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Home Alone 2 star found guilty on all 34 counts in criminal case – politicalbetting.com

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  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Still half asleep sorry, 6.

    But as it pertains to continents, the Canadians are American, and we are European. It's just geography. Every landmass is part of one of them, Europe is our one.
    As Dan Hannan said before the referendum, you can like Europe but hate the EU, in the same way as you can like football but hate FIFA.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,306
    DougSeal said:

    I don’t think you hate Russia. It’s your dislike of domestic pressure groups who don’t share your opinions I’m concerned about. And for the avoidance of doubt I think that linking them to offensive action by Russia is loony tunes stuff.
    The other day Palestine Action attacked the Internet connection to an arms manufacturer. They have the will.
    https://x.com/Pal_action/status/1795437306893193325

    Russia and Belarus uses immigrants to cause chaos, including flying them over and taking them to the border:
    "The border has been a flashpoint since migrants started flocking there in 2021, after Belarus, a close Russian ally, reportedly opened travel agencies in the Middle East to offer a new unofficial route into Europe - a move the European Union said was designed to create a crisis."
    https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/poland-reintroduce-buffer-zone-belarus-border-pm-says-2024-05-29/ (+many more)

    Russia uses criminal gangs in Europe:
    https://ecfr.eu/publication/crimintern_how_the_kremlin_uses_russias_criminal_networks_in_europe/
    https://lansinginstitute.org/2023/07/19/russian-intelligence-exploits-gangs-in-operations-abroad/

    Russia would be stupid *not* to be encouraging the activist groups. At the very least.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,201

    Angie Rayner’s bus has got a fridge.

    https://x.com/damocrat/status/1796179586536882340

    Perhaps you can make a formal allegation to Chief Constable Watson. He can then instigate an investigation.

    (It would be no less spurious than Daly's complaint.)
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,155
    DavidL said:

    I heard a slightly more rational analysis (of the republican position, not you) on the Briefing Room on R4 yesterday.

    Some Republicans are concerned about the blank cheque problem. Are they committed to support Ukraine no matter how much?

    More, however, and it was suggested that this included Trump, are concerned about the clear path to victory problem. What does victory look like? How can Ukraine, for all its bravery, defeat a country the size of Russia? It was being suggested by some Republicans that if Trump did see a way to victory he would be on board and want to claim that victory but he is not willing to invest open ended sums into a bloody stalemate.

    I don't agree with this analysis but it does make more sense than the way the Republican position is all too often portrayed in this country (servants of Putin, corrupt etc).


    For me, victory for Ukraine will be either from the collapse of the kleptocracy that controls Russia (like the end of Russia's engagement in WW1) or by driving Russian forces back out of Ukrainian territory. Both are difficult and have been made more so by the parsimonious response of European countries in particular in both the speed and scale of support. We really need to step up our game and stop moaning that the US is not doing enough when it is doing so much more than everyone else.
    I think that, ultimately, Trump has an inferiority complex when it comes to dictators like Putin and Xi. Consequently, like some PB.com posters, he will be deterred by Russians warnings of escalation, and so wouldn't take the necessary steps for Ukrainian victory.

    The West does need to create a strategy for victory. The mindset is still in February 2022 - desperate measures to prevent defeat - rather than working out how to achieve victory.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,291
    Sandpit said:



    Yes, there’s 10% on the fringe right and 10% on the fringe left in the US, who agree that Ukraine is basically Russian territory and are on Putin’s side.

    About a third of US aid to Ukraine is C-5Ms full of cash, running at about $25bn/year. So it's not the whole deal, but it's not nothing.
  • Savanta - you did say to ask the same respondents, right?
    Wouldn't talking to the same respondents a couple of weeks apart actually be quite useful in terms of detection of movement? At least, if you did, you could say the movement is "real" in the sense that the movements are in fact people changing their mind. If you're taking two different samples of 1000 people a couple of weeks apart, and one party is up 2% and the other down 2%, that could be movement... or it could simply be the fact it's a different sample.

    Parties regularly do this with canvassing. A switch analysis is far more informative than raw percentages.

    I mean, there are reasons pollsters don't just keep going back to the same group as it would rely heavily on the original group being representative (which they may not be, simply due to sampling error) and having a "panel" may in itself influence behaviour.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,096
    12 hours until the Electoral Calculus MRP is published.
  • DougSeal said:

    Barty - go and read a history book. This country has always described itself as European. Despite cosplaying as a sovereign state we have always been beholden to the entity that controls the balance of power in Europe - even at the height of empire. That’s why our foreign policy was to avoid a country holding it. Thanks to your facile and ahistorical campaign we now are beholden
    to the EU and cannot influence it. You don’t understand what it is to be British as you clearly have no understanding whatsoever of the last 1000 years of our history beyond how it intersects with that of Australia.
    We've moved on in the past thousand years.

    Yes a hundred plus years ago there was a good reason to oppose European unification under German or French or Prussian or Austrian or any other leadership depending upon the era.

    But we've moved on. If they want to unify peacefully, let them. Nowt to do with us anymore.

    The world is much more interconnected now and it's attitudes like yours that are ossified in the past.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,118
    This scream of rage on Fox is a good example of how this conviction may not damage Trump in the way that people hope/expect: https://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2024/05/30/laura_ingraham_on_trump_guilty_verdict_this_is_a_disgraceful_day_for_the_united_states.html

  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,312
    DougSeal said:

    Barty - go and read a history book. This country has always described itself as European. Despite cosplaying as a sovereign state we have always been beholden to the entity that controls the balance of power in Europe - even at the height of empire. That’s why our foreign policy was to avoid a country holding it. Thanks to your facile and ahistorical campaign we now are beholden
    to the EU and cannot influence it. You don’t understand what it is to be British as you clearly have no understanding whatsoever of the last 1000 years of our history beyond how it intersects with that of Australia.
    One of the important fantasy bits of That Dan Hannan Article was that other countries would join us in leaving. Partly to magic away the Ireland problems, but also because the UK would implicitly lead Free Europe.

    That hasn't happened, and it does change things.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,112

    That ignores the Afghan and Vietnam lessons. The North Vietnamese did not drive the American forces out of Vietnam: instead, they made the war far too costly for it to be continued.

    The same thing happened in the 1980s with Afghanistan. The Russians were not militarily defeated per se; but the occupation was made not worth the bother. And the same thing happened three decades later with the Americans in the same country.

    The questions are if, and at what point, Russia decides the war is not worth the pain it is causing to itself (and that pain is, after only two years, far greater than any of the wars I mentioned above). This has been made more complex by the fact they've claimed large swathes of Ukraine as *their* territory - something that was never done in those other wars.

    *If* Russia was to 'win', then I expect a massive depopulation of Ukrainians from Ukrainian territory, as Russia attempts to stop the population fighting them in an insurgency. That's something the appeasers (not you) never mention. It's not as if Russia is not already doing it in the areas they control...
    Incidentally, if you follow the various people who've taken over from Oryx, they are showing the same old pattern - a tanks of ancient vintage, SPGs and lots of APCs of similar vintage and a sprinkling of T-90 and other new built.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    Wouldn't talking to the same respondents a couple of weeks apart actually be quite useful in terms of detection of movement? At least, if you did, you could say the movement is "real" in the sense that the movements are in fact people changing their mind. If you're taking two different samples of 1000 people a couple of weeks apart, and one party is up 2% and the other down 2%, that could be movement... or it could simply be the fact it's a different sample.

    Parties regularly do this with canvassing. A switch analysis is far more informative than raw percentages.

    I mean, there are reasons pollsters don't just keep going back to the same group as it would rely heavily on the original group being representative (which they may not be, simply due to sampling error) and having a "panel" may in itself influence behaviour.
    If they used the same panel, something limited like 20 switchers in a panel of 1000 with 300 discarded for DK etc would produce big swings. You'd be reporting a shift in sentiment on a handful of people. If you get that movement across a fresh sample of 1000 it's much more likely to be on to something. If then confirmed by the next 1000 etc etc
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,654
    Taz said:
    Interesting that it represents a screw threaded lightbulb, rather than bayonet.

    Do I win a prize for dorkiest comment of the day?
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,243
    Eabhal said:

    12 hours until the Electoral Calculus MRP is published.

    Sneak preview of methodology: https://docs.python.org/3/library/random.html
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    ANC look to lose their majority in SA.

    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/5/31/south-africa-elections-live-results-2024-by-the-numbers-on-day-2

    Zuma’s party seems to be the difference maker here - though the centrist dad ascendency is reaching the Saffers too, it seems, as the DA seem to be improving their share.
  • Ghedebrav said:

    Yuge-if-true breaking news on PB

    Britain no longer part of Europe
    Japan no longer part of Asia
    Madagascar no longer part of Africa
    Islas Malvinas… hang on
    Britain is a part of Europe.
    Japan is a part of Asia.

    But American typically doesn't mean part of the continent of America, it means part of the country of America.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Eabhal said:

    12 hours until the Electoral Calculus MRP is published.

    It will show somewhere around 100 Tory seats. The polling is as it was generally, so we should expect the MRPs to be no different.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,461
    DavidL said:

    This scream of rage on Fox is a good example of how this conviction may not damage Trump in the way that people hope/expect: https://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2024/05/30/laura_ingraham_on_trump_guilty_verdict_this_is_a_disgraceful_day_for_the_united_states.html

    Fox is a disgrace for the United States.

    Fear unbalanced.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860

    Interesting that it represents a screw threaded lightbulb, rather than bayonet.

    Do I win a prize for dorkiest comment of the day?
    Shame they didn’t go for the more Channel 4 ‘Very British Energy’.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    edited May 2024

    Britain is a part of Europe.
    Japan is a part of Asia.

    But American typically doesn't mean part of the continent of America, it means part of the country of America.
    What about a North American?

    EDIT: also that comment wasn’t particularly aimed at you.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,118

    That ignores the Afghan and Vietnam lessons. The North Vietnamese did not drive the American forces out of Vietnam: instead, they made the war far too costly for it to be continued.

    The same thing happened in the 1980s with Afghanistan. The Russians were not militarily defeated per se; but the occupation was made not worth the bother. And the same thing happened three decades later with the Americans in the same country.

    The questions are if, and at what point, Russia decides the war is not worth the pain it is causing to itself (and that pain is, after only two years, far greater than any of the wars I mentioned above). This has been made more complex by the fact they've claimed large swathes of Ukraine as *their* territory - something that was never done in those other wars.

    *If* Russia was to 'win', then I expect a massive depopulation of Ukrainians from Ukrainian territory, as Russia attempts to stop the population fighting them in an insurgency. That's something the appeasers (not you) never mention. It's not as if Russia is not already doing it in the areas they control...
    The difference is that the US is subject to democratic pressures in a way that the Russian kleptocracy isn't. America lost the will to win in both Vietnam and Afghanistan. In both they could have persevered, they had the military capacity to do so, but the populace were no longer persuaded it was worth the cost. Who gives a toss about what the populace of Russia thinks? Certainly not Putin and his gang.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,011
    DougSeal said:

    I’ll take Gordon Brown over Osbourne, Kwarteng and Hunt any day of the week.
    That doesn't answer the question

    Is this the PFI scheme revisited ?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,112
    Dura_Ace said:

    I don't think it's failed yet and those are not the reasons. Nobody who knows anything about it in the upper reaches of the DoD, Pentagon, MoD, etc. would have doubted the Russian resolve and capacity to keep fighting in the face of losses that would have cause any Western government to throw the towel in.

    Part of the problem is that gullible ultras have swallowed and then faithfully regurgitated Ukrainian lies about Russian losses. So the answer to how can Russia keep taking this number of casualties is that they are probably not.

    The other issue is that Biden, and to the very minor extent that it matters, the other Western leaders have never articulated any sort of definitive goal for their involvement in the SMO. There is no strategy beyond keeping Ukraine in the fight until next weekend.

    However, Ukraine are (just) still in there swinging, so it's not over yet.
    On casualties - https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/resources/idt-829ea0ba-5b42-499b-ad40-6990f2c4e5d0
  • DavidL said:

    This scream of rage on Fox is a good example of how this conviction may not damage Trump in the way that people hope/expect: https://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2024/05/30/laura_ingraham_on_trump_guilty_verdict_this_is_a_disgraceful_day_for_the_united_states.html

    Is anyone at all saying this will shift Trump's hardcore fanbase?

    The issue is the swing/independent voters rather than raging Trumpers. I can see how this COULD work in his favour with those voters - a narrative might develop amongst those voters in Arizona, say, that Trump has been a bit harshly treated by a liberal-leaning jury in Manhattan. But an alternative is that they see the jurors as people a bit like them, faithfully deciding a case on evidence, and being attacked for it by a bullying liar. But that won't primarily be decided by a known figure in Trumpworld raging on Fox.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,839

    If you want to go off culture, royal family, language etc then we share far more in common with many of our fellow Commonwealth nations that speak the English language and have the same monarch as we do than we do the diverse nations of Europe that speak other languages etc

    Under your logic Australia is also European. It is in Eurovision I suppose.
    Well in large parts of the world “European” means white of course. But Australia doesn’t share our geography, biome, frontal systems, air pollution, telecoms grid, electricity and gas networks, petrochemical industry, auto industry or people smuggling networks. So to argue I am “going off culture” is somewhat ignoring about 90% of the post.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,118

    Good morning

    Listening to Labour ruling out tax increases it is becoming very obvious that they are seeking the private sector to invest many billions in an attempt to increase growth to pay for all the goodies

    This is straight out of the Gordon Brown playbook and disastrous PFI scandal or am I wrong ?

    Nope but you can't really make the case that the Tories are any better either.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,307
    edited May 2024
    Ghedebrav said:

    What about a North American?

    EDIT: also that comment wasn’t particularly aimed at you.
    Good question.

    I don't think it's a very commonly used phrase but if it were used in America (or Canada) I suspect it'd be more likely interpreted to refer to the Northern States of the USA in a Civil War style context than Canadians.

    Never known a Canadian yet who is happy to be called an American.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,011
    Jamarion said:

    Europeans all speak German for you? How worldly wise.

    Clearly fixed links are ignored in your classification system if they run undersea. What about bridges though? Is Manhattan in America?

    PS Luckyguy - Agreed that Canadians are American. Anyone who uses "America" to mean the USA is village-brained. Most US citizens don't even speak the language that's spoken by the largest number of Americans. (And in that language, nobody would ever make the mistake!) Thinking the USA equals America is just as ignorant as thinking England equals Britain, if not more so.
    Try explaining that to my Canadian daughter in law
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,011

    Interesting that it represents a screw threaded lightbulb, rather than bayonet.

    Do I win a prize for dorkiest comment of the day?
    No - very observant
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,242

    Interesting that it represents a screw threaded lightbulb, rather than bayonet.

    Do I win a prize for dorkiest comment of the day?
    A Great British Lightbulb free from the dead hand of the EUSSR presumably,
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Incidentally, if you follow the various people who've taken over from Oryx, they are showing the same old pattern - a tanks of ancient vintage, SPGs and lots of APCs of similar vintage and a sprinkling of T-90 and other new built.
    The T-90 is still basically the same old design they’ve been slowly updating since the ‘60s, with the ammunition under the turret, and a small detonation at the right point can blow them half way to the moon.

    The T-14 is the new new tank, and they’ve not been spotted outside the Red Square parade ground. The rumour is they can’t make them without a whole pile of Western electronics.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,839
    Ghedebrav said:

    What about a North American?

    EDIT: also that comment wasn’t particularly aimed at you.
    I had a folder in my outlook at work called “US clients”, but then I got a couple of Canadian projects so it’s now renamed “North American clients”.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,494
    Sandpit said:

    Radar and QRA are good, what’s lacking is the ability to defend against a volley of missiles aimed at the UK, or dozens of fighter jets.

    Not too sure the Russians can muster either of those at the moment, especially knowing that it would generate an overwhelming response from NATO.

    The real weakness is, as others have suggested, a relatively small-scale attack on key nodes of critical infrastructure.
    Those are the sorts of things our increased defence budget should be spent on.
    Cut the likely obsolete stuff like Challenger III.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,461
    Ultimatley, all Labour will have the money for is the Great British Energy logo.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,112
    DavidL said:

    Nope but you can't really make the case that the Tories are any better either.
    In *theory* small government investments in a project can be used to leverage many multiple of that from private sources.

    I've mentioned before an idea of how get investment in clean vehicle technology* without spending any money before the next election. Offer a subsidy for each KWh of storage actually installed in a vehicle, in the UK. Subsidy is scaled according to the UK content of the storage - use a Chinese battery, get nothing.

    *Notice I'm not saying battery - no picking winners. Even the winners whom seem to have won the race already.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896

    The Holyrood poll has:

    Under analysis by Prof Curtice, the SNP would have 43 MSPs and Labour 41 MSPs if a Scottish Parliament election was held tomorrow. That signals a shift in support from Labour to the SNP, with the previous Savanta poll putting the SNP on just 35 Holyrood seats and Labour on 47.

    https://www.scotsman.com/news/politics/new-poll-shows-john-swinney-has-managed-to-stem-snps-bleeding-but-labour-on-course-for-victory-4648379

    Makes sense, Lab in Westminster, SNP in Holyrood.
    Even if the SNP got 43 MSPs the only way they could stay in power at Holyrood would be confidence and supply from the Scottish Conservatives. That would require an end to any indyref2 talk but some Scottish Tory support for more Thatcherite economics from Swinney and Forbes
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,654

    A Great British Lightbulb free from the dead hand of the EUSSR presumably,
    British bulbs for British lampshades!
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,201
    edited May 2024

    Ultimatley, all Labour will have the money for is the Great British Energy logo.

    Labour's pledge not to increase taxes compared to the Conservatives tax cuts AND service improvement is meagre gruel.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    DavidL said:

    The difference is that the US is subject to democratic pressures in a way that the Russian kleptocracy isn't. America lost the will to win in both Vietnam and Afghanistan. In both they could have persevered, they had the military capacity to do so, but the populace were no longer persuaded it was worth the cost. Who gives a toss about what the populace of Russia thinks? Certainly not Putin and his gang.
    It’s fair to say that the Russian media isn’t full of images of plane loads of coffins landing every few days.

    There’s still enough money in Russia to pay off handsomely the families of dead soldiers.

    The Western pressure really needs to be on China and India, who are both buying the Russian O&G output at a discount, and assisting their supply chains of capital equipment and spares.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,461

    Interesting that it represents a screw threaded lightbulb, rather than bayonet.

    Do I win a prize for dorkiest comment of the day?
    It doesn't take too much imagination for it to become the emoji for "Go fuck yourself...."
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,839
    Sandpit said:

    The T-90 is still basically the same old design they’ve been slowly updating since the ‘60s, with the ammunition under the turret, and a small detonation at the right point can blow them half way to the moon.

    The T-14 is the new new tank, and they’ve not been spotted outside the Red Square parade ground. The rumour is they can’t make them without a whole pile of Western electronics.
    Long term we probably underestimate the import substitution capabilities of a weakened but still militarily obsessed state like Russia. Iran shows you can be under crippling economic sanctions for years or decades, and so long as you have a few friends out there (and Russia has more than Iran) you can remain in power in your own country and project military power abroad while your population suffers in poverty. North Korea is exhibit B, too. The tenacious pariah state.

    The “Iranification” of Russia is not a phrase I’ve seen deployed but it’s potentially useful.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,461
    So what is Ed Davey going to do today? Get to drive a steam train?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,201

    So what is Ed Davey going to do today? Get to drive a steam train?

    Driving through empty cardboard boxes on a JCB loading shovel is always worthy of a spot on BBC's Ten O ' Clock News.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,088

    So what is Ed Davey going to do today? Get to drive a steam train?

    Maybe a visit to a post sorting office.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,483

    So what is Ed Davey going to do today? Get to drive a steam train?

    more power to his elbow...
  • So what is Ed Davey going to do today? Get to drive a steam train?

    Surely a photo op at Alton Towers is overdue, get him on the log flume.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,155

    So what is Ed Davey going to do today? Get to drive a steam train?

    I want to see him try to wakeboard.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    So what is Ed Davey going to do today? Get to drive a steam train?

    Next week should finish with him skydiving or flying aerobatics. Davey the Daredevil, the new Peter Duncan.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896
    DavidL said:

    This scream of rage on Fox is a good example of how this conviction may not damage Trump in the way that people hope/expect: https://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2024/05/30/laura_ingraham_on_trump_guilty_verdict_this_is_a_disgraceful_day_for_the_united_states.html

    Nobody expects Trump's Fox backers or the MAGA crowd to have changed their mind, they would likely still back Trump even if he was convicted of multiple murders.

    It is the reaction of Independents and swing voters in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona and Georgia and Nevada that matters
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,096
    edited May 2024

    So what is Ed Davey going to do today? Get to drive a steam train?

    Nah. Needs to be something involving wetsuits.

    Caving? "I think I've found the bottom of Sunak's hole"
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,312

    That doesn't answer the question

    Is this the PFI scheme revisited ?
    Depends what projects and how the contracts are drawn up.

    There's nothing intrinsically wrong with PFI, just that Brown used it in the wrong things and a shambolic way.

    And there are plenty of infrastructure projects which jolly well ought to be commercially viable.
  • So what is Ed Davey going to do today? Get to drive a steam train?

    Don't be absurd. How's he going to have time for that AND the bouncy castle?
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860

    Surely a photo op at Alton Towers is overdue, get him on the log flume.
    Rubber dinghy rapids bruv
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,112
    Sandpit said:

    The T-90 is still basically the same old design they’ve been slowly updating since the ‘60s, with the ammunition under the turret, and a small detonation at the right point can blow them half way to the moon.

    The T-14 is the new new tank, and they’ve not been spotted outside the Red Square parade ground. The rumour is they can’t make them without a whole pile of Western electronics.
    It's a classic tank fail in another way - they had this brilliant new design of diesel engine. Which was so awesomely compact that they could make the engine compartment smaller.

    The engine is a failure, and you can't just shove an older engine in the same space.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,188
    DavidL said:

    This scream of rage on Fox is a good example of how this conviction may not damage Trump in the way that people hope/expect: https://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2024/05/30/laura_ingraham_on_trump_guilty_verdict_this_is_a_disgraceful_day_for_the_united_states.html

    I'm not expecting anything. We all have, or should have, scars on our backs from "this will kill/save him" events. I'm waiting for the polls like a good viewcode should.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,096

    It will show somewhere around 100 Tory seats. The polling is as it was generally, so we should expect the MRPs to be no different.
    I think the overall polling numbers won't have changed much but that the Conservative vote has become much more efficient.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,050
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,242
    On header subject, seen on twitter a likely Stornoway Gazette headline:
    'Son of Tong Woman Convicted of 34 Offences'
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,971
    Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott...
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,176
    Roger said:

    Thanks for that. Quite remarkable how close they were under all the various circumstances.

    I think the time has come to call this a landslide for Labour.
    Best news I've had all day.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,242
    At least Davey has moved on the LDs involved in watersports narrative.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited May 2024
    Ghedebrav said:

    Yuge-if-true breaking news on PB

    Britain no longer part of Europe
    Japan no longer part of Asia
    Madagascar no longer part of Africa
    Islas Malvinas… hang on

    A pedant writes: Madagascar was never part of Africa - off a different chunk of Gondwanaland entirely (ie what is now India).
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,494
    TimS said:

    Long term we probably underestimate the import substitution capabilities of a weakened but still militarily obsessed state like Russia. Iran shows you can be under crippling economic sanctions for years or decades, and so long as you have a few friends out there (and Russia has more than Iran) you can remain in power in your own country and project military power abroad while your population suffers in poverty. North Korea is exhibit B, too. The tenacious pariah state.

    The “Iranification” of Russia is not a phrase I’ve seen deployed but it’s potentially useful.
    They have China as a committed industrial supplier, so they're rather better off than Iran.

    Though now Iran too is part of a new (in terms of economic heft) non-western economic network, that has China as its largest component.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,096
    Would you rather:

    1) Listen to yet another boring speech from Starmer/Sunak

    2) Climb the Inaccessible Pinnacle with Ed Davey?

    It's a brilliant media strategy
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,118

    In *theory* small government investments in a project can be used to leverage many multiple of that from private sources.

    I've mentioned before an idea of how get investment in clean vehicle technology* without spending any money before the next election. Offer a subsidy for each KWh of storage actually installed in a vehicle, in the UK. Subsidy is scaled according to the UK content of the storage - use a Chinese battery, get nothing.

    *Notice I'm not saying battery - no picking winners. Even the winners whom seem to have won the race already.
    But @Malmesbury subsidies are money. And we don't have any.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,176
    eek said:

    Slight problem with the claim they undercook the Tories in the mayoral elections.

    Yougov said Andy Street would win with 41% of the vote, he lost with 37.5%

    In fact if you look at YouGov's report it seemed they continually over estimated Tory support

    https://yougov.co.uk/politics/articles/49372-yougov-at-the-2024-local-and-mayoral-elections

    They overestimated Labour and Reform too. Even in the West Midlands mayoralty.

    And did you see how far out they were in London?

    Their panel seems to regularly find twice the support for Reform there actually is.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Local reaction to the Kemptown selection:

    https://www.theargus.co.uk/news/24357056.chris-ward-selected-brighton-kemptown-peacehaven-candidate/

    Somewhat blunts Labour’s attacks on “parachuted in” candidates in adjacent Brighton Pavilion….
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,564

    Good question.

    I don't think it's a very commonly used phrase but if it were used in America (or Canada) I suspect it'd be more likely interpreted to refer to the Northern States of the USA in a Civil War style context than Canadians.

    Never known a Canadian yet who is happy to be called an American.
    I use Usonian / Canadian.

    Like Frank Lloyd Wright.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    On header subject, seen on twitter a likely Stornoway Gazette headline:
    'Son of Tong Woman Convicted of 34 Offences'

    I checked. Not up yet; obvs more concerned with the prospects for the coming guga season and the impact of admission charges on the Calanais stones.
  • Eabhal said:

    Would you rather:

    1) Listen to yet another boring speech from Starmer/Sunak

    2) Climb the Inaccessible Pinnacle with Ed Davey?

    It's a brilliant media strategy

    Bit childish of Davey to name his penis in that way.
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,243

    Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott...

    Mushroom mushroom?
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    Eabhal said:

    Would you rather:

    1) Listen to yet another boring speech from Starmer/Sunak

    2) Climb the Inaccessible Pinnacle with Ed Davey?

    It's a brilliant media strategy

    Tbh while I’m not sure it’s in brilliant territory, I tend to agree and it is a significantly different approach to everyone else. The risk is making him look silly/trivial but honestly I think it just improves his profile and the public generally like someone who doesn’t take themselves too seriously.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,564

    At least Davey has moved on the LDs involved in watersports narrative.

    Cough.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pjr8LsEnUaw
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Eabhal said:

    Would you rather:

    1) Listen to yet another boring speech from Starmer/Sunak

    2) Climb the Inaccessible Pinnacle with Ed Davey?

    It's a brilliant media strategy

    Just get him to blow the Last Post at Menin Gate, and do a shift selling sticky tape at the local Office Supplies, and that'll be Google sorted Boris Cardboard Box Bus style.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,913
    Carnyx said:


    A pedant writes: Madagascar was never part of Africa - off a different chunk of Gondwanaland entirely (ie what is now India).
    Does that mean Scotland should be joining NAFTA and not the EU...?

    I think you get to take a bit of Cumberland with you too.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Does that mean Scotland should be joining NAFTA and not the EU...?

    I think you get to take a bit of Cumberland with you too.
    A fairt chunk of Ireland and Scandinavia too.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,118

    Is anyone at all saying this will shift Trump's hardcore fanbase?

    The issue is the swing/independent voters rather than raging Trumpers. I can see how this COULD work in his favour with those voters - a narrative might develop amongst those voters in Arizona, say, that Trump has been a bit harshly treated by a liberal-leaning jury in Manhattan. But an alternative is that they see the jurors as people a bit like them, faithfully deciding a case on evidence, and being attacked for it by a bullying liar. But that won't primarily be decided by a known figure in Trumpworld raging on Fox.
    I fear that the Lawfare meme has considerable traction and that even many independents will listen to the "banana republic", political use of prosecution lines.

    The prosecution for January 6th is absolutely fair enough and should have been brought at least 2 years earlier. The confidential papers case he really brought on himself because of his arrogant stupidity. The focus on this particular case is somewhat unhelpful in rebutting the lawfare argument. It is, at heart, a bit of a nonsense.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860

    Bit childish of Davey to name his penis in that way.
    Ric Flair calls his ‘Space Mountain’.

    “Oldest ride - longest line! Woo!”
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,143

    Surely a photo op at Alton Towers is overdue, get him on the log flume.
    Nah, Alton Towers is Staffordshire Moorlands, LD nowhere there.

    Thorpe Park however, Runnymede and Weybridge, on the outer fringes of yellow target seats, but William Hague got there first.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,188

    One of the important fantasy bits of That Dan Hannan Article was that other countries would join us in leaving. Partly to magic away the Ireland problems, but also because the UK would implicitly lead Free Europe.

    That hasn't happened, and it does change things.
    "What is That Dan Hannan Article, DougSeal?"
    "Why, it's this one Viewcode: https://reaction.life/britain-looks-like-brexit/ "
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,118
    Carnyx said:

    Just get him to blow the Last Post at Menin Gate, and do a shift selling sticky tape at the local Office Supplies, and that'll be Google sorted Boris Cardboard Box Bus style.
    No, no, no. Anything to do with Post is to be strictly avoided.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited May 2024

    Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott, Abbott...

    32 beers, or 32 clergymen?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,494
    Eabhal said:

    Would you rather:

    1) Listen to yet another boring speech from Starmer/Sunak

    2) Climb the Inaccessible Pinnacle with Ed Davey?

    It's a brilliant media strategy

    Is there a third choice ?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Sandpit said:

    32 beers, or 32 clergymen?
    Or the Royal Artillery on Salisbury Plain c. 1970.
  • OllyTOllyT Posts: 5,034
    kle4 said:

    You haven't looked at it more. I've followed this trial every day - the defense has some points they scored (some inconsistencies, the difficulties tying Trump directly to some actions), they have some points they could raise on appeal (the question of the second crime which had to be undertaken to make it a felony for example), but the case was not reliant on Cohen (though he was significant). Trump's lawyers have made very different arguments to those the media talking heads make - whether you buy the former's arguments or not, they were not making the case the media heads were.

    And as for the DA's office being politically motivated, well, unfortunately that is the american legal system - it sucks, but that is their way.

    As I mentioned, the most damning testimony came from people who like Trump. People who said they admire him. People who worked for him, and people who still work for him. They were not out to get him, they were compelled to testify and tell the truth.

    It's fine to question any verdict, but there's a lot more to this case than Cohen, if that is what you are reading you are reading a lie.
    Leon's not interested in the facts, he's just like most of the hard-right blowhards he admires, spouting rubbish.

  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    So what is Ed Davey going to do today? Get to drive a steam train?

    Ed Davy has taken over from Boris Johnson as Britain's ludicrous lying buffoon. Much like Johnson and Trump, he will be found out eventually.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,765
    edited May 2024

    Local reaction to the Kemptown selection:

    https://www.theargus.co.uk/news/24357056.chris-ward-selected-brighton-kemptown-peacehaven-candidate/

    Somewhat blunts Labour’s attacks on “parachuted in” candidates in adjacent Brighton Pavilion….

    I think Labour will still win Brighton Kemptown, though their vote will be significantly depressed. Many of the local activists seem to have taken their bats home. They'd have been better off 'selecting' a current local (councillor, probably Sankey, or maybe Nancy Platts) to keep the door-knocking troops happy.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    DavidL said:

    No, no, no. Anything to do with Post is to be strictly avoided.
    You misunderstand. The idea is to overwrite unfortunate Google searches permanently, like 'Boris Bus'.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Ghedebrav said:

    Tbh while I’m not sure it’s in brilliant territory, I tend to agree and it is a significantly different approach to everyone else. The risk is making him look silly/trivial but honestly I think it just improves his profile and the public generally like someone who doesn’t take themselves too seriously.
    At some point his party and donors are going to gently suggest he's not there to have a lovely old time.
  • That's a massive night.

    I prefer Old Speckled Hen but doubt I'd have made it past your first line.
    Ah, Abbott. Dark, fruity and well-balanced. I'd be on that all night.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    Best news I've had all day.
    I am going to laugh so much if they end up with a majority of about 10, or better still have to be propped up by the buffoon in the wetsuit.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,537
    Carnyx said:


    A pedant writes: Madagascar was never part of Africa - off a different chunk of Gondwanaland entirely (ie what is now India).
    Populated from Indonesia too, I believe. Quite impressive ocean crossing.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,155

    We're told that if Trump's crimes are ignored, he benefits electorally from showing he can get away with anything.
    We're told if he's prosecuted and it fails, he benefits electorally from being exonerated.
    We're told if he's prosecuted and it succeeds, he benefits electorally from claiming to be politically harassed.

    But at the end of the day, if you can't do something beneficial to yourself, default to doing what is right.

    This outcome was right.

    The problem we have is that, in a political debate, the truth only wins if people place a value on the truth as a thing in itself, even when it tells them something they don't like to hear. Otherwise the lies will win because they can be tailored to be more attractive.

    I'm the US the Democrats are somewhat more tethered to reality, and Trump continues to avoid the electoral oblivion he deserves because there are enough voters willing to believe lies. So it really didn't matter what happens, because the political message isn't tethered to reality, so it can adjust to any eventuality.

    Britain is not so far gone, but you can see the same thing, with the almost universal belief that all the nice things can be paid for by other people/cutting waste.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,913
    edited May 2024
    Nigelb said:

    Is there a third choice ?
    I'm taking the In Pinn please, although I'm not sure I'd trust Ed on lead. I think he'd get hauled up the V. Diff.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,494

    Best news I've had all day.
    Sadly Leon has usurped the power of Rogerdamus, so you're still in jeopardy.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,696

    I am going to laugh so much if they end up with a majority of about 10, or better still have to be propped up by the buffoon in the wetsuit.
    I suspect come July 5th we will be laughing at how little your desires match the new reality.

    Although I suspect governing with a majority of about 250 will in many ways be harder than a small majority because many Labour MPs will never have any chance of becoming a Minister..
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,575

    NEW THREAD

  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited May 2024
    That's obviously the Holyrood list only, though, so different from Westminster (and incomplete without the constituency data which it tends to complement rather than emulate).

    Does anyone have the full lot?
This discussion has been closed.