Howdy, Stranger!

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

Bookmark this post and these tweets – politicalbetting.com

14567810»

Comments

  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,283

    My favourite bit is where Next slips into the water following Gorman exploding. I just think it’s a clever bit of writing. I know films don’t bind their successors ( a bit like parliaments) but the tragedy of Alien 3 rendering everything that had been achieved in Aliens void was awful. And don’t get me started on Alien Resurrection.
    We all pretend Alien3 didn't happen.

    It is the right thing to do.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516
    Ghedebrav said:

    Certainly pedalling a lot of nonsense.
    A chain of events.
  • megasaur said:

    It's more that you can't prevent it from doing so
    Unless you specifically turn it off. But he clearly wouldn’t have a clue how to do that.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    There are some pretty inferior names on your list, notably the more recent ones.
    It was never the same since Mr Addison carked it. Now that chap knew how to write.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,936
    edited May 2024
    MJW said:

    Obviously it's not as simple as the Tories didn't just "implement the decision of the voters" but advocated for it. Without Boris, Gove, Cummings, Farage et al the 'Leave' vote itself doesn't happen. Without advocating for specific self-harming forms of Brexit to satisfy parts of the Tory Party post-vote, they don't happen.

    If you think Brexit was/is a terrible idea - as lots (even more than in 2019) do now. Then regardless of what comes next, or whether you understand why some ordinary voters voted the way they did. You're not going to forgive, trust, or easily vote for the people who were its chief advocates. Not least when one of their chief political tactics since 2016 has been insulting you.

    It's in some ways the same problem as Jeremy Corbyn. People are reticent to vote for people who make it seem like they don't like them very much. In his case it was British institutions, symbols and those who put value in them.

    In the case of the Tories that's quite a large swathe of the country that they have spent much of the past decade insulting and portraying as "not real Britain" because they happen to hold liberal views, think leaving the EU is a shit idea, or this week, merely have the temerity to be young.

    Novel idea. But maybe if the Tories tried to understand why they've become so hated among parts of the electorate they never used to be quite so decisively disliked in, they might not be in this mess.
    It's more than that though.
    There are many in the Tory Party who are still fervently convinced they speak for the "silent majority". Brexit vote re-inforced that belief. The unfiltered common sense of Middle England. They think they are Centrists.
    And that if it wasn't for lefty, liberal blobs and luvvies nowt they do could possibly go wrong.
    Until they are firmly and finally disabused of that notion, then there can be no self-reflection.
    They need to lose big time.
    How insufferable and downright bizarre, corrupt, incompetent and brazen would they be with five more years?
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,340
    edited May 2024

    Its possible - everything is in todays politics. But at the moment the polls do not show that. So if the Tories end up near the 200 mark then its a cataclysmic failure of the entire polling industry.
    More likely a massive slip on the shiny floor that SKS is currently carrying the Ming vase over.

    After all, we also have the recent by-elections and the results of the locals, which are all telling roughly the same story. To get to 200 seats, the Conservatives have to hold on in places like Swindon North, places that fall on a thirteen percent swing. (Apols, can't subtract 200 from 370.)

    It's a future event, it's possible, but chinny reckon.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,936
    EPG said:

    His next job could be in cyber.
    Hopefully summat like that.
    A complete change of career could be the making of him.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    Leon said:

    Sadly, writing for the world's most prestigious and longest running English language magazine - the Spectator - is very much out of my league. I leave that to its various famous contributors, like Graham Greene, George Orwell, @SeanT, Alexander Pope, Sylvia Plath, sundry Prime Ministers and Chancellors, and Lionel Shriver. And Taki. For me it is the humble Knapper's Gazette, but maybe one day. Who knows?
    It's a shitty rag wherein 87.4% of its writers are pretty standard journeymen churning out pedestrian prose which panders to and stokes the prejudices of the red cord-wearing rural types you enjoy making fun of so much yet of whom for some unaccountable reason you are in awe.

    12.6% of its writers get the joke and manage to turn out great prose which laughs at that demographic without it being obvious.

    Despite your huge self-regard in particular when you come onto PB to parade your supposed sophistication to the yokels, you are comfortably in the former group.
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,243

    Hah! Authentic Sunak:

    Rishi Sunak has long gone on about to his love of the exercise brand Peloton, appealing to the healthier, fitter spectrum of the population. In keeping with his fitness-freak image, he revealed to the Daily Mail that he starts of with a 6am Peloton session to Britney Spears songs. What Rishi doesn’t realise however, is that Peloton recently changed its privacy policy to allow registered users to search for any other user by name. A co-conspirator happened to come across Sunak’s profile…

    In reality, Rishi Sunak hardly uses the treadmill or the bike – just 34 times since he joined. And none of those workouts have been before 8am, preferring instead to exercise just before a leisurely 9am. He hasn’t been quite so successful in the “achievements” section either. The only Peloton workout he’s done since calling the election? A 5km scenic run along the Californian coast at Big Sur, naturally. Getting homesick…?


    https://order-order.com/2024/05/28/revealed-rishi-ran-peloton-5k-in-california-after-calling-election/

    #nottobetrusted

    Sunak is the first person to manage to be lanterne rouge in a one-man virtual peloton.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188

    My favourite bit is where Next slips into the water following Gorman exploding. I just think it’s a clever bit of writing. I know films don’t bind their successors ( a bit like parliaments) but the tragedy of Alien 3 rendering everything that had been achieved in Aliens void was awful. And don’t get me started on Alien Resurrection.
    Both Alien and Aliens were great films. Different genres in the same universe. When they started trying to make remakes (the rest of the series) it failed.

    Much like the first two Terminator films.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,641

    Both Alien and Aliens were great films. Different genres in the same universe. When they started trying to make remakes (the rest of the series) it failed.

    Much like the first two Terminator films.
    The Alien|Bladerunner TV show that's in the works is supposed to blend the two 'universes'. We'll see I guess.

    I do have a soft spot for Raised by Wolves, I admit. Quite bonkers.
This discussion has been closed.