. You can be a righty like me and know that it’s wrong. Every right wing/tory should be protecting and supporting teachers and it’s infuriating that you are suffering this. You should be allowed a taser in the classroom. How on god’s earth can they penalise you financially for something that isn’t your fault.
    Process detached from morality and humanity, is how it happens.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    edited April 2024
    boulay said:

    That’s just fucking disgraceful. You can be a righty like me and know that it’s wrong. Every right wing/tory should be protecting and supporting teachers and it’s infuriating that you are suffering this. You should be allowed a taser in the classroom. How on god’s earth can they penalise you financially for something that isn’t your fault.
    The last thing I want or need is a taser.
    I want timely specialist mental health and other interventions.
  • Andy_JS said:

    Could the SNP select a new leader capable of getting the Greens back on board?

    In theory, however the Green membership are riled up and have the ability to vote down an attempt to restart the Bute House agreement. Which would be extremely amusing, so lets hope that plays out.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    It's delicious, and I am here for it.

    I will never forget reading Social Work England's assertion that a GRC 'changes your biological sex' - a wholly false and actively insane assertion which I asked them through their barrister Robin Moira White to withdraw. They did not.

    So I am just taking a moment here to savour 58,000 chickens coming home to roost.


    https://x.com/SVPhillimore/status/1784690304538316993

  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,287
    Barnesian said:

    You don't need a passport to get from Ireland to the UK. I regularly travel back and forth by car ferry and I've never once been asked for my passport, or indeed for any identification. I'm just waved through.
    I think you do need one if you fly: they check it when you check in.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154

    Process detached from morality and humanity, is how it happens.
    I just find it so incomprehensible how it’s “ok” to behave in a way at school because it’s the diametric opposite to my life. The fear of being told off, my parents bollocking me, the detentions, the threat of rustication or expulsion. It mattered so much but Dixie has to work without that being a consideration and threat. I don’t want us to be China but really we need a bit of brutal discipline that’s supported by parents, schools and gov because it will make the country better in the long term.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651

    Tribunal awards *exemplary damages* against Social Work England for its harassment of gender critical social worker Rachel Meade.

    Is the message getting though yet?


    https://x.com/mforstater/status/1784685462717689952

    This is a huge deal. Exemplary damages are very rare in the employment tribunal. Theyre used to signal extreme disapproval of egregious behaviour, in this case by Social Work England, the regulator. Whoever gave SWE legal advice that didn't consist of "you've massively screwed up, apologise immediately, offer a decent settlement and undertake to get proper training in belief discrimination" really doesn't deserve to get further work. They're a very costly liability to clients.

    https://x.com/hjoycegender/status/1784686943197950361

    I know well the lawyer who acted for Ms Meade. Not someone to be messed with.

    This is a pretty significant case for regulators and employers. It's not just the exemplary damages on top of the normal compensation. Social Work England and Westminster City Council have also been ordered to provide proper training on equality law and freedom of speech not rely on the rubbish churned out by lobby groups making stuff up. Some of the stuff SWE was saying was so obviously - comically - wrong it was just embarrassing. And yet, even when given an opportunity to withdraw and apologise, they refused.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154
    dixiedean said:

    The last thing I want or need is a taser.
    I want timely specialist mental health and other interventions.
    I know, I was being overly angry and bemused. But I still think of you had a taser it might make you feel better. Or pepper spray.
  • DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    edited April 2024
    Donkeys said:

    Perhaps they've heard he'll be making a short-notice announcement to the nation about something utterly boring, and spreading the rumour that he's going will let them (or even just one clever person) cash in on some market or other - between the announcement and the appearance.

    Or he could be going.
    Wait - who is he talking about?? I was thinking he meant Sunak. Does he mean Yousaf? I doubt many markets could care less whether Yousaf goes or stays.

    PS A Gaza connection is possible with Yousaf. See also the surprise resignation of Varadkar after he came back from the US after St Patrick's Day. Ireland was about to intervene in the ICJ genocide case against Israel but AFAIAA the intervention hasn't happened. Incidentally this wasn't the first thing that came to mind when I heard Varadkar had gone. The first thing was [better not mention it here, because of libel law, but not foreign policy-related].
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,287
    ohnotnow said:

    Have you ever thought about the merits of differing rail gauges?
    Certain science fiction franchises spring to mind. It's been ages since I talked about pylons... :)
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    viewcode said:

    I think you do need one if you fly: they check it when you check in.
    Yup - imagine the exploding heads if the security theatre dance was abbreviated for flying.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Andy_JS said:

    "Inside the fight for smartphone-free childhoods
    A rising number of parents want to ban under-16s from owning smartphones: “If it’s impossible for adults to regulate their emotions around phones, how can a 12-year-old?”

    By Pippa Bailey"

    https://www.newstatesman.com/the-weekend-report/2024/04/inside-fight-smartphone-free-childhoods

    "The problem, say smartphone critics, is that large-scale adoption occurred before any scientific studies had been carried out into their effects on children’s health. The evidence now emerging, as laid out in The Anxious Generation, suggests that smartphone use in children is linked with poor mental health outcomes. One recent study of 28,000 young adults worldwide, published by the Washington DC-based Sapien Lab, found that the younger children got their first smartphone, the more likely they were later in life to experience suicidal thoughts, feelings of aggression towards others and a sense of detachment from reality. There are several reasons smartphone use might cause poor mental health among young people, all of which interact with each other.

    Smartphones are designed by the smartest minds in Silicon Valley to be addictive, to hold our attention for longer and to keep us coming back for more. Greenwell’s co-founder, Clare Fernyhough, a psychologist who lives in Hampshire, believes young people are uniquely vulnerable to this “rewiring” because their brains aren’t fully developed until their early twenties. Executive function skills, “the child’s growing ability to make plans and… execute those plans” writes Haidt, are largely based in the frontal cortex, “the last part of the brain to rewire during puberty”. The dopamine released every time we receive a notification “affects our brains in the way gambling does”, Fernyhough said. “[Children] are becoming completely wired to be addicted to dopamine hits.”"
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,838
    How would a Scottish election affect the timing of the UK GE?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    The issue Im annoyed about is the deduction of pay.
    Rest is just the job which I love. Haven't had a day off since February which makes it doubly confusing.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073
    edited April 2024

    ...

    Thank you for the tip. I will bet accordingly. Con majority is now out at 35/1 on Oddschecker It was 12/1 not long ago, so I am planning on topping up on your advice.
    Truth is Mex, we can repetitively post T R U S S in whatever spam trap format we wish, it doesn’t change the fact that Truss and her budget is ancient history now compared to a new reality this summer of inflation below 2%, interest rate cuts and an economy bouncing out of recession with strong growth.

    When you have one party at an election hailing an economic miracle that came from their sound stewardship, and promising to alleviate all household budgets with national insurance and other tax cuts - and an opposition refusing to promise tax cuts, and even threatening more years ahead of belt tightening for households and tight government spending budgets, there can only be polling shift one way, can’t there.

    Unless you think votes always go the way of honesty and reality, and “electioneering” doesn’t matter a jot.

    Of all posters I’m sure your mind is already suitably sardonic enough to appreciate the truth of political elections I am making here?

    And all this is in reply to Heathener, who just can’t grasp how something ignoring what has been witnessed the last 5 years, is ludicrously untrue, dishonest and unfair, and asks us to defy reality, could never have hordes of voters won over by it so last minute in a General Election campaign.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    boulay said:

    I just find it so incomprehensible how it’s “ok” to behave in a way at school because it’s the diametric opposite to my life. The fear of being told off, my parents bollocking me, the detentions, the threat of rustication or expulsion. It mattered so much but Dixie has to work without that being a consideration and threat. I don’t want us to be China but really we need a bit of brutal discipline that’s supported by parents, schools and gov because it will make the country better in the long term.
    You might as well trying exorcism.

    Most such kids generally have a head full of bad wiring and need to be helped to find a way out of the maelstrom of anger and confusion in their own minds. The violence is the external symptom.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    boulay said:

    I know, I was being overly angry and bemused. But I still think of you had a taser it might make you feel better. Or pepper spray.
    It would make me feel better if we could give them a big bear hug when we are asked.
    But we can't. Cos we're paedophiles or summat.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154
    The video for Dire Straits “Romeo and Juliet” is a masterpiece.

    https://youtu.be/rC95MEenIxA?si=ddhjXz8VNr644KtE

    I will now be wearing all pink next Saturday for a day out. And a cravat.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,287
    Andy_JS said:

    "Inside the fight for smartphone-free childhoods
    A rising number of parents want to ban under-16s from owning smartphones: “If it’s impossible for adults to regulate their emotions around phones, how can a 12-year-old?”

    By Pippa Bailey"

    https://www.newstatesman.com/the-weekend-report/2024/04/inside-fight-smartphone-free-childhoods

    If they don't want their children to have smartphones, they should stop buying them and giving it to them. What kind of country have we built where people ask the Government to stop them doing things?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    viewcode said:

    Certain science fiction franchises spring to mind. It's been ages since I talked about pylons... :)
    What do you want?

  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    You might as well trying exorcism.

    Most such kids generally have a head full of bad wiring and need to be helped to find a way out of the maelstrom of anger and confusion in their own minds. The violence is the external symptom.
    Spot on. Absolutely no effort is being made to do that.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,838
    viewcode said:

    If they don't want their children to have smartphones, they should stop buying them and giving it to them. What kind of country have we built where people ask the Government to stop them doing things?
    "First they came for the smokers, and I did not speak out because I was not a smoker..."
  • viewcode said:

    I think you do need one if you fly: they check it when you check in.
    AFAIK you don't legally need a passport for journey but the airlines insist so, practically, you do. For land/sea crossings there is no check as we are in a Common Travel Area.

    Simon Harris can bluster about returning migrants to the UK but the CTA means they can pop back whenever they want.
  • DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    edited April 2024

    No. As usual you are not paying attention to what is actually happening. Unlike the old Rwanda narrative, the attention now is shifted onto the potential of the Rwanda Scheme to work, and this optimism neutralises what should be very negative narrative for the Tories in what is becoming record boat crossings. The Tories have cleverly shifted focus from what has happened and is happening, onto the future potential of their scheme to finally stop the boats, completely. Additionally the Labour Parties mistake in pledging to bin the scheme on day 1, wasting all the time and costs getting here as it’s binned despite being unproven the scheme has failed and won’t work, is actually making this into a General Election vote winner for the conservatives.

    Truth is, in the minds eye of every voter they can see the Tories magic bullet to stop illegal migration, but they can’t see Labours. If Labour are taking 5 minutes to explain why the Rwanda Policy won’t work to justify why they are junking it, and a further 5 minutes to explain what they will do differently and why it will deliver better results, then Labour have already lost on this one.

    Labour have been outmanoeuvred on boats. Labour are about to be outmanoeuvred on the main reason to change government - management of the economy.
    Future potential is a magic bullet?? And the sunk costs fallacy helps the sitting government?

    Lab: "This won't work".
    Con: "You haven't proved it won't. You're letting Britain down by being so pessimistic. And we've spent a lot of money on it."

    Cue laughs in the audience. At the Tory. Because it's very easy for Labour to make their message punchy.

    I think the Tories will win the election, that immigration is their issue, and that the idea that Labour can take it from them is ludicrous. But it will play out differently from how you say. It will be Penny with Neptune's trident. There will be an unexpected ingredient, beyond the procedural crap. Trident in one hand, sword cutting the Gordian knot on live TV in the other.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,838
    Donkeys said:

    Future potential is a magic bullet??

    Lab: "This won't work".
    Con: "You haven't proved it won't. You're letting Britain down by being so pessimistic."

    Cue laughs in the audience. At the Tory. Because it's very easy for Labour to make their message punchy.

    I think the Tories will win the election, that immigration is their issue, and that the idea that Labour can take it from them is ludicrous. But it will play out differently from how you say. It will be Penny with Neptune's trident. There will be an unexpected ingredient, beyond the procedural crap. Trident in one hand, sword cutting the Gordian knot on live TV in the other.
    The French have finally worked out how to solve the problem: slash the boats.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198

    The French have finally worked out how to solve the problem: slash the boats.
    I can think of six ways to stop the boats. One or two even have death tolls less than WWII.

    One would make a profit.
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,262
    In my slightly-informed opinion, true humans began with homo erectus, who made hand axes -- which would have evened out competition among men. They were different from their more ape-like predecessors in another, perhaps even more important, way:
    "H. erectus males and females may have been roughly the same size as each other (i.e. exhibited reduced sexual dimorphism), which could indicate monogamy in line with general trends exhibited in primates."
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homo_erectus#Culture

    (Adult male gorillas are about twice as large as adult females, by way of comparison.)

  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    "Wellbeing and fitness
    The active commuters making travelling to work a workout
    People are cycling, running and even skiing to the office for better mental and physical health"

    https://www.ft.com
  • DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    edited April 2024

    I can think of six ways to stop the boats. One or two even have death tolls less than WWII.

    One would make a profit.
    Selling organs?

    It's easy to imagine "Stop the Boats" giving way to "Defend Our Shores".
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073
    Dura_Ace said:

    I can't decide if this is performance art or a genuine mental health crisis.
    I laughed like I drain when I read this.

    But truth is, even with just the 6 % election win, it results thanks mainly to Brexit driven and Corbyn gone tactical voting, in still an historic Labour majority from such low starting position, Libdems winning many seats too, and the Tories down to 180.

    There’s a centre right pro Brexit bloc out there right now of about 37/38 %. It’s not crazy to anticipate the polls to start tightening once the election is called, even down to just 6 or 7 % gap come the end - becuase that’s the science of what FPTP does. The Tory election campaign does not need to win over lots of different voter groups for this dramatic tightening, just a significant chunk of the double digit Reform polling.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154
    Donkeys said:

    Selling organs?
    Mr Steinway regrets manufacturing the wrong keyboard.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295

    I laughed like I drain when I read this.

    But truth is, even with just the 6 % election win, it results thanks mainly to Brexit driven and Corbyn gone tactical voting, in still an historic Labour majority from such low starting position, Libdems winning many seats too, and the Tories down to 180.

    There’s a centre right pro Brexit bloc out there right now of about 37/38 %. It’s not crazy to anticipate the polls to start tightening once the election is called, even down to just 6 or 7 % gap come the end - becuase that’s the science of what FPTP does. The Tory election campaign does not need to win over lots of different voter groups for this dramatic tightening, just a significant chunk of the double digit Reform polling.
    It's far too early to make predictions for the election IMO.
  • legatuslegatus Posts: 126

    I laughed like I drain when I read this.

    But truth is, even with just the 6 % election win, it results thanks mainly to Brexit driven and Corbyn gone tactical voting, in still an historic Labour majority from such low starting position, Libdems winning many seats too, and the Tories down to 180.

    There’s a centre right pro Brexit bloc out there right now of about 37/38 %. It’s not crazy to anticipate the polls to start tightening once the election is called, even down to just 6 or 7 % gap come the end - becuase that’s the science of what FPTP does. The Tory election campaign does not need to win over lots of different voter groups for this dramatic tightening, just a significant chunk of the double digit Reform polling.
    During election campaigns the incumbent party has tended to lose ground to the opposition - partly because the latter then receives equal media coverage by broadcasters etc. Swingback as such really only tends to apply to the period leading up to the formal election campaign itself.
  • DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    viewcode said:

    If they don't want their children to have smartphones, they should stop buying them and giving it to them. What kind of country have we built where people ask the Government to stop them doing things?
    People have lost pride and spirit. It's a slave culture. And I'm a leftie saying this.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073
    Andy_JS said:

    It's far too early to make predictions for the election IMO.
    If you think it’s too early to make predictions now, we’ll ask you after breakfast. The election is on July 4th.

    You could rubbish this election date by saying the Con position will be stronger in November, but truth is the economic platform definitely won’t be stronger, sunnier or more optimistic in Autumn than it will seem in June and July, nor will a further fiscal event or Party conference help at all. The strongest thing about Rwanda policy is in its potential, not the speed it starts delivering as a deterrent .

    The date is driven by waiting hoping for better polls and ratings as the year goes on? Nope, the date as it always has been is based on science, the art of electioneering, and thisis about shaping an electorate, and this shaping is best achieved when the iron is hottest. As it’s about to become…
  • DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    HYUFD said:

    By 60 most married couples and partners rarely have sex anyway
    When the husband is aged 55-65 there is a strong positive correlation between frequency of sex and the M-F age gap.

    I made that up.
    Bet it's true though.
    Biologically obvious because of fertility.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,171

    Speaking of Truss being the leader of all she surveys, she's got to number 3 on the Times bestseller list.

    https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/truss-book-becomes-a-bestseller/

    It would appear that the gleeful report in the Guardian of the book's comparatively modest sales, reported equally gleefully by fat, unhappy people on PB (author's assumption), compared Truss's hardback sales with everybody else's hardback and paperback sales.

    I am sure all on PB will wish the newly minted bestselling author and polemicist their hearty congratulations.

    Hey, I bought Liz Truss's book, though I've not read it.
This discussion has been closed.