Howdy, Stranger!

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

Stodge’s third and final look at the locals – politicalbetting.com

13567

Comments

  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482
    Workers Party has a new spin doctor.

    Just found out ex England cricketer Monty Panesar is standing for Parliament.

    https://twitter.com/greg_herriett/status/1785220066423824675
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,608

    Polls don’t predict. They just give a snapshot. Have a think about what might move the polls.

    When inflation is Under 2%, and BoE announce rat cut, the economy is out of recession because growth in 2024 is strong. And Rwanda flights are in the air, you reckon the polls won’t move at all?

    And I know why you get it wrong. Psychologically if you are left or centre left, this magic dust sprinkled on you won’t work at all, so you can’t “imagine” a world how it would work on anyone. But if you were right or centre right getting this magic dust…

    And remember Beergate month worked. It tightened the polls to just a 4% lead polling day.
    Low inflation, rate cut, recession over, growth good -- these would all be beneficial to the Tories' standing. However, polls move slowly. A huge amount of distrust has built up around the Tories. A month of good news isn't going to reverse that. They need an extended period of good stuff happening.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,153
    Nigelb said:

    Four and a half kilos of plutonium, to generate 150 watts of electricity, seems a tad inefficient.
    Even if you could perhaps get a bit of hot water out of the setup.
    Hmm, okay, the global stockpile of plutonium is about 560 tonnes, so we can generate nearly 19MW of electricity.

    Conclusion: we're going to need some more plutonium.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    For watchers of whether the green vote will determine next FM both Alex Cole Hamilton and Douglas Ross have said they will stand as FM (as per @HolyroodSources interviews) which means that in a contested election plurality (with more than all opponents) wins as per SO 11.10.6ff…..

    Contested election means green support is probably not necessary for the election of the FM in Holyrood


    https://x.com/scott_wortley/status/1785242444881100871?
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,608
    edited April 2024

    Hmm, okay, the global stockpile of plutonium is about 560 tonnes, so we can generate nearly 19MW of electricity.

    Conclusion: we're going to need some more plutonium.
    Can we go mine Pluto?
  • legatuslegatus Posts: 126
    Back in May 2017 Theresa May and the Tories were 20% ahead in the polls and appeared likely to win a big majority at the GE held a month later.At the Mayoral elections for West Midlands and Teeside Andy Street and Ben Houchen both managed to just squeak over the line. Yesterday's Yougov poll implies a swing to the Tories in both areas compared with 2017 - despite a very different national polling backdrop.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,223

    Polls don’t predict. They just give a snapshot. Have a think about what might move the polls.

    When inflation is Under 2%, and BoE announce rat cut, the economy is out of recession because growth in 2024 is strong. And Rwanda flights are in the air, you reckon the polls won’t move at all?

    And I know why you get it wrong. Psychologically if you are left or centre left, this magic dust sprinkled on you won’t work at all, so you can’t “imagine” a world how it would work on anyone. But if you were right or centre right getting this magic dust…

    And remember Beergate month worked. It tightened the polls to just a 4% lead polling day.
    I haven't said the polls won't move, in fact I propose that possibility and suggest that righties *might* turn back to Rishi in spite of his voter repellant ways. You should stop seeing everything as an attack on your hypothesis.

  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,156
    edited April 2024

    My point was that in Rumsfeldian terms, the gender of an unknown person is a known unknown, but once they become known to you, you stop using the neutral term.

    Nigel's example wouldn't be answered with 'they':

    - Who is the prime minister of Moldova, and do you know their gender ?
    - They are called Dorin Recean and they are male.
    So known unknowns cannot be attributed, but known knowns can.

    This is beginning to sound like algebraic structure, where rings, groups, fields, commutativity etc are defined and discussed. Also identity. Which is ironic when you think about it. :)
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,540
    Eabhal said:

    Really admire your work on this. That facebook post is a gentle reminder of just how inconsiderate some people can be to people who wheel about, and why "red tape" is such a useful guard against such arseholes.
    Thank-you.

    I haven't achieved much yet - though I was one of the first talking about using "Unlawful Obstruction of PROW" laws against obstructions installed by Councils themselves, and that is now being pursued in various places.

    At present I've nerded out down the rabbit hole, but I have yet to get a lot of barriers removed :smile: .
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,087

    Hmm, okay, the global stockpile of plutonium is about 560 tonnes, so we can generate nearly 19MW of electricity.

    Conclusion: we're going to need some more plutonium.
    That's trivial.

    You get a lot of natural uranium. Make it into sheet metal. Attach it to the ground.

    Detonate a thermonuclear bomb above it - high enough that the fireball doesn't touch down, close enough for the neutron pulse.

    Hundreds of tons of plutonium in an instant.

    You need to be a bit careful with the configuration of the uranium sheets - otherwise it would go critical and melt.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Nigelb said:

    Workers Party has a new spin doctor.

    Just found out ex England cricketer Monty Panesar is standing for Parliament.

    https://twitter.com/greg_herriett/status/1785220066423824675

    Perhaps he can get elected, and show the other 649 of them what good spin looks like?

    Much better than Alastair Campbell’s bad version of spin.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,026

    You mean that Kate didn't publicly defend those freaks outside abortion clinics and the progressives are lying? Shocking if true.

    I wouldn't describe the Record and Hutcheon as friends of any part of the SNP, progressives or conservatives.
    The Record is always there when they want muck spread
  • legatuslegatus Posts: 126

    Polls don’t predict. They just give a snapshot. Have a think about what might move the polls.

    When inflation is Under 2%, and BoE announce rat cut, the economy is out of recession because growth in 2024 is strong. And Rwanda flights are in the air, you reckon the polls won’t move at all?

    And I know why you get it wrong. Psychologically if you are left or centre left, this magic dust sprinkled on you won’t work at all, so you can’t “imagine” a world how it would work on anyone. But if you were right or centre right getting this magic dust…

    And remember Beergate month worked. It tightened the polls to just a 4% lead polling day.
    Low inflation might be a symptom of weak demand combined with rising unemployment.Inflation has already fallen from 11% to just over 3% but has had little obvious effect on the polls. Why should any further decline to 2% make much difference?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482
    Lawyers for Hunter Biden are telling Fox News to correct the record on bribery allegations made by a discredited FBI informant or face a defamation lawsuit..
    https://twitter.com/Acyn/status/1784983358545834172

    Given he probably still faces a criminal trial, the damage from widely reported, known false allegations is arguably quite considerable.
    If they fail to retract, then malice ought not be too hard to demonstrate.

    Sean Hannity’s show alone aired at least 85 segments in 2023 that pushed the informant's claim that Joe and Hunter Biden each took a $5 million bribe. The informant has now been indicted by the feds, who say he fabricated the story...
    https://twitter.com/MattGertz/status/1784986051523522929
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,156

    You mean that Kate didn't publicly defend those freaks outside abortion clinics and the progressives are lying? Shocking if true.

    I wouldn't describe the Record and Hutcheon as friends of any part of the SNP, progressives or conservatives.
    Tim Farron must be biting his lip at this point.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,153
    edited April 2024
    legatus said:

    Low inflation might be a symptom of weak demand combined with rising unemployment.Inflation has already fallen from 11% to just over 3% but has had little obvious effect on the polls. Why should any further decline to 2% make much difference?
    It won't. People want prices to go back to what they remember them being.

    Failing that, they'd like their income to increase by enough to make up the difference, and then some.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,540
    HYUFD said:

    Which is why the average UK politician aiming at swing voters if they state a religion at all say C of E or Church of Scotland.

    Some Muslims and Roman Catholics can also get away with it if not too hardline in their adherance to Imam or Vatican doctrine eg Yousaf and Biden. For evangelicals however often their faith defines their life see Forbes or Farron or Kruger and so it leads their political life too (Pentecostal Morrison in Australia did manage it for one win but largely by focusing on the economy, same with hardline Catholic Abbott by focusing on immigration)
    That's a good observation - evangelical belief can be quite fragile and crystalline, and a gradual process of liberalisation-with-growing-older as there is a greater exposure to the wider society can be difficult; sometimes it can shatter instead. Alternatively it can harden into intolerance.

    It is often less so amongst those with a broader innate awareness - Church of England doctrinal comprehensiveness or the gradual liberalisation of the mainstream Methodist tradition may help here (though Methodism is in heavy decline in the UK).

    Roman Catholicism is perhaps easier to sit lightly to without losing all contact. And Islam is a more-encompassing system in its nature.

    One corollary is that if you talk to ex-evangelicals - especially in my experience men in their 30s who have maintained the lifestyle discipline but have never managed to get into the 'happy settled down with a wife and family' situation, there can be quite deep bitterness. That may itself be tempered later with a broader experience.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,087
    Just catching up with the Rwanda/Ireland question. Is the fear that there will be many more drownings in the channel as migrants attempt to get to English-speaking ROI via UK? And do we expect Ireland to set up its own Rwanda scheme, to somewhere equally "safe" but slightly more grim?

    And a PB prediction - Scotland, in particular Glasgow, could become a haven for those coming over on small boats, on their way to ROI it not. There are already protests whenever the Home Office try to lift people, with stand offs with Police Scotland etc. https://news.sky.com/story/amp/glasgow-immigration-raid-police-and-protesters-face-off-as-home-office-tries-to-remove-people-from-property-on-eid-12305355
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    edited April 2024

    Low inflation, rate cut, recession over, growth good -- these would all be beneficial to the Tories' standing. However, polls move slowly. A huge amount of distrust has built up around the Tories. A month of good news isn't going to reverse that. They need an extended period of good stuff happening.
    “However, polls move slowly.”

    No. No no nonono no nooooooo your post is utterly wrong. Polls and the opinion behind them move in the space of a balloon pop. Corbyn in commons saying send the substance to Moscow for testing. The days following Truss’s budget. FBI announcing investigation into Presidential Candidate. Etc etc
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,026

    You mean that Kate didn't publicly defend those freaks outside abortion clinics and the progressives are lying? Shocking if true.

    I wouldn't describe the Record and Hutcheon as friends of any part of the SNP, progressives or conservatives.
    They are always lying TUD , the halfwits think men can be women
  • DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    edited April 2024
    Cookie said:

    Clearly, from the opening sentence of that post, I'm not THAT uncomfortable with using 'they' with a singular verb form!
    Nothing wrong with saying "they" when you don't know a person's sex. Usually far better stylistically than "he or she" or the even ghastlier "s/he". It's when "they" is used when the sex is known that it gets my goat, e.g. when someone refers to me as "they" when they know damned well I'm male because I am right there standing in front of them. Or when a generic mother is referred to as "they". Utterly performative craziness, up there with 2+2=5. Don't do it, kids.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Nigelb said:

    Workers Party has a new spin doctor.

    Just found out ex England cricketer Monty Panesar is standing for Parliament.

    https://twitter.com/greg_herriett/status/1785220066423824675

    They have a big announcement at 2 today apparently, regarding the upcoming GE. Tice reckons they are claiming they'll stand everywhere, but given they only have 33 on Thursday this seems unlikely. Maybe it's Webbe going to them or a few councillors.
    I think Glorious George might end up a bit of am irritant for Labour, he has a very limited but very specific appeal
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482
    Eabhal said:

    Just catching up with the Rwanda/Ireland question. Is the fear that there will be many more drownings in the channel as migrants attempt to get to English-speaking ROI via UK? And do we expect Ireland to set up its own Rwanda scheme, to somewhere equally "safe" but slightly more grim?

    And a PB prediction - Scotland, in particular Glasgow, could become a haven for those coming over on small boats, on their way to ROI it not. There are already protests whenever the Home Office try to lift people, with stand offs with Police Scotland etc. https://news.sky.com/story/amp/glasgow-immigration-raid-police-and-protesters-face-off-as-home-office-tries-to-remove-people-from-property-on-eid-12305355

    How many of those Irish border crossers were individuals who had been formally notified by the Home Office that they were liable to be flown to Rwanda ?

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-68924392
    Most of the asylum seekers initially earmarked for deportation to Rwanda cannot be immediately located, the Home Office has admitted.
    Home Office documents show that of 5,700 asylum seekers identified in the initial cohort, the government had lost contact with 3,557.
    Only "2,143 continue to report to the Home Office and can be located for detention", the documents say.
    A government source denied the group were missing...

    ..The policy document sets out details of the 5,700 people that Rwanda has "in principle" already agreed to accept. Those identified in the initial cohort all arrived in the UK illegally between January 2022 and June 2023.
    They had already received a "notice of intent" that their asylum claims were inadmissible and they were being considered for deportation to Rwanda before the Court of Appeal ruled the policy was unlawful on 29 June 2023.
    It means no-one who arrived on a small boat since last summer will be removed in the first flights to Rwanda...
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,285
    Today's PO witness is Hugh Flemington, former head of legal.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HvYbKgs5ezY
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,608

    “However, polls move slowly.”

    No. No no nonono no nooooooo your post is utterly wrong. Polls and the opinion behind them move in the space of a balloon pop. Corbyn in commons saying send the substance to Moscow for testing. The days following Truss’s budget. FBI announcing investigation into Presidential Candidate. Etc etc
    It is very unusual for single events to cause a big shift. Polls usually move slowly. If you look at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_next_United_Kingdom_general_election , barring noise, most of the change is a slow and steady decline in Tory support from summer 2021 onwards. Truss produced a blip, but Truss was perhaps uniquely awful.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,285
    edited April 2024

    Nick Ferrari on LBC claims two Labour MPs are about to defect to Gorgeous's latest vehicle.

    The MP for Coventry South might be a possibility.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482
    I had never heard of these remarkable buildings.

    This is Borgund Church in Norway, made entirely out of wood and built over 800 years ago.

    It is a "stave church", an incredibly unusual type of Medieval building.

    What makes them so special? Well, there are only 30 original stave churches in the world...

    https://twitter.com/culturaltutor/status/1784997063240859994
  • eekeek Posts: 29,690

    They have a big announcement at 2 today apparently, regarding the upcoming GE. Tice reckons they are claiming they'll stand everywhere, but given they only have 33 on Thursday this seems unlikely. Maybe it's Webbe going to them or a few councillors.
    I think Glorious George might end up a bit of am irritant for Labour, he has a very limited but very specific appeal
    Might end up being? Glorious George has been a minor irritant for years
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Andy_JS said:

    The MP for Coventry South might be a possibility.
    I suspect that entirely depends on whether jezza is planning a new party or not.
    Rumours were Webbe and Tahir Ali but the latter has vehemently denied
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    eek said:

    Might end up being? Glorious George has been a minor irritant for years
    Indeed. I meant specifically iro this election.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,780
    Donkeys said:

    Nothing wrong with saying "they" when you don't know a person's sex. Usually far better stylistically than "he or she" or the even ghastlier "s/he". It's when "they" is used when the sex is known that it gets my goat, e.g. when someone refers to me as "they" when they know damned well I'm male because I am right there standing in front of them. Or when a generic mother is referred to as "they". Utterly performative craziness, up there with 2+2=5. Don't do it, kids.
    Well I'm largely with you there. But I'd be happier if there was a word meaning 'third person singular gender unknown' to distinguish it from 'third person plural'. It would be useful.

    Still, other languages have these inadequacies too. My understanding (though my 12 year old daughter, whose understanding of these things is not necessarily perfect) is that Spanish has either 'third person plural female' or 'third person plural male/mixed' - so a group of 99 women and one man would be given the masculine third person.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533
    Been listening to the Post Office Inquiry; another case of amnesia!
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,608
    Andy_JS said:

    The MP for Coventry South might be a possibility.
    The North East mayoral election will be a test of how well an ex-Labour candidate can do up against an official Labour candidate.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,608
    Cookie said:

    Well I'm largely with you there. But I'd be happier if there was a word meaning 'third person singular gender unknown' to distinguish it from 'third person plural'. It would be useful.

    Still, other languages have these inadequacies too. My understanding (though my 12 year old daughter, whose understanding of these things is not necessarily perfect) is that Spanish has either 'third person plural female' or 'third person plural male/mixed' - so a group of 99 women and one man would be given the masculine third person.
    That kind of happens in English. A group of male and female former students are alumni. A group of male only former students are alumni. But a group of female only former students are alumnae.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,608
    Cookie said:

    Well I'm largely with you there. But I'd be happier if there was a word meaning 'third person singular gender unknown' to distinguish it from 'third person plural'. It would be useful.

    Still, other languages have these inadequacies too. My understanding (though my 12 year old daughter, whose understanding of these things is not necessarily perfect) is that Spanish has either 'third person plural female' or 'third person plural male/mixed' - so a group of 99 women and one man would be given the masculine third person.
    Is it Hungarian that has no gender in its pronouns? So then you don't need to worry about any of this! Go Hungarian!
  • eekeek Posts: 29,690

    The North East mayoral election will be a test of how well an ex-Labour candidate can do up against an official Labour candidate.
    Not really that is a unique case of decent candidate against a second rate Labour candidate.

    And where the decent candidate is managing to pick up a lot of screw the establishment votes
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    On topic.
    Thanks Stodge.
    Having measurement, par scores and yardsticks up front is so important to avoiding the daftness everyone claiming victory. You have effectively put padlock on door to the spin room, killing all post match spin.
    Provided your pre match analysis is balanced.

    “I'm expecting 500 Conservative losses at least” - Stodge.
    There are reasons it might not get near 500 losses. Cons are only defending “900 and something” seats this time. In many places the Conservatives are now the opposition, challengers to unpopular councils and recent council decisions. So we need to factor in Conservative gains, likely at expense of the Yellows and Greens as well as reds.

    Also, with Palestine bombed and starved to death and Muslims in UK unhappy with Starmer’s and Labours response, it will be interesting how terribly this impacts Labours turn out in some places, traditional Labour places. George might be the only one legitimately crowing after these elections, enhancing his profile and danger to Labour still more.

    Also, is your “I'm expecting 500 Conservative losses at least” based too much on national polling? where all those GE polls offer voters a Reform option, and these local ballot papers don’t, just to what extent does this surely boost the Tories?

    We have to factor in Conservative gains limiting overall losses.
  • Leon said:

    Bonjour


    Go to Mass
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,608
    eek said:

    Not really that is a unique case of decent candidate against a second rate Labour candidate.

    And where the decent candidate is managing to pick up a lot of screw the establishment votes
    If Driscoll loses in that context, and also the context of the more personal mayoral position, then I think that should dash the hopes of anyone else planning this route. If Driscoll wins, then, sure, those caveats apply.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,661
    edited April 2024
    Nigelb said:

    I had never heard of these remarkable buildings.

    This is Borgund Church in Norway, made entirely out of wood and built over 800 years ago.

    It is a "stave church", an incredibly unusual type of Medieval building.

    What makes them so special? Well, there are only 30 original stave churches in the world...

    https://twitter.com/culturaltutor/status/1784997063240859994

    They're amazing inside. Well worth a wallet-emptying trip to Norway.

    We have only very-much-modified ones in England:



    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greensted_Church
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,608
    Rob Ford has put his guide to the locals up (at least, this is part 1 of 3!): https://swingometer.substack.com/p/local-elections-the-big-preview
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,223
    edited April 2024
    Nigelb said:

    I had never heard of these remarkable buildings.

    This is Borgund Church in Norway, made entirely out of wood and built over 800 years ago.

    It is a "stave church", an incredibly unusual type of Medieval building.

    What makes them so special? Well, there are only 30 original stave churches in the world...

    https://twitter.com/culturaltutor/status/1784997063240859994

    I've seen pics of one of the largest ones which I think featured in Andrew Graham-Dixons quite good BBC series Art of Scandinavia*, in fact I thought (wrongly) that there was only one. They are other wordly, almost from a fantasy.

    *Ironically not currently available on iplayer but is on Apple and Prime.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,087
    Nigelb said:

    How many of those Irish border crossers were individuals who had been formally notified by the Home Office that they were liable to be flown to Rwanda ?

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-68924392
    Most of the asylum seekers initially earmarked for deportation to Rwanda cannot be immediately located, the Home Office has admitted.
    Home Office documents show that of 5,700 asylum seekers identified in the initial cohort, the government had lost contact with 3,557.
    Only "2,143 continue to report to the Home Office and can be located for detention", the documents say.
    A government source denied the group were missing...

    ..The policy document sets out details of the 5,700 people that Rwanda has "in principle" already agreed to accept. Those identified in the initial cohort all arrived in the UK illegally between January 2022 and June 2023.
    They had already received a "notice of intent" that their asylum claims were inadmissible and they were being considered for deportation to Rwanda before the Court of Appeal ruled the policy was unlawful on 29 June 2023.
    It means no-one who arrived on a small boat since last summer will be removed in the first flights to Rwanda...
    Avoid deportation to Rwanda with this one simple trick. I presume that the remaining 2,143 have suddenly gone missing too.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243
    Nigelb said:

    I had never heard of these remarkable buildings.

    This is Borgund Church in Norway, made entirely out of wood and built over 800 years ago.

    It is a "stave church", an incredibly unusual type of Medieval building.

    What makes them so special? Well, there are only 30 original stave churches in the world...

    https://twitter.com/culturaltutor/status/1784997063240859994

    No doubt numinous, if not numerous :wink:

    I've been to the one in Sweden, which is far from the most impressive (looking at that thread), but still a fascinating building.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,285
    "Simon Harris: ‘Legitimate expectation’ asylum seekers will be returned to UK
    The Taoiseach called for a sense of calm and said everyone needed ‘to take a deep breath and just be very factual’."

    https://www.irishnews.com/news/ireland/simon-harris-legitimate-expectation-asylum-seekers-will-be-returned-to-uk-B7FA3VUMZRGY5MPLWXF7MMZACI/
  • That's trivial.

    You get a lot of natural uranium. Make it into sheet metal. Attach it to the ground.

    Detonate a thermonuclear bomb above it - high enough that the fireball doesn't touch down, close enough for the neutron pulse.

    Hundreds of tons of plutonium in an instant.

    You need to be a bit careful with the configuration of the uranium sheets - otherwise it would go critical and melt.
    Do it in Camden, then HS2 and HS1 could be joined up afterwards.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,087
    Selebian said:

    No doubt numinous, if not numerous :wink:

    I've been to the one in Sweden, which is far from the most impressive (looking at that thread), but still a fascinating building.
    I've been in one in Norway. And has anyone who has played Skyrim.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482
    viewcode said:

    So known unknowns cannot be attributed, but known knowns can.

    This is beginning to sound like algebraic structure, where rings, groups, fields, commutativity etc are defined and discussed. Also identity. Which is ironic when you think about it. :)
    It's just a slightly novel usage of a very common existing form. I really don't see the problem.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,585

    I've seen pics of one of the largest ones which I think featured in Andrew Graham-Dixons quite good BBC series Art of Scandinavia*, in fact I thought (wrongly) that there was only one. They are other wordly, almost from a fantasy.

    *Ironically not currently available on iplayer but is on Apple and Prime.
    North Russia has similarly amazing wooden
    churches. I was planning to go see til war intervened. Churches in Russia - especially in the north - are rammed with Noom

    This is apparently the most famous


  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,540

    I have a lot of sympathy, as a “now” wheelchair user who, long ago in his “able” days extended a shop premises in such a way as to render the extension area inaccessible to wheelchair users. Karma is indeed a bitch!
    I also now cannot get into my once-favourite pub!
    They are required to make reasonable adjustments under EA2010. But it often needs a fuss to wake things up. The standard process for a local council is to obfuscate or ignore until such time as a Letter Before Action appears, when they will act or sometimes try and buy off the complainant whilst doing nothing, and may make a move when the case reaches the door of the Court.

    Or you could try the James May option :wink:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dtmZHLSqiL8

    I've had a general awareness of such barriers for years, but I did not internalise the impact on disabled or elderly people using mobility aids until I could not wheel my mum to the GP for that reason in 2017-18.

    In your case a pragmatic (though not perfect) answer could be to ask them to install a request-assistance bell by the door and buy an inexpensive deployable ramp, if it is anything like the one in the James May video above, or something similar. There is often a greater response to a specific, known individual, than a generic principle.

    (WIth barriers on footpaths, a specific local voter lobbying the Local Councillor could do better than an activist from elsewhere lobbying the Chief Exec. In my area I know that there is a bias to do nothing, so I am focus on things that are enforcible legal processes.)
  • Andy_JS said:

    Today's PO witness is Hugh Flemington, former head of legal.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HvYbKgs5ezY

    Who suffers from chronic amnesia.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,475
    Another sinner repenting on matters of gender

    Starmer supports Rosie Duffield now however...

    In 2021, the Labour leader had criticised Ms Duffield for saying that only women have a cervix, saying that her comment “is something that shouldn’t be said. It’s not right”.

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/rosie-duffield-right-to-say-only-women-have-a-cervix-says-starmer/ar-AA1nV79p?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=e355acd57feb461fc92fab194b68f5c4&ei=30
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Who suffers from chronic amnesia.
    Something that seems to be have been highly contagious among senior PO managers.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,285
    edited April 2024
    Bad news, Trump extends his lead to 2% with the Economist's poll tracker. 46% v 44%.

    https://www.economist.com/interactive/us-2024-election/trump-biden-polls
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,080
    It looks like the mini-heatwave here ends tomorrow, so a lazy morning in the garden with a book and the Post Office inquiry for company…
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,060
    Telegraph up for sale after takeover collapses
    The Daily and Sunday Telegraph newspapers are back up for sale after an Abu Dhabi-backed bid to take them over collapsed.

    The ownership of the papers was set to be transferred to the Gulf-backed RedBird IMI consortium before the government intervened in January.

    Legislation has since been put forward to ban foreign states from owning UK newspapers and news magazines.

    RedBird said it would halt the takeover and put the media firm up for sale.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-68926764
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482
    Selebian said:

    No doubt numinous, if not numerous :wink:

    I've been to the one in Sweden, which is far from the most impressive (looking at that thread), but still a fascinating building.
    I'm happy to own my ignorance relative to the PB knowledge base.
    One to add to the must visit list.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,559
    TimS said:

    Those RR mini nukes are still a bit big though for domestic use. There's a gap in the market for a full service household nuclear generation option, on the model of solar panels.

    Subscribe for home nuclear. Up-front payment then a small monthly service contract.

    Briefcase-sized reactor arrives and the installers will install it on the back wall or in the basement and wire it up to your mains supply. Excess power goes back into the grid with a generous feed-in tariff. Cooling water can be reused for your bath and showers. Every couple of months an engineer will come with a van to collect your radioactive waste and replenish the uranium.

    And if you want to be even more green then consider home hydro. Engineers will come and install a micro-generator on your mains water supply. Worth considering if you're on fixed water rates rather than a meter.
    Given recent weather, what about mini turbines installed in drainpipes?
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,156
    edited April 2024
    Taz said:

    Another sinner repenting on matters of gender

    Starmer supports Rosie Duffield now however...

    In 2021, the Labour leader had criticised Ms Duffield for saying that only women have a cervix, saying that her comment “is something that shouldn’t be said. It’s not right”.

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/rosie-duffield-right-to-say-only-women-have-a-cervix-says-starmer/ar-AA1nV79p?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=e355acd57feb461fc92fab194b68f5c4&ei=30

    I hesitate to ask this, but the banter heuristic demands it. Do artificially constructed vaginas have cervixes (cervices?) technically? A cervix is the boundary between the vagina and the womb. Trans women with a vagina have a vagina but no womb and so technically cannot have a cervix. However such a vagina is not open ended but is closed. Is this closure analogous to a closed cervix, in the same way that a closed door and an open door are both doors?

    Would a diagram help? I mean I have Paint on my laptop and it'll only take me fi[That's enough - Ed]

  • TazTaz Posts: 17,475
    Andy_JS said:

    Bad news, Trump extends his lead to 2% with the Economist's poll tracker. 46% v 44%.

    https://www.economist.com/interactive/us-2024-election/trump-biden-polls

    Why ? Biden is not the greatest President ever but he seems far more competent than Trump. In a straight choice I would always plump for Biden
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,453
    Good afternoon, everyone.

    Mr. B, stave churches are pretty cool, and I imagine they were some of the inspiration behind Whiterun's architecture in Skyrim.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,585
    Why the fuck is this UNESCO World Heritage Listed already, when the Jobbie building in Edinburgh, or the Holyrood Parliament masterpiece, have yet to even make the “tentative list”?!

    And what about “the ensemble of Camden High
    Street retail centre and its homeless tents”. Been waiting for status for yonks. Yet this crap, a couple of houses and a chapel on a muddy island? - the French bribe a couple of UNESCO dudes in Paris and bingo. Listed

    Pff!


  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482

    Who suffers from chronic amnesia.
    Must be something in the PO tea.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,569
    edited April 2024
    Everton about to be more fucked than a stepmom on Pornhub.

    Everton call in insolvency advisers amid fresh doubt over 777 takeover

    Club believed to be waiting for further £15m of loans from 777

    Advisory firm Teneo deals with restructuring and insolvency


    Everton are calling in a leading firm of restructuring and insolvency advisers, the Guardian understands, raising further questions about the proposed takeover of the Premier League club by 777 Partners.

    The move comes as the club are believed to still be waiting for a further £15m of loans that 777 had pledged to provide Everton with during April, according to one 777 source.

    The latest loan would have taken the amount the club had borrowed from the American firm to more than £200m during the seven months since it was announced it would acquire Everton.

    However, 777 appears to be experiencing further financial difficulties, with its low-cost airline Bonza entering voluntary administration in Australia on Tuesday.

    Meanwhile, 777 Partners is understood to have parted company with its UK PR advisers after falling behind on paying its fees.


    https://www.theguardian.com/football/2024/apr/30/everton-call-in-insolvency-restructuring-advisers-777-takeover-doubt
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,475
    How the SNP broke Scotland, from the Telegraph. Obviously not the most balanced of takes. I presume the SNP did some good too .

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/how-the-snp-broke-scotland/ar-AA1nUzga?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=8e4caeb7eded4e7094361cd25036be45&ei=10
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,475

    Who suffers from chronic amnesia.
    Another one. It seems to be quite widespread in witnesses in this enquiry.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,585
    TBF that is one of the most majestic things I have ever seen

    Will it have noom??

    Dunno. But it has tremendous beauty and sublimity
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533

    The North East mayoral election will be a test of how well an ex-Labour candidate can do up against an official Labour candidate.
    I got the impression, rightly or wrongly, from fairly casual reading, that a sensible Labour Party would have nominated the Independent anyway.
    My recollection, from long, long ago, is that there’s a much stronger regional identity in the NE, than in the Home Counties.
    So I would expect a reasonably well known local candidate to do well.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,285
    edited April 2024

    Hainault latest: 'Stabbings' reported as man with sword attacks people near Tube station
    The Metropolitan Police says a 36-year-old man wielding a sword has been arrested after an attack on members of the public and two police officers near an east London Tube station. Officers said they are not looking for more suspects and the attack "does not appear to be terror related".

    https://news.sky.com/story/hainault-latest-stabbings-reported-as-man-with-sword-attacks-people-near-tube-station-13126112

    Hainault is in the Havering & Redbridge constituency for the London Assembly and Mayoral elections in two days' time, and in Wes Streeting's Ilford North parliamentary constituency.

    North-east London seems to have an unusually high number of this type of incident.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,585
    Fucking hell
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,475

    Rob Ford has put his guide to the locals up (at least, this is part 1 of 3!): https://swingometer.substack.com/p/local-elections-the-big-preview

    Looks more like the Royal Rumble than an election !!!!
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,559
    malcolmg said:

    The Record is always there when they want muck spread
    And they’ve got their man Murray Foote on the inside to stir up the shit.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    legatus said:

    Low inflation might be a symptom of weak demand combined with rising unemployment.Inflation has already fallen from 11% to just over 3% but has had little obvious effect on the polls. Why should any further decline to 2% make much difference?
    It’s a huge symbolic moment in a febrile political atmosphere, meaning lots of voters will notice it and think the government have done a good job to stand cost of living crisis on its head so quickly.

    Just to correct you, it’s energy behind the big drop. And the sequence of announcements is: 9th May interest rate cut announced, 10th May UK comes out of recession with very good first quarter growth, 22nd May Inflation will fall below 2%!

    To exploit this, Rishi Sunak is announcing the General Election date 1037hrs 13th May, for 2024 General Election is being held on 4th July. Parliament will end on 23rd May.

    The final vote shares will be CON33 LAB39 LDM16 REF3 GRN4 SNP2
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,475
    viewcode said:

    I hesitate to ask this, but the banter heuristic demands it. Do artificially constructed vaginas have cervixes (cervices?) technically? A cervix is the boundary between the vagina and the womb. Trans women with a vagina have a vagina but no womb and so technically cannot have a cervix. However such a vagina is not open ended but is closed. Is this closure analogous to a closed cervix, in the same way that a closed door and an open door are both doors?

    Would a diagram help? I mean I have Paint on my laptop and it'll only take me fi[That's enough - Ed]

    God knows. It is not something I have extensively researched as I am quite squeamish anyway.

    I do wonder if we will get to the stage where transplants will be available ?
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,475
    Leon said:

    Fucking hell

    It's soft cell
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,085
    Leon said:

    Why the fuck is this UNESCO World Heritage Listed already, when the Jobbie building in Edinburgh, or the Holyrood Parliament masterpiece, have yet to even make the “tentative list”?!

    And what about “the ensemble of Camden High
    Street retail centre and its homeless tents”. Been waiting for status for yonks. Yet this crap, a couple of houses and a chapel on a muddy island? - the French bribe a couple of UNESCO dudes in Paris and bingo. Listed

    Pff!


    I remember going there as a young whipper-snapper and being given one of those big Franc notes that were like wrapping paper to occupy myself in the shops whilst my parents and their friends enjoyed post lunch drinks. I bought a comb that was made like a flick knife with a crocodile design handle. Obviously when I got home I took apart a real knife and replaced the comb and thought I was the nuts with my flick knife until my sister grassed me up and my parents confiscated it.

    I’m not sure what connects flick-combs with Mont St Michel to warrant selling them there but maybe they were a thing with the monks for keeping their tonsures neat.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204
    edited April 2024
    Andy_JS said:

    Bad news, Trump extends his lead to 2% with the Economist's poll tracker. 46% v 44%.

    https://www.economist.com/interactive/us-2024-election/trump-biden-polls

    Real Clear have handily kept their averages over time archived.

    https://www.realclearpolling.com/polls/president/general/2020/trump-vs-biden

    At this point in 2020 Biden +6.2, final RCP average Biden +7.2. Final result, Biden +4.5

    https://www.realclearpolling.com/polls/president/general/2024/trump-vs-biden

    At this point, Trump +1.4.

    I genuinely don't know who is going to win, but Trump is undeniably in a stronger position than he was back in 2016. Biden's approval is around the 40% mark too. I've green levelled on the pair of them for POTUS in my Betfair book, having been long Biden. Trump at 2.26 is a big price considering the polling.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,475
    Andy_JS said:

    The MP for Coventry South might be a possibility.
    And Nottingham East ?

    They'd be a sad loss for Labour, I am sure SKS would be appalled to see them go.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,913
    Eabhal said:

    I've been in one in Norway. And has anyone who has played Skyrim.
    Yes, I went to one in Lom. It wasn't quite as outlandish as some but it is still remarkable.

    I like the grass roofed buildings in Norway too, although you need a lot of rain to make that work.

    I tried it here on a garden structure and it refused to grow grass for 20 years until the past 12 months of deluge...
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482
    Leon said:

    TBF that is one of the most majestic things I have ever seen

    Will it have noom??

    Dunno. But it has tremendous beauty and sublimity

    I have little doubt it will be noomed to the moon.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,080
    Andy_JS said:

    North-east London seems to have an unusually high number of this type of incident.
    We always used to worry that the BNP would get its foothold there, yet in the event their first (and only) councillor there got elected for Woodford Bridge.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,834
    boulay said:

    I remember going there as a young whipper-snapper and being given one of those big Franc notes that were like wrapping paper to occupy myself in the shops whilst my parents and their friends enjoyed post lunch drinks. I bought a comb that was made like a flick knife with a crocodile design handle. Obviously when I got home I took apart a real knife and replaced the comb and thought I was the nuts with my flick knife until my sister grassed me up and my parents confiscated it.

    I’m not sure what connects flick-combs with Mont St Michel to warrant selling them there but maybe they were a thing with the monks for keeping their tonsures neat.
    My only visit was ill-timed, on a peak day in summer when the place was heaving with tourists. Still beautiful especially from a distance but the magic is dimmed when you're struggling up the streets being elbowed by fellow visitors. I was told then that the best thing is to stay overnight, as in so many tourist honeypots, and I can well imagine on a quiet sunny evening once all the day trippers have gone it would be wonderful.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,153
    Andy_JS said:

    "Simon Harris: ‘Legitimate expectation’ asylum seekers will be returned to UK
    The Taoiseach called for a sense of calm and said everyone needed ‘to take a deep breath and just be very factual’."

    https://www.irishnews.com/news/ireland/simon-harris-legitimate-expectation-asylum-seekers-will-be-returned-to-uk-B7FA3VUMZRGY5MPLWXF7MMZACI/

    Worth noting that the government in Ireland is pulling a bit of a fast one here. They admitted yesterday that they had no statistics or data on asylum seeker arrivals, and had just assumed they all asylum seekers who weren't claiming asylum at a port of entry (like Dublin Airport) must have come from the UK via Northern Ireland.

    Of course, it suited the Tories to accept responsibility so they could claim it as evidence that Rwanda was working.
  • legatuslegatus Posts: 126

    It’s a huge symbolic moment in a febrile political atmosphere, meaning lots of voters will notice it and think the government have done a good job to stand cost of living crisis on its head so quickly.

    Just to correct you, it’s energy behind the big drop. And the sequence of announcements is: 9th May interest rate cut announced, 10th May UK comes out of recession with very good first quarter growth, 22nd May Inflation will fall below 2%!

    To exploit this, Rishi Sunak is announcing the General Election date 1037hrs 13th May, for 2024 General Election is being held on 4th July. Parliament will end on 23rd May.

    The final vote shares will be CON33 LAB39 LDM16 REF3 GRN4 SNP2
    We have also seen a rise in unemployment levels to 4.2%. Back in the 1960s even 2% unemployment was viewed as high, and were we to remove the many adjustments made to such data - particularly in the 1980s - we would be looking at at least 5% unemployment in 1960s terms on a like for like basis. Todays level is only seen as acceptable because of the memories of it being much higher in the 1980s and 1990s - and again following the GFC.
    Energy prices have recently risen and the cost effect is likely to contribute to inflation moving higher again by late Summer or early Autumn.
    Inflation is now less than a third of where it stood a year or so ago yet the polls have not shifted at all. The idea that a further slight drop will change that seems more than a little optimistic from a Tory perspective.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,153
    Pulpstar said:

    Real Clear have handily kept their averages over time archived.

    https://www.realclearpolling.com/polls/president/general/2020/trump-vs-biden

    At this point in 2020 Biden +6.2, final RCP average Biden +7.2. Final result, Biden +4.5

    https://www.realclearpolling.com/polls/president/general/2024/trump-vs-biden

    At this point, Trump +1.4.

    I genuinely don't know who is going to win, but Trump is undeniably in a stronger position than he was back in 2016. Biden's approval is around the 40% mark too. I've green levelled on the pair of them for POTUS in my Betfair book, having been long Biden. Trump at 2.26 is a big price considering the polling.
    This is the argument I keep on making.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,559
    Taz said:

    How the SNP broke Scotland, from the Telegraph. Obviously not the most balanced of takes. I presume the SNP did some good too .

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/how-the-snp-broke-scotland/ar-AA1nUzga?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=8e4caeb7eded4e7094361cd25036be45&ei=10

    Episode two will be how new legislation broke the Telegraph.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,540
    IanB2 said:

    It looks like the mini-heatwave here ends tomorrow, so a lazy morning in the garden with a book and the Post Office inquiry for company…

    That dog wants a walk.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,475
    Ncuti Gatwa’s Doctor will explore his queerness, says RTD: ‘We’re not delivering a neutered Doctor’

    I have nothing but admiration for the ability of RTD to garner publicity for his show ahead of it dropping on the 11th May. He truly is a master at his craft. I have nothing but admiration for him. Also makes some decent Telly.

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/entertainment/tv/ncuti-gatwa-s-doctor-will-explore-his-queerness-says-rtd-we-re-not-delivering-a-neutered-doctor/ar-AA1nIFcc?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=90bd8d12f3df4143e059dd00337cd53d&ei=16
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Taz said:

    Another sinner repenting on matters of gender

    Starmer supports Rosie Duffield now however...

    In 2021, the Labour leader had criticised Ms Duffield for saying that only women have a cervix, saying that her comment “is something that shouldn’t be said. It’s not right”.

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/rosie-duffield-right-to-say-only-women-have-a-cervix-says-starmer/ar-AA1nV79p?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=e355acd57feb461fc92fab194b68f5c4&ei=30

    Some left wing men have fallen into the same trap as Billy Bragg - if sex realists / gender critics include women like Kemi Badenoch they must be “wrong”, when a little thinking could go a long way.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,585
    TimS said:

    My only visit was ill-timed, on a peak day in summer when the place was heaving with tourists. Still beautiful especially from a distance but the magic is dimmed when you're struggling up the streets being elbowed by fellow visitors. I was told then that the best thing is to stay overnight, as in so many tourist honeypots, and I can well imagine on a quiet sunny evening once all the day trippers have gone it would be wonderful.
    TimS said:

    My only visit was ill-timed, on a peak day in summer when the place was heaving with tourists. Still beautiful especially from a distance but the magic is dimmed when you're struggling up the streets being elbowed by fellow visitors. I was told then that the best thing is to stay overnight, as in so many tourist honeypots, and I can well imagine on a quiet sunny evening once all the day trippers have gone it would be wonderful.
    It’s fucking hideous. They should UNESCO list the tourist crowds. This is the queue just to get in the abbey


  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482
    This is quite a good article on AI regulation - more about how it should be used than limitations on development. The issues discussed don't really require Leon style excitement (so he'll probably argue it's all going to be rendered irrelevant).

    Are These States About to Make a Big Mistake on AI?
    AI is potentially transformative. Whether that’s a good or bad thing depends on whether we set the right rules.
    https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2024/04/30/ai-legislation-states-mistake-00155006
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,285
    edited April 2024

    Who suffers from chronic amnesia.
    They're very good at using corporate jargon though, like "reaching out", "escalate to", etc.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,156
    Taz said:

    God knows. It is not something I have extensively researched as I am quite squeamish anyway.

    I do wonder if we will get to the stage where transplants will be available ?
    I genuinely don't know, sorry :(
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,475

    Some left wing men have fallen into the same trap as Billy Bragg - if sex realists / gender critics include women like Kemi Badenoch they must be “wrong”, when a little thinking could go a long way.
    We are seeing a flood of people changing their tune on this matter. Problem is people have kept the receipts. Whatever people think of Rosie Duffields views she was treated appallingly by Labour over it. Ostracised and abused by online TRA's for daring to challenge their orthodoxy.

    People now changing their views because of the Cass report are just moral cowards. Weathervanes. It is not a case of changing views as the information had changed. It was all there in the first place.

    Billy Bragg is just a prick. Mansplaining feminism to real feminists. Women be quiet. A man is speaking.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Taz said:

    Ncuti Gatwa’s Doctor will explore his queerness, says RTD: ‘We’re not delivering a neutered Doctor’

    I have nothing but admiration for the ability of RTD to garner publicity for his show ahead of it dropping on the 11th May. He truly is a master at his craft. I have nothing but admiration for him. Also makes some decent Telly.

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/entertainment/tv/ncuti-gatwa-s-doctor-will-explore-his-queerness-says-rtd-we-re-not-delivering-a-neutered-doctor/ar-AA1nIFcc?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=90bd8d12f3df4143e059dd00337cd53d&ei=16

    Makes a change from extremely old Time Lord absconds with attractive teenage girl and places her in danger only he can save her from
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,475
    viewcode said:

    I genuinely don't know, sorry :(
    :smile:

    My question was more out of interest than personal need !!!!
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,585
    They will surely have to start charging simply to come here soon. As Venice has done

    I believe ex-PBer @SeanT predicted this: fees simply to enter famous destinations, towns, islands - in a piece for the Spec in 2016

    https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/caught-in-the-tourist-trap/

    “By the end of my autumnal travels, it occurred to me that there is one solution: the Bhutanese example. You ration travel, by time and money: you start to make people pay simply to get into cities, regions, nations”

    I bow to no-one in my futurology and extrapolations, but that is notably prescient: as Venice starts to charge simply for Venice
This discussion has been closed.