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Were some Tory MPs secretly lobotomised? – politicalbetting.com

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  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,105
    The Tory campaign off to a blinding start

    There really is a Labour mole in Richi's team, isn't there
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited May 2024

    Tice has chosen to lose in Boston and Skeggy

    Bad choice. He should have stood in Clacton.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    Scott_xP said:

    @AdamBienkov

    So Rishi Sunak just took a question from a hi-vis jacket-wearing man at a campaign event in a McVities warehouse.

    It turns out the man is actually local Conservative councillor Ross Hills.

    Hills just admitted to me to being asked to appear at the event

    Caught hobnobbing with a Tory councillor? That takes the biscuit.
  • This argument is irrelevant as nuclear weapons were not around at the start of WW2 and of course when they were around they were used . WW3 is important to stop and that means everyone saving face , WW2 less so. Trump is all about saving face , its what he understands more than anything given his ego and pride
    No, it does not mean everyone saving face, it means Putin needs to be defeated.

    America was defeated in Vietnam. They never saved face.
    The USSR was defeated in Afghanistan. They never saved face.
    America was defeated in Afghanistan. They never saved face.

    Stop worrying about saving face for Putin. He needs to be defeated instead.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,105
    @thetimes
    Jo Churchill, a junior minister in the Department for Work and Pensions, has become the 109th MP to announce they will not stand again at the general election, citing “family reasons”
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,834

    No, it does not mean everyone saving face, it means Putin needs to be defeated.

    America was defeated in Vietnam. They never saved face.
    The USSR was defeated in Afghanistan. They never saved face.
    America was defeated in Afghanistan. They never saved face.

    Stop worrying about saving face for Putin. He needs to be defeated instead.
    Do you think it was wrong to end the war in Korea?
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,072

    Caught hobnobbing with a Tory councillor? That takes the biscuit.
    It’s a bit of a shock we’ve got any left.
  • I thought Rory Stewart gave a very sound analysis of Russia in a recent podcast. At this point there's going to have be some kind of negotiated settlement, when that exactly will come is unclear but something is going to have to be negotiated eventually - so Stewart said. This seemed realistic based on where things are.

    No, there does not need to be a negotiated settlement, there needs to be a Russian surrender and Russia retreating back to their own borders.

    What negotiated settlement did America get in Vietnam, or Afghanistan?
    What negotiated settlement did the USSR get in Afghanistan?

    There is no reason whatsoever that foreign power, even superpowers (which Russia is not, the USSR was), have a divine right to a negotiated settlement.
  • FossFoss Posts: 1,394

    I thought Rory Stewart gave a very sound analysis of Russia in a recent podcast. At this point there's going to have be some kind of negotiated settlement, when that exactly will come is unclear but something is going to have to be negotiated eventually - so Stewart said. This seemed realistic based on where things are.

    Generally Nixon is not condemned for ending the Vietnamese war (and the inevitable subsequent collapse of the south Vietnamese regime), Nixon is condemned for getting in the way of it happening sooner.
  • Do you think it was wrong to end the war in Korea?
    I think its a shame for the people in North Korea, yes.

    Though over 70 years later NK remains a total pariah state and we have not negotiated normality with them.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,072
    Scott_xP said:

    @soph_husk

    Keir Starmer strongly pitching himself as the “normal person” candidate

    Not a bad line to take with voters when it emerged last week that Rishi Sunak is richer than the King…

    Naff politics from Starmer. Rishi Sunak being richer than the king means you don’t need to pitch yourself as being a pleb in comparison. Concentrate on explaining your policies instead.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933

    This argument is irrelevant as nuclear weapons were not around at the start of WW2 and of course when they were around they were used . WW3 is important to stop and that means everyone saving face , WW2 less so. Trump is all about saving face , its what he understands more than anything given his ego and pride . you cannot defeat a country with the biggest nuclear arsenal in the world despite wishful thinking, it needs an agreement
    Yet oddly enough that's exactly what the Taliban just did a few years ago, and what the North Vietnamese did in the 70s, and the Afghan Mujahideen in the 1980s.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    algarkirk said:

    All that is a given - just one of a range of problems that don't have solutions; but it is not relevant now. Elections in the modern era are not about ideological choices.

    On the whole the pragmatic Overton window has narrowed to a thin Romanesque lancet; while most of the issues engaging the public are filed under 'too difficult'. Like, tax, spend, debt, deficit, defence, NHS, social care, migration, housing, transport, post-Brexit deals, the submerged tenth, corruption in public life, and so on.
    For some people high immigration is a problem in itself, for others (like me) it is a symptom of some problems (ageing, skills shortages) and an exacerbator of others (housing shortages, underfunded public services). This difference in perspective suggests different solutions, but it doesn't mean that anyone thinks the issue isn't important.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161

    I thought Rory Stewart gave a very sound analysis of Russia in a recent podcast. At this point there's going to have be some kind of negotiated settlement, when that exactly will come is unclear but something is going to have to be negotiated eventually - so Stewart said. This seemed realistic based on where things are.

    There doesn't have to be a negotiated settlement. Is there a negotiated settlement on the Korean peninsula, between Taiwan and the mainland, between Israel and Palestine?

    Secondly, a negotiated settlement could be about the level of Russian reparations that would normalise relations after Russian forces had withdrawn from Ukraine, or about whether the rump of Western Ukraine centred on Lviv would join the EU after Russia had conquered the rest of the country.

    The difference between those two negotiated settlements being how well the war goes between now and then, and that being largely determined by how much external assistance Ukraine and Russia receive from their allies.

    So saying, "there has to be a negotiated settlement," doesn't really get you anywhere. It doesn't inform what action you should take next.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,700
    Scott_xP said:

    @thetimes
    Jo Churchill, a junior minister in the Department for Work and Pensions, has become the 109th MP to announce they will not stand again at the general election, citing “family reasons”

    Halifax Labour MP Holly Lynch is also stepping down for family reasons,
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,169
    Andy_JS said:

    Yes I think so.
    That's nice. It will give Aaron something to do for six weeks before @Tissue_Price posts again.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    🚨 NEW: During Labour Party's election campaign launch this morning, Keir Starmer said that his dad was a toolmaker.
    HUGE if true
  • Leon said:

    And yet somehow we are told that as soon as Labour wins, this issue - migration - will disappear, magically, because Labour are in power and once we have David Lammy in Downing Street no one will care about immigration just because

    These two things cannot be true. I submit that immigration is going to be an enormous and immediate migraine for the new govt, and I am right
    Nothing magic about it, migration plummeted as an issue following 23/06/2016.

    Net migration of over 1.2 million people in the past two years and the overwhelming majority of the country, unlike you, just shrugs their shoulders and gets on with their life and doesn't care obsessively.

    Most people do care about other things like can they get a GP appointment, or the state of their roads, or can they get a train, or can they get a house etc - migration without corresponding investment does make those problems worse, but its entirely possible to have a growing population and have those problems get better not worse - indeed we've done so for centuries.

    Failing to invest in infrastructure, failure to construct enough housing etc is a political choice not an economic or demographic necessity.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782

    I thought Rory Stewart gave a very sound analysis of Russia in a recent podcast. At this point there's going to have be some kind of negotiated settlement, when that exactly will come is unclear but something is going to have to be negotiated eventually - so Stewart said. This seemed realistic based on where things are.

    This was true a year ago, as some of us pointed out, and we got called "fucking appeasers" for our sins. And it is still true today, only with about 200,000 more corpses
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,918
    edited May 2024
    eek said:

    so the girl who died in a landslide yesterday was on a school residential trip from the local non-church primary school

    Yes, that's a bit of a shocker.

    Carlton Bank has had landslides in the past I think, and there's an Alum quarry which was supposedly stabilised about 30 years ago.

    I've been up there with a mountain bike and whilst it is steep I don't think I'd have thought of mudslides as an obvious problem if assessing risks.

    It certainly isn't Rest and Be Thankful levels of hazard.

    Hard to say any more without knowing exactly what happened.
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    TimS said:

    Yet oddly enough that's exactly what the Taliban just did a few years ago, and what the North Vietnamese did in the 70s, and the Afghan Mujahideen in the 1980s.
    sometimes the imbalance between enemies (like the ones you mention ) is so great , the big guy can go away without much fuss (its a bit like giving in as a parent to a kid , the parent can still maintain they are control of the decision ) - The difficulty is when enemies are more equal in status, then the "loser" cannot claim control and destiny without losing face - unfortunately thats the position we are in with Russia and The West now - there needs an agreement and no side will get all they want but importantly it will be enough for both sides - Trump I suggest is more of this mindset than the current western leaders
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933

    🚨 NEW: During Labour Party's election campaign launch this morning, Keir Starmer said that his dad was a toolmaker.
    HUGE if true

    Apparently in a recent poll only a small minority of people were aware of this despite it having been repeated ad infinitum. More people knew about Rishi's father in law.

    I think the election campaign will actually be the first time many voters get to know anything meaningful about Starmer or Labour policy, and likewise Ed Davey. The big question is whether that warms them to the two men or puts them off, relative to how their views of Sunak evolve.
  • WildernessPt2WildernessPt2 Posts: 715
    algarkirk said:

    All that is a given - just one of a range of problems that don't have solutions; but it is not relevant now. Elections in the modern era are not about ideological choices.

    On the whole the pragmatic Overton window has narrowed to a thin Romanesque lancet; while most of the issues engaging the public are filed under 'too difficult'. Like, tax, spend, debt, deficit, defence, NHS, social care, migration, housing, transport, post-Brexit deals, the submerged tenth, corruption in public life, and so on.
    Corruption in public life is pretty close to non existent and clamped down heavily when uncovered. Unless you have evidence to the contrary.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933

    sometimes the imbalance between enemies (like the ones you mention ) is so great , the big guy can go away without much fuss (its a bit like giving in as a parent to a kid , the parent can still maintain they are control of the decision ) - The difficulty is when enemies are more equal in status, then the "loser" cannot claim control and destiny without losing face - unfortunately thats the position we are in with Russia and The West now - there needs an agreement and no side will get all they want but importantly it will be enough for both sides - Trump I suggest is more of this mindset than the current western leaders
    Ukraine and Russia are not equal in status. Ukraine is very similar in status to North Vietnam. Russian "trainers" were flying sorties over Vietnam for heaven's sake!
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    TimS said:

    Apparently in a recent poll only a small minority of people were aware of this despite it having been repeated ad infinitum. More people knew about Rishi's father in law.

    I think the election campaign will actually be the first time many voters get to know anything meaningful about Starmer or Labour policy, and likewise Ed Davey. The big question is whether that warms them to the two men or puts them off, relative to how their views of Sunak evolve.
    Nobody thinks he's working class no matter how much he cosplays it. Rayner, yes. Knight of the realm, not so much
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    TimS said:

    Ukraine and Russia are not equal in status. Ukraine is very similar in status to North Vietnam. Russian "trainers" were flying sorties over Vietnam for heaven's sake!
    I said Russia and the West - Its not about Ukraine and Russia - as i said the two sides are of very equal status
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    Leon said:

    This was true a year ago, as some of us pointed out, and we got called "fucking appeasers" for our sins. And it is still true today, only with about 200,000 more corpses
    How, precisely, would you have forced Putin to the negotiating table a year ago?
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,622
    edited May 2024

    That's nice. It will give Aaron something to do for six weeks before @Tissue_Price posts again.
    Can we book @Tissue_Price for a "WTF happened" explanatory header on July 6th?

    :wink: :

    (It says he was active in March '24)
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782

    Nothing magic about it, migration plummeted as an issue following 23/06/2016.

    Net migration of over 1.2 million people in the past two years and the overwhelming majority of the country, unlike you, just shrugs their shoulders and gets on with their life and doesn't care obsessively.

    Most people do care about other things like can they get a GP appointment, or the state of their roads, or can they get a train, or can they get a house etc - migration without corresponding investment does make those problems worse, but its entirely possible to have a growing population and have those problems get better not worse - indeed we've done so for centuries.

    Failing to invest in infrastructure, failure to construct enough housing etc is a political choice not an economic or demographic necessity.
    No, it's nonsense. Polls show that migration is resurging as an issue

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13448151/Immigration-living-costs-NHS-key-issues-Rishi-Keir-need-convince-say-voters-despite-split-party-theyre-united-one-thing-Britain-ready-polls.html

    And why? Because voters are only now waking up to the scale of what is happening


    "Cut immigration levels, say voters in nine out of 10 constituencies
    Polling also shows public underestimating scale of net migration by almost 10 times"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2024/01/13/cut-immigration-levels-voters-nine-of-10-constituencies/
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,475
    edited May 2024

    Corruption in public life is pretty close to non existent and clamped down heavily when uncovered. Unless you have evidence to the contrary.
    I think the UK is pretty good for having minimal out and out corruption, unlike a lot of countries. In general, promising a load of cash as a backhander doesn't really work here. There is plenty of what I would suggest is soft corruption, of you do this for me and you will then be the preferred option for that, I am golfing mates or school / uni friends with this guy who will get my son a prime internship in government / big organisation.

    Where the UK also seems very bad is the failing upwards / sideways and how organisations will close ranks and protect / lie / obfuscate until the bitter end. There seem little punishment for failure, at worst you resign (still get your payoff) and a year or two later there you are back again at the top of another organisation.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,454
    Leon said:

    Er, Rog, there's this thing called a Digital Nomad Visa. Do try and keep up

    https://www.exteriores.gob.es/Consulados/londres/en/ServiciosConsulares/Paginas/Consular/Digital-Nomad-Visa.aspx
    They're mostly creatives. How many of those do you think have graduate or post graduate degrees? And in any case it's just for Spain. The Austrian one which gives full EU status including a second passport to anyone with great grandparents or the progeny thereof is more interesting. Doesn't work for me but apparently it's working for plenty of others
  • Nigelb said:

    Halifax Labour MP Holly Lynch is also stepping down for family reasons,
    I rather suspect the family circumstances are rather different.

    Lynch is the 37 year old mother to a young son, and it's interesting she's decided not to go again with Labour on the brink of power - it probably is quite genuinely related to the burden placed on the family of an MP (particularly for a constituency a long way from Westminster).

    Churchill is (not to be indelicate) 60 years old. She'd be very likely to be returned even in current circumstances (Bury St Edmunds is a plum seat). But she's never going to serve in government again. Even if the Tories got back in at first time of asking, which is unlikely, she'd be yesterday's woman. Slightly early retirement may well just be a more attractive option for her than a thankless, aimless slog on the backbenches of a fractious opposition party.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085

    Corruption in public life is pretty close to non existent and clamped down heavily when uncovered. Unless you have evidence to the contrary.
    Is this a joke? You are new to this site I see and I wonder if you’re here for nefarious reasons?

    Greenshill - Mr David Cameron the now Foreign Secretary in particular.
    Michelle Mone
    The Post Office
    Water companies syphoning off investment to shareholders
    Operations Midland and Conifer and the subsequent jobs for boys in blue e.g. promotion to the head of the NCA
    Peerages for donations

    Actually, do I really need to go on? The list is endless. Deplorable corruption akin to a third world country.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933

    I said Russia and the West - Its not about Ukraine and Russia - as i said the two sides are of very equal status
    Why is that any different from the USSR and the West in both Vietnam or Afghanistan, which were the two examples I mentioned?

    If you're in the imperialist "Ukraine is a proxy war" camp then Vietnam and Afghanistan were absolutely proxy wars.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,521
    (((Dan Hodges)))
    @DPJHodges
    ·
    33m
    Dangerously dark mood amongst Tory MPs. Cold fury at what they see as Sunak bouncing them into an unwinnable election. Does not bode well for unity during the campaign. Would be amazed if we don’t see some sort of rupture before polling day.

    https://x.com/DPJHodges/status/1793589139297935484
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,622
    edited May 2024
    Good morning everyone, just.

    I feel a distraction is required - Beach Bollards.

    https://x.com/WorldBollard/status/1792955144855859358

    Why does @Leon not collect photos of bollards he sees as he perambulates the planet on his progressions?

    They beat Numerous Noomorous castles to a cocked hat.
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    edited May 2024

    I think the UK is pretty good for having minimal out and out corruption, unlike a lot of countries. In general, promising a load of cash as a backhander doesn't really work here. There is plenty of what I would suggest is soft corruption, of you do this for me and you will then be the preferred option for that.

    Where the UK also seems very bad is the failing upwards / sideways and how organisations will close ranks and protect / lie / obfuscate until the bitter end.
    yes its a form of established and legal corruption - even encouraged in a lot of public and even third sector bodies .
    Even encouraged in law - If you want to leave a job try making a nuisance of yourself and doing stuff just below gross misconduct level and you will get 6 months payoff - dont just be a good employee and hand your notice in .We are a weak society now for bad behaviour being rewarded
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    edited May 2024
    He's right


    "Make no mistake: the latest immigration statistics represent the biggest failure in public policy in modern British history, surpassing even the 1992 sterling crisis when the UK Government was forced to withdraw sterling from the European Exchange Rate Mechanism."

    This is why the Tories are going to be obliterated

    https://x.com/technopopulist/status/1793575619315319188

    He adds:

    "Of course, the term "failure" needs to be qualified here. It suggests that the Tory party genuinely tried to control our borders, and that the increase in non-EU migrants is the result of some administrative error or hiccup in the Home Office. This, I am afraid, is not the case. The reason we have record-breaking levels of mass immigration is that the Conservative government intended it to be so. It was a purposeful policy, not a failure of policy. What evidence do I have for this? Well, firstly, look at the actual policies that were implemented. The Tories:

    - abolished the annual cap on non-EU workers.
    - expanded overseas recruitment for lower-skilled jobs like migrant care workers.
    - scrapped the Resident Labour Market Test.
    - expanded the Shortage Occupation List.
    - reduced the general salary threshold.
    - outsourced student admissions to British universities.
    - extended post-graduation stays for international students.
    - initiated a recruitment drive for postgraduate students from Nigeria and India.
    - expanded humanitarian visas without a numerical cap or a time limit.
    - refused to abolish the Human Rights Act, knowing full well that the courts would challenge the Rwanda Plan on non-refoulement grounds."
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,454
    Farooq said:

    What a striking image. Excellent.

    Thinking on it, Sunak should have had a huge union fleg brolly. Harder to criticise him showing his patriotism etc etc.
    He'd look like he was standing for the EDF. He might as well have walked out flanked by Braverman and Patel. (But yes. A great shot)
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,475
    edited May 2024
    Leon said:

    He's right


    "Make no mistake: the latest immigration statistics represent the biggest failure in public policy in modern British history, surpassing even the 1992 sterling crisis when the UK Government was forced to withdraw sterling from the European Exchange Rate Mechanism."

    This is why the Tories are going to be obliterated

    https://x.com/technopopulist/status/1793575619315319188

    500-600k a year of people leaving. Would be interested to know who those people are.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012

    For some people high immigration is a problem in itself, for others (like me) it is a symptom of some problems (ageing, skills shortages) and an exacerbator of others (housing shortages, underfunded public services). This difference in perspective suggests different solutions, but it doesn't mean that anyone thinks the issue isn't important.
    Of course, but as with a number of issues neither major party gains an advantage by drawing unnecessary attention to issues where either there is no solution, or no solution that doesn't divide the voters they need.

    What we shall not find (I suggest) is Labour coming out with a clear migration policy, with numbers, which shows clear water between them and the Tories. On the 'boats' where a line is unavoidable, both parties have differing and utterly bogus (Rwanda v better enforcement) lines.

    Nearly all migration is of course unrelated to the boats.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    Stats like this are just mindboggling

    "total net migration in the whole of the 1980s and 1990s was 606,000. In short the UK is experiencing more net immigration in a single year than we had in the last two decades of the 20th century."

  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,862

    (((Dan Hodges)))
    @DPJHodges
    ·
    33m
    Dangerously dark mood amongst Tory MPs. Cold fury at what they see as Sunak bouncing them into an unwinnable election. Does not bode well for unity during the campaign. Would be amazed if we don’t see some sort of rupture before polling day.

    https://x.com/DPJHodges/status/1793589139297935484

    Seeing how utterly terrified these Tory MPs are of democracy is very unedifying.

    Anyway they'll soon all be off to their individual constituencies (if they can remember where to find them) to explain themselves...
  • Do you think it was wrong to end the war in Korea?
    Being pedantic about it, the war in Korea hasn't ended in the sense there was never a peace treaty. The shooting (largely) stopped and there was an armistice agreement for the cessation of a hot war whilst a peace treaty was hammered out... but it never was.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,475
    edited May 2024

    yes its a form of established and legal corruption - even encouraged in a lot of public and even third sector bodies .
    Even encouraged in law - If you want to leave a job try making a nuisance of yourself and doing stuff just below gross misconduct level and you will get 6 months payoff - dont just be a good employee and hand your notice in .We are a weak society now for bad behaviour being rewarded
    My understanding now is that references for jobs are practically worthless as no employer dares say anything bad about a previous employee. So again this just allow people to behaviour poorly and bullshit their way into a similar job. At best all you can infer from a reference is the lack of extremely positive words probably means the last employer didn't rate them that highly (but for what reason, is unknown).
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    edited May 2024
    Leon said:

    Stats like this are just mindboggling

    "total net migration in the whole of the 1980s and 1990s was 606,000. In short the UK is experiencing more net immigration in a single year than we had in the last two decades of the 20th century."

    Yes very true - Its odd because the UK State loves control and planning and the one area it seems to shy away from this is the one area control and planning makes sense - Maybe its the emotion side but its a severe failing of the state in the last 20 years
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,475
    edited May 2024
    Leon said:

    Stats like this are just mindboggling

    "total net migration in the whole of the 1980s and 1990s was 606,000. In short the UK is experiencing more net immigration in a single year than we had in the last two decades of the 20th century."

    But we are going to spend 6 weeks talking about 10,000 people arriving via small boats, in which neither party has a real plan to change this anyway.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,834
    MattW said:

    Good morning everyone, just.

    I feel a distraction is required - Beach Bollards.

    That's an accident waiting to happen if someone confuses them for inflatables.
  • That's an accident waiting to happen if someone confuses them for inflatables.
    An hilarious accident, but an accident nonetheless.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    MattW said:

    Good morning everyone, just.

    I feel a distraction is required - Beach Bollards.

    Why does @Leon not collect photos of bollards he sees as he perambulates the planet on his progressions?

    They beat Numerous Noomorous castles to a cocked hat.

    I try not to clog up the board by intervening in these sorts of disputes, but I feel compelled to say that I value the wonderful photos of old castles and other random old places, and if Leon switched to bollards I think something inside me would wither and die.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,622

    An hilarious accident, but an accident nonetheless.
    Isn't it an old prank to fill a punctured football with concrete and just leave it somewhere?
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,169
    Farooq said:

    So, what exactly IS the problem of relying on nuclear weapons for defence [against conventional wars]?

    For a long time we've been told that nukes are a deterrent against being attacked [by states]. Was this always a lie?
    Yes, put like that, it was a lie. Nuclear weapons are to deter attacks by nuclear weapons, via MAD. They are not for using which is just as well because they probably will not work (as shown by recent tests) but our enemies, the French, cannot be 100 per cent sure our weapons will not work. Just as we doubt Russia's weapons have been properly maintained but cannot risk finding out.

    How many wars has Britain been involved in where we did not use nuclear weapons? A dozen or so? We did not use nuclear weapons in the Falklands, the Middle East, Sierra Leone to name but three. Nuclear missiles are for having, not using. A bit like cakes.

    Unfortunately, four decades of Tory defence cuts have left our conventional armed forces depleted. We have aircraft carriers that cannot both work at the same time because we do not have enough planes, and also because one of them is always needing repair. Nor do we have enough ships to sail alongside the carriers, or sailors to drive the boats. Ditto the RAF where even the Red Arrows have shrunk, and the army is now little more than the SAS and some lorries parked in Catterick.
  • RattersRatters Posts: 1,300
    Feels like some of big structural questions resolved quickly:

    - Farage not around so Reform won't get the same publicity
    - Reform standing in all seats in Britain means they'll pick up a modest protest vote given high migration, but not sufficient to win any seats
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Swinney is backing Matheson after the recommended suspension. I suspect this is his Owen Patterson moment
  • GIN1138 said:

    Seeing how utterly terrified these Tory MPs are of democracy is very unedifying.

    Anyway they'll soon all be off to their individual constituencies (if they can remember where to find them) to explain themselves...
    Indeed. They can mutter darkly about it for the next few days. But then they are back in their constituencies for the hard slog of trying to hang on. I'm not sure how a "rupture" comes about - the die is cast and it's every man for himself until polling day.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,475

    Swinney is backing Matheson after the recommended suspension. I suspect this is his Owen Patterson moment

    Good job there isn't any elections coming up....
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,169
    Andy_JS said:

    Don't know but Betfair Exchange has set up markets for about 50 constituencies so far.

    https://www.betfair.com/exchange/plus/en/politics/uk-general-election-key-constituencies-betting-33295556
    Here is the list of Betfair constituencies as of last night:-

    Aldershot
    Amber Valley
    Ashford
    Aylesbury

    Banbury
    Basingstoke
    Bracknell
    Brecon, Radnor and Cwm Tawe
    Bromley and Biggin Hill
    Buckingham and Bletchley
    Burton and Uttoxeter

    Chester South and Eddisbury
    Chippenham
    Croydon South

    Didcot and Wantage

    Epsom and Ewell

    Forest of Dean

    Great Yarmouth

    Harborough, Oadby and Wigston
    Harrogate and Knaresborough
    Harrow East
    Henley and Thame
    Horsham

    Isle of Wight West

    Kettering

    Lowestoft

    Mansfield
    Morecambe and Lunesdale

    Newark
    Newbury
    Newcastle-under-Lyme
    North Cornwall
    North Devon
    North Somerset
    North West Cambridgeshire
    North West Leicestershire

    Redditch
    Ribble Valley
    Romford
    Rugby
    Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner

    Sherwood Forest
    Stafford
    Staffordshire Moorlands

    Tamworth
    Thornbury and Yate
    Tunbridge Wells

    Wellingborough and Rushden
    Weston-Super-Mare

    York Outer

    All Sports > Politics > UK - General Election - Key Constituencies
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,622
    edited May 2024

    I try not to clog up the board by intervening in these sorts of disputes, but I feel compelled to say that I value the wonderful photos of old castles and other random old places, and if Leon switched to bollards I think something inside me would wither and die.
    On balance I will let you have both ... and.

    A bonus just for you. Child-protecting Pencil Bollards of Dublin.

    (I'd put them further out, make the footway wider, and add a cycle track. But Dublin, Belfast and Ashfield are not there yet.)

    https://x.com/WorldBollard/status/1629791158573383680?lang=en-GB

    (Has PB stopped creating pixel-puzzles? We can post pictures of Go boards now.)
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782

    I try not to clog up the board by intervening in these sorts of disputes, but I feel compelled to say that I value the wonderful photos of old castles and other random old places, and if Leon switched to bollards I think something inside me would wither and die.
    Very kind of you, and you're welcome. And I enjoy posting them - please tell the powers that be that one photo a day is an unnecessary limit, perhaps, if we are using an external site to host the photos and putting them here with html

    Because in the morning I might see a screenshot of a Tweet that deserves to be posted, and then later the conversation comes round to history and I have a really good inage to show, and I won't be able to do so

    I completely get the idea we don't want to burden Vanilla, but if we are not using Vanilla to post the images?
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,509
    MattW said:

    Good morning everyone, just.

    I feel a distraction is required - Beach Bollards.

    https://x.com/WorldBollard/status/1792955144855859358

    Why does @Leon not collect photos of bollards he sees as he perambulates the planet on his progressions?

    They beat Numerous Noomorous castles to a cocked hat.

    For some bizarre reason my wife insisted on being photographed next to the (7) different coloured hydrants as we toured New England (different colour for each state). She seemed to have got over it for the Las Vegas trip (3 states).
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422

    Swinney is backing Matheson after the recommended suspension. I suspect this is his Owen Patterson moment

    Extraordinary decision by John Swinney. He questions the integrity of the Standards, Procedures and Public Appointments Committee of the Scottish Parliament, and rejects its proposed sanction of Michael Matheson.

    https://x.com/staylorish/status/1793602143640842281
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,502

    Yes, put like that, it was a lie. Nuclear weapons are to deter attacks by nuclear weapons, via MAD. They are not for using which is just as well because they probably will not work (as shown by recent tests) but our enemies, the French, cannot be 100 per cent sure our weapons will not work. Just as we doubt Russia's weapons have been properly maintained but cannot risk finding out.

    How many wars has Britain been involved in where we did not use nuclear weapons? A dozen or so? We did not use nuclear weapons in the Falklands, the Middle East, Sierra Leone to name but three. Nuclear missiles are for having, not using. A bit like cakes.

    Unfortunately, four decades of Tory defence cuts have left our conventional armed forces depleted. We have aircraft carriers that cannot both work at the same time because we do not have enough planes, and also because one of them is always needing repair. Nor do we have enough ships to sail alongside the carriers, or sailors to drive the boats. Ditto the RAF where even the Red Arrows have shrunk, and the army is now little more than the SAS and some lorries parked in Catterick.
    The military budget was quite sufficient from 1979 -91. We have a big military budget, but it's not big enough to do everything that governments expect it to do. Either it has to be increased, or else, some things must be axed, and other things funded to the max.
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,955
    MattW said:

    Good morning everyone, just.

    I feel a distraction is required - Beach Bollards.

    https://x.com/WorldBollard/status/1792955144855859358

    Why does @Leon not collect photos of bollards he sees as he perambulates the planet on his progressions?

    They beat Numerous Noomorous castles to a cocked hat.

    Wouldn't be the first time seeing a load of old bollards posted on here...
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Habib going again in Wellingborough for Reform.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,305
    Scott_xP said:

    The Tory campaign off to a blinding start

    There really is a Labour mole in Richi's team, isn't there

    Are we going to have 6 weeks of you Scott & Pasting your vapid bilge on here 60-70 times a day?
  • GarethoftheVale2GarethoftheVale2 Posts: 2,293

    Oxbridge educated journalist with a degree in PPE....not enough of those in parliament.
    In terms of my local patch,Berkshire, I'm thinking the following:

    Reading Central - very safe Lab hold
    Slough - Lab hold but could see a relatively good Con performance due to the council issues and Gaza
    Earley and Woodley - I guess Lab gain but on a low share with very split opposition
    Bracknell - Lab would take on current polls but they've said it's not a target seat and haven't selected a candidate

    Wokingham & Newbury - the 2 main LD targets. Boundary changes make Newbury a bit better and Wokingham a bit worse for them. Again depends on national polls and if Con can squeeze reform

    Maidenhead, Windsor and Reading W & Mid Berks - Con holds unless complete meltdown. I can't see LDs having the resources to target these as well as the 2 above and Labour don't have enough local strength in any of them to squeeze the LDs out.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,305
    Ratters said:

    Feels like some of big structural questions resolved quickly:

    - Farage not around so Reform won't get the same publicity
    - Reform standing in all seats in Britain means they'll pick up a modest protest vote given high migration, but not sufficient to win any seats

    Reform on between 4-6% is my guess, and less in the key marginals.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    MattW said:

    Good morning everyone, just.

    I feel a distraction is required - Beach Bollards.

    https://x.com/WorldBollard/status/1792955144855859358

    Why does @Leon not collect photos of bollards he sees as he perambulates the planet on his progressions?

    They beat Numerous Noomorous castles to a cocked hat.

    THose are lethal - drunk tourists will kick them ...
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,664

    NEW THREAD

  • glwglw Posts: 10,363
    TimS said:

    What we do when Russia invades Latvia, and a Trump-led US sits back and decides not to get involved. UK, France, Germany, Poland and our Nordic neighbours need to get a move on. Poland and the Nordics are already on the case, but the rest of us are still in denial.

    Starmer's pitch for the general election reminds me a lot of Boris in 2019. Blathering on about all the nice things they are going to do and spend money on in the next Parliament. I suspect that events will intervene and the UK will have to find a lot more money very quickly to spend on defence and the Labour government will have to put all the nice things on the back burner.

    Starmer has a mere 6 months to prepare for a full on crisis if Trump is re-elected. If that's not the first thing he sits down to do the man is a fool.
  • BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 4,786
    edited May 2024
    Moved to other thread
  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586

    (((Dan Hodges)))
    @DPJHodges
    ·
    33m
    Dangerously dark mood amongst Tory MPs. Cold fury at what they see as Sunak bouncing them into an unwinnable election. Does not bode well for unity during the campaign. Would be amazed if we don’t see some sort of rupture before polling day.

    https://x.com/DPJHodges/status/1793589139297935484

    He was seeing off a putsch. If that's not true it's at least likely enough that you would expect to see the possibility discussed by mainstream commentators
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,955
    Sean_F said:

    With Farage taking no part, I'll stand by my prediction that Reform will amount to very little, and will poll about the same as the Referendum Party.

    Will reform voters return to the Conservatives, or will they be more likely to stay at home - a plague on all your houses etc.

    Could be interesting in terms of betting on overall turnout.

    On the one hand, I think it's going to be high, just based on the sheer numbers of people I know IRL who are hopping mad - many of them traditional Conservative voters - and want a change.

    On the other hand I wonder how many of those traditional Conservative voters will just stay at home this time, and as for reform voters, whose primary motivation seems to be immigration, will they really come back to a Conservative party that's allowing a net immigration figure of six or seven hundred thousand annually (with absolutely no infrastructure development to back it up)?

    Immigration is simply a numerical problem at this point. We are importing far, far more people than we have housing, transport, health, education capacity, etc, and none of the main parties seems to have a scooby what to do about it.

    I still like my idea of passing a law that caps annual immigration at the annual rate of housebuilding. No new places, no new spaces. My guess is this would lead to very rapid planning reform...
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,622
    Leon said:


    Very kind of you, and you're welcome. And I enjoy posting them - please tell the powers that be that one photo a day is an unnecessary limit, perhaps, if we are using an external site to host the photos and putting them here with html

    We have a limit? Perhaps I'm just naturally not-annoying-sometimes and have not been banned therefore.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Leon said:

    Stats like this are just mindboggling

    "total net migration in the whole of the 1980s and 1990s was 606,000. In short the UK is experiencing more net immigration in a single year than we had in the last two decades of the 20th century."

    Starmer will have to do something about it, whether his party likes it or not.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Extraordinary decision by John Swinney. He questions the integrity of the Standards, Procedures and Public Appointments Committee of the Scottish Parliament, and rejects its proposed sanction of Michael Matheson.

    https://x.com/staylorish/status/1793602143640842281
    Haven't read it in detail, no Twitter, but AIUI two Tories on the committee were involved in making partisan attacks beforehand (before it formally came to the committee, but that could have been expected). The fact that one of them recused himself for that very reason (and was rseplaced by another precisely because the latter had not made any such comments) rather throws a poor light on the other one, who did not follow suit.
  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586
    NEW THREAD
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,319
    MattW said:

    On balance I will let you have both ... and.

    A bonus just for you. Child-protecting Pencil Bollards of Dublin.

    (I'd put them further out, make the footway wider, and add a cycle track. But Dublin, Belfast and Ashfield are not there yet.)

    https://x.com/WorldBollard/status/1629791158573383680?lang=en-GB

    (Has PB stopped creating pixel-puzzles? We can post pictures of Go boards now.)
    2 photos, ur fucked m8.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,281
    edited May 2024
    Leon said:

    HOW have the Tories so COMPLETELY lost control of immigration???

    Reasons are as follows
    • I) Our current ruling classes have no tie to the physical United Kingdom, either living in other countries (Andrew Neil, Stanley Johnson, David Miliband, Nick Clegg) or wanting to (Rishi Sunak). It does not matter to them in the UK is shit
    • II) Enshittification. Having taken on large debt from foreign powers, the UK has to be forced to grow to service that debt
    • III) Distance of the political class from the working class, as previously discussed
    • IV) Cargo-cult management of abstractions. By becoming reliant on indicators on a screen they attempt to tune the economy to those indicators, whilst neglecting the things that really matter to people.
    • V) other stuff I forgot
    So they don't know how to run an economy, consider their clients to be foreigners not the locals, don't know the locals enough to assess anyway, and will fuck off when it becomes too difficult.

    I could throw this into a PowerPoint if you'd like.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,700

    Do you think it was wrong to end the war in Korea?
    The Koreans didn't, which is the point.
    Similarly in Vietnam and Afghanistan.

    In sharp contrast, Ukraine does not wish to give in to Putin, and that remains the case.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    viewcode said:

    Reasons are as follows

    I) Our current ruling classes have no tie to the physical United Kingdom, either living in other countries (Andrew Neil, Stanley Johnson, David Miliband, Nick Clegg) or wanting to (Rishi Sunak). It does not matter to them in the UK is shit
    Ii) Enshittification. Having taken on large debt from foreign powers, the UK has to be forced to grow to service that debt
    Iii) Distance of the political class from the working class, as previously discussed
    Iv) Cargo-cult management of abstractions. By becoming reliant on indicators on a screen they attempt to tune the economy to those indicators, whilst neglecting the things that really matter to people.
    V) other stuff I forgot

    So they don't know how to run an economy, consider their clients to be foreigners not the locals, don't know the locals enough to assess anyway, and will fuck off when it becomes too difficult.

    I could throw this into a PowerPoint if you'd like.
    Interesting points, thanks VC.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,169
    edited May 2024

    (((Dan Hodges)))
    @DPJHodges
    ·
    33m
    Dangerously dark mood amongst Tory MPs. Cold fury at what they see as Sunak bouncing them into an unwinnable election. Does not bode well for unity during the campaign. Would be amazed if we don’t see some sort of rupture before polling day.

    https://x.com/DPJHodges/status/1793589139297935484

    For this reason I still half-believe the election will be in January and yesterday's announcement was just a dream, as a July election is clearly against the interests of the Conservative Party and also of Conservative MPs. It is the type of half-cocked, spur of the moment decision associated with the sort of man who absent-mindedly steps out into the rain without an umbrella.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,700

    Being pedantic about it, the war in Korea hasn't ended in the sense there was never a peace treaty. The shooting (largely) stopped and there was an armistice agreement for the cessation of a hot war whilst a peace treaty was hammered out... but it never was.
    Leon would have negotiated a 'deal' when N Korean forces surrounded Busan, I guess.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,917

    We're only eighteen and a half hours into the election campaign. Certainly seems like the Tories as a whole are less keen on the election than Labour and Lib Dems, but give them a couple of days to contemplate a Labour landslide and they may well come out scrapping a bit harder than it looks like at the moment.
    Most likely scrapping with one another, though.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,281

    ...the sort of man who absent-mindedly steps out into the rain without an umbrella.

    He didn't absent-mindedly step out into the rain without an umbrella. He deliberately, and in full knowledge of the situation, walked out into the rain, spoke, and continued to speak without caring that he was becoming increasingly soaking wet and ridiculous.

    Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, everybody. :(
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,291

    Scott was a passionate supporter of Cameron and Osborne before Brexit.
    William was a passionate supporter of Remain before Brexit.
This discussion has been closed.