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Being a convicted felon has consequences – politicalbetting.com

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  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Labour's Barking candidate booted over conduct
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,135
    Leon said:

    Jeez. I know I’m quite influential on PB and have a lifelong tenancy in your brains but I didn’t realise I was personally running the country and have been doing so for 32 years!

    I’m amazed I got it all done looking back. I must have done Brexit after a boozy lunch. Ah well. Shit happens
    You've lost your teeth old man.

    Perhaps you'll enjoy the simplicity of having a Labour government to rail against? Might give you some of your old oomph back.
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    Leon said:

    Except that the LABOUR MP for Rotherham thinks it may be as high as a million. And I have a tiny idea she might know more than you. Don’t you?

    So 100,000 is actually and tragically conservative

    https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/child-sex-abuse-gangs-could-5114029
    So your citation is one MP in the Mirror from 2015 saying it "could be" as high as a million kids being sexually assaulted by Muslim grooming gangs; what I have cited is a summary of a Home Office report from 2020 that was directly aimed at investigating those claims which shows how that is not the case:

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/944206/Group-based_CSE_Paper.pdf

    We can also see how some of the issue is straight up victim blaming by the cops, with reports from stories like this where "The inquiry into the Telford abuse scandal, which published its report in 2022, found police dismissive of claims of abuse, with one saying "these girls had chosen to go with, I don't know, 'bad boys'". https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-65174096

    Again, grooming gangs happen and sexual assault happens and it is awful - but none of this suggests it is a problem predominantly of immigrant populations nor would it be solved by stopping immigration, because if you did stop immigration you'd still have the issue of most people committing sexual assault against girls and women being white British, and the issue of the police not giving a shit because they are institutionally misogynistic.

    I also find it very interesting how the man who cries about wokeness all the time is claiming to care about sexual assault of women - is feminism not woke? Was the movement to hold powerful men accountable for their sexual crimes not woke? Or is it just that when you can pin sexual crimes on black and brown skinned people you want to claim you care about women?
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,558
    @Steven_Swinford
    EXCLUSIVE:

    Red Wall Tory MP says Labour is on course for 'overwhelming' victory as he appeals to Nigel Farage to stand down Reform candidates in seats with right-wing Conservatives

    Marco Longhi, Tory MP for Dudley North, says Farage is a 'hugely talented politician' who should have been given a peerage in recognition for his achievements

    He says Farage will have no one left to partner with in the Commons if he wins Clacton but kills off all the Tory Brexiteers

    'It feels like there is going to be an overwhelming win by Labour. Why target certain MPs who have a track record of Reform type politics?

    'If you want to remove even those with traditional conservative views there will be absolutely no coalition left to have in Parliament. If he wins and becomes an MP they will have no-one to partner with'

    Longhi insists he will not defect, saying he will fight 'tooth and nail' for the Tories. 'If I go down I go down'
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,201
    edited June 2024
    Off-topic.

    Moon walking bollards arrive in the Strand. First installation of these I am aware of in the UK.

    I'm sure some PBer knows of a prior-install.

    I very much like the proximity sensor which stops them moving when anyone is close, and I want one fitted to all BMWs, Audis, Mercedes, and Land Rovers.

    https://x.com/RantyHighwayman/status/1797630674431889717
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,502
    edited June 2024

    Labour's Barking candidate booted over conduct

    Were they not sufficiently Barking?
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,017

    There’s a devastating debt bomb lurking inside the Royal Mail takeover

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2024/06/04/devastating-debt-bomb-lurking-inside-royal-mail-takeover/

    Must be for the property assets rather than the Royal Mail core business.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Lmao, Guido trolling SKS. Keirs old private school is offering a pay in advance to avoid VAT wheeze. Lolz
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,295
    Weird lack of people getting the bus to Odesa. Apparently not a popular route
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,129

    You surely don’t really want to encourage Farage to come to Scotland?
    Farage crapping himself while being chased down the Royal Mile again is just what the nation needs.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Lmao, Guido trolling SKS. Keirs old private school is offering a pay in advance to avoid VAT wheeze. Lolz

    Guido is an idiot. Sir Keir did not attend private school – it was not fee-paying when he attended. Next.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,954
    Andy_JS said:

    England is mostly okay outside the crowded south-east.
    I thought the only reason the South East was crowded was because it's swamped with people desperate to escape the decaying, crime-ridden, impoverished North.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,502

    Lmao, Guido trolling SKS. Keirs old private school is offering a pay in advance to avoid VAT wheeze. Lolz

    You see, if the Tories were smart (don't laugh), they'd have Sunak mention this tonight. Now, it would be naughty as it would insinuate that Starmer was privately educated, but it is legitimate to point this out to Starmer as a "Reigatian":

    https://www.rgs.foundation/2020/04/04/breaking-news-congratulations-sir-kier-starmer/
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,164
    Andy_JS said:

    England is mostly okay outside the crowded south-east.
    It's eye of the beholder stuff - a lot of leafy commuter belt is fine; most of London is fine; the outer belt of the south east is largely lovely. But if you don't like the south east it isn't going to appeal - I struggle with the gritty parts of Yorkshire but I recognise that lots of people love it, which is fine.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192
    edited June 2024
    MattW said:

    Off-topic.

    Moon walking bollards arrive in the Strand. First installation of these I am aware of in the UK.

    I'm sure some PBer knows of a prior-install.

    I very much like the proximity sensor which stops them moving when anyone is close, and I want one fitted to all BMWs, Audis, Mercedes, and Land Rovers.

    https://x.com/RantyHighwayman/status/1797630674431889717

    They move like they are powered by indentured toddlers.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,201

    Must be for the property assets rather than the Royal Mail core business.
    Does this get decided on by the old Government or the new Government?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,617
    edited June 2024
    148grss said:

    But I don't think they would predate on the deer enough. We need big predators that would not only cull numbers but change deer behaviour and make them more worried around open spaces and watering holes and such. The issue of deer is not just their numbers, but their grazing habits and the erosion they cause by not really acting in ways they would of when they did have predators. Their numbers alongside this behaviour change is what makes the impact so much worse.
    I mean a wolf killing a deer would be a pretty long, drawn out, bloody, and painful affair do you really want to inflict that on a deer rather than a single bullet.

    It's not like a pack of hounds killing a fox which was a super efficient means of pest control.
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155

    I've read things from people in the know who think that Lynx would do the job.

    The way I'd view it use that Lynx would be the best way to start, and sort out issues to do with livestock predation, and confidence-building with farmers. And then it's easier to make the case for other predators later.
    That would make sense - wolves and bears are just a lot cooler than lynx, and just as native to the country. I do dislike living in a country where the largest native carnivore that isn't extinct is the badger. And there is an unnecessary cull on them!
  • ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,264
    edited June 2024

    Lmao, Guido trolling SKS. Keirs old private school is offering a pay in advance to avoid VAT wheeze. Lolz

    Worst thing is that a lot of schools are making a complete pigs ear of it - about half we've seen are likely to not work according to a session I had at work a few weeks ago - we've placed a complete ban on giving our opinion on them due to the risk involved. The impact is potentially catastrophic if they get it wrong. Personally I don't think it will end up happening though.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,295
    148grss said:

    So your citation is one MP in the Mirror from 2015 saying it "could be" as high as a million kids being sexually assaulted by Muslim grooming gangs; what I have cited is a summary of a Home Office report from 2020 that was directly aimed at investigating those claims which shows how that is not the case:

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/944206/Group-based_CSE_Paper.pdf

    We can also see how some of the issue is straight up victim blaming by the cops, with reports from stories like this where "The inquiry into the Telford abuse scandal, which published its report in 2022, found police dismissive of claims of abuse, with one saying "these girls had chosen to go with, I don't know, 'bad boys'". https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-65174096

    Again, grooming gangs happen and sexual assault happens and it is awful - but none of this suggests it is a problem predominantly of immigrant populations nor would it be solved by stopping immigration, because if you did stop immigration you'd still have the issue of most people committing sexual assault against girls and women being white British, and the issue of the police not giving a shit because they are institutionally misogynistic.

    I also find it very interesting how the man who cries about wokeness all the time is claiming to care about sexual assault of women - is feminism not woke? Was the movement to hold powerful men accountable for their sexual crimes not woke? Or is it just that when you can pin sexual crimes on black and brown skinned people you want to claim you care about women?
    1400 girls were raped/abused/tortured in
    Rotherham according to the official report. Rotherham has a population of 260,000, about 0.3% of the UK. We know this pattern of rape and grooming has occurred all across the UK - basically wherever it is sought, it is found

    300 x 1400 = 420,000

    I’ve reduced it by 75% so you don’t have conniptions; you can thank me later
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,174
    ToryJim said:


    They move like they are powered by indentured toddlers.
    Careful. Rishi is still looking for policies he can announce, and toddler indenture sounds right up his street.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,502

    Guido is an idiot. Sir Keir did not attend private school – it was not fee-paying when he attended. Next.
    But it is still his old school which he has connections with.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    Guido is an idiot. Sir Keir did not attend private school – it was not fee-paying when he attended. Next.
    It changed to fee paying whilst he was there. He received an assisted place.
    Yes, Guido is also an idiot.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,698

    Aberdeenshire. Mild and dry climate with plenty of sunshine (genuinely, ask the Met Office). Fresh air, mountains, cliffs, castles, whisky, long sandy beaches. Farming, fishing, energy, tourism. My own village has a fantastic community spirit, food, shops, events - and easy access to Aberdeen city and the airport.

    Despite being there for 15 years I never felt like Teesside was home - it was just where I lived. Aberdeenshire is home. Genuinely love the place.
    What about Rochdale? Did that feel like home?

    I'm fascinated by the concept of home. I lived in the suburbs of Nottingham for 9 years - it was pleasant, I had good friends there, but it never felt like home. It seems churlish to complain about living too far south when you are only 50 miles south of where you are born, but there you are.
    But I've also lived in Sheffield and that DID feel like home.
    My own gwlad - the land which stirs my soul - is quite large. It encompasses almost all of the North West (with the exception of Cumbria west of Scafell, and Crewe), and about two thirds of Yorkshire (with the boundary roughly being the M1 up as far as Tadcaster, and some vague line somewhere in the North York Moors north of that). It doesn't include much of the North East, but does include the western fringes of County Durham and the south western bit of Northumberland (the Pennines, basically). Oh, and the northern half of the Peak District.

    I'd then add a tier-2 homeland which I don't feel I'm entitled to but which elictis the same sort of feelings: Western Shropshire, Herefordshire, Worcestershire, Gloucestershire, Devon, Somerset, the Scottish Borders, the Lothians, Stirlingshire, Perthshire. (I could claim ancestral connections to those areas of Scotland but I could also claim ancestral connections to South East London, and that doesn't feel the same).

    There is a danger of course in just saying that places which are nice are those which feel like home. But obviously as @RochdalePioneers points out it's much easier for somewhere to feel like home if it's nice!
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,017
    Leon said:

    1400 girls were raped/abused/tortured in
    Rotherham according to the official report. Rotherham has a population of 260,000, about 0.3% of the UK. We know this pattern of rape and grooming has occurred all across the UK - basically wherever it is sought, it is found

    300 x 1400 = 420,000

    I’ve reduced it by 75% so you don’t have conniptions; you can thank me later
    When you calculated your IQ as 145 or whatever, was that achieved by adding up the IQ for each of your many identities?
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,869
    Scott_xP said:

    ...

    Marco Longhi, Tory MP for Dudley North, says Farage is a 'hugely talented politician' who should have been given a peerage in recognition for his achievements ...

    "a man who you may rightly think should have become Prime Minister of his country or President of the world"
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,295

    You've lost your teeth old man.

    Perhaps you'll enjoy the simplicity of having a Labour government to rail against? Might give you some of your old oomph back.
    I’ve been “losing my oomph” on PB for at least a decade. Strangely you all still bang on and on and on about me even when I’m not here. Imagine how mad you’ll be when my “oomph” returns!
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    TOPPING said:

    I mean a wolf killing a deer would be a pretty long, drawn out, bloody, and painful affair do you really want to include that one deer rather than a single bullet.

    It's not like a pack of hounds killing a fox which was a super efficient means of pest control.
    But like I said, this isn't just about culling, it's about changing deer behaviour to be less damaging. Human hunting isn't something that keeps deer on edge and anxious like having natural predators does. Anxiety reduces breeding, reduces congregating in certain spots, makes spooking behaviour more pronounced. Short of sending out people tasked with guns to mow deer down, even if we increase hunting licenses for deer, I don't see human action making enough of a dent.

    And the issue with animal suffering and efficiency and such is less to do with the existence of it; nature is, as Darwin noted, cruel and painful and inefficient. But as humans we have created an understanding of morality where we want to reduce unnecessary pain and suffering. To me that includes eating factory farmed meat or the tearing apart of a fox by dogs for the amusement of some toffs. That doesn't preclude me from wanting to bring back extinct predators (to potential benefit of the environment and biodiversity as a whole) if it also helps deal with other man made problems.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,698
    TOPPING said:

    I mean a wolf killing a deer would be a pretty long, drawn out, bloody, and painful affair do you really want to inflict that on a deer rather than a single bullet.

    It's not like a pack of hounds killing a fox which was a super efficient means of pest control.
    It's a complicated subject. But in 148grss's favour, I vaguely speculated on the subject of reintroducing large predators on here a year or so back, and was labelled (politely) a wolf-introducer. Which is quite a fun label to have.
    On the basis that nothing we say on here will sway the argument one way or the other, you may as well go with the one which gives you the best label.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,201
    edited June 2024

    Labour's Barking candidate booted over conduct

    It's alleged conduct not conduct. That's important.

    Labour have done the right thing suspending, as they have time to appoint a new candidate.

    Some corners of UK politics are filthy enough that such allegations can be faked up and used to knock people out of the game. That happened to Jason Zadrozny in 2015, when he was a real possibility for Ashfield MP for the Lib Dems. I'm very critical of his current behaviour, but he has my sympathy for 2015.

    Old sexual rumours miraculously reappeared shortly before the Election in the press and he had to stand down.

    The CPS / Police kept him hanging for 2 years under investigation then collapsed their case at the door of the Court.

    I make no comment on the Barking case.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192

    Careful. Rishi is still looking for policies he can announce, and toddler indenture sounds right up his street.
    Solid Victorian values and as The Great Lady herself said “Victorian values were the values when our country was great”. 😉
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,902

    Congratulations on posting yet another anecdote of someone taking to you about politics, posted on an anonymous forum. Who are all these people you meet up with talk about politics? I just had coffee with two colleagues for 45 minutes. We talked about my extension roof, Bath rugby and the new ground, the A303, pubs I used to work in, Nigel Owens... The election and politics didn't come up.

    Real world people are excited about Love Island, Britains Got (no) Talent, their summer holidaysbobs...
    "Real people" encompasses both types.
    And also just because they don't chat about politics doesn't mean they lack string feeling about it.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,295
    I have no idea if this is indicative of anything to do with the Ukrainian war but the train from krakow to Lviv was rammed last year. As was the bus from chernivtsi OUT of Ukraine

    On this large bus there are 7 people going to Odesa. Four oldsters, one stunning young woman and her baby. And me

    And I have just been told by a photographer friend who did this exact journey last summer that HIS bus was rammed too. Something has changed
  • biggles said:

    I think this tends to be the missing bit in political messaging about stuff like climate change. People respond much more to “do your best but no one is perfect”.
    The problem is that what people think is their best is nowhere near good enough to be effective. People respond considerably better in terms of actual behaviour when bad stuff is taxed sufficiently to make it an occasional luxury, but good luck getting elected on that platform.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    MattW said:

    It's alleged conduct not conduct. That's important.

    Labour have done the right thing suspending, as they have time to appoint a new candidate.

    Some corners of UK politics are filthy enough that such allegations can be faked up and used to knock people out of the game. That happened to Jason Zadrozny in 2015, when he was a real possibility for Ashfield MP for the Lib Dems. I'm very critical of his current behaviour, but he has my sympathy for 2015.

    Old sexual rumours miraculously reappeared shortly before the Election in the press and he had to stand down.

    The CPS / Police kept him hanging for 2 years under investigation then collapsed their case at the door of the Court.

    I make no comment on the Barking case.
    Yes, add the word allegations to the end of my post. Conduct allegations
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,848
    ToryJim said:

    NEW: Labour's Barking candidate Darren Rodwell has been removed from the list of election candidates being approved by the party's National Executive Committee (NEC) this lunchtime.

    The decision follows BBC reports into his conduct.

    https://x.com/joepike/status/1797934619360473148?s=46

    Given that Barking's last MP was Margaret Hodge, who was in no way responsible for Islington's children's home scandal even though she ran the council, and previously Tom Driberg, I'd say the good people of Barking have suffered enough.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,052
    Leon said:

    I have no idea if this is indicative of anything to do with the Ukrainian war but the train from krakow to Lviv was rammed last year. As was the bus from chernivtsi OUT of Ukraine

    On this large bus there are 7 people going to Odesa. Four oldsters, one stunning young woman and her baby. And me

    And I have just been told by a photographer friend who did this exact journey last summer that HIS bus was rammed too. Something has changed

    It’s Nazis, as Frederick Forsyth predicted, they will do anything to stop Odessaphiles.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,200
    The Guardian does seem to have little time for the Labour Party. Plenty of articles having a dig.

    Sharon Graham of Unite. Critical of Labour who will not rebalance in favour of her demands the workers.

    Zero hours contracts are useful for some people. My wife has one and it is great for her.

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/will-labour-rebalance-the-country-in-favour-of-working-people-i-don-t-think-so/ar-BB1nB1t4?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=6a53ea6388f94e748c04b7df37122fda&ei=12
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,735

    The problem is that what people think is their best is nowhere near good enough to be effective. People respond considerably better in terms of actual behaviour when bad stuff is taxed sufficiently to make it an occasional luxury, but good luck getting elected on that platform.
    Well yes, exactly. I have this argument with younger relatives all the time. It’s all very well to take a full on “Thunberg” position, but you’ll never get elected; and if you do then you won’t get reelected and it’ll be reversed.

    Democracy = pragmatism.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,342
    148grss said:

    But like I said, this isn't just about culling, it's about changing deer behaviour to be less damaging. Human hunting isn't something that keeps deer on edge and anxious like having natural predators does. Anxiety reduces breeding, reduces congregating in certain spots, makes spooking behaviour more pronounced. Short of sending out people tasked with guns to mow deer down, even if we increase hunting licenses for deer, I don't see human action making enough of a dent.

    And the issue with animal suffering and efficiency and such is less to do with the existence of it; nature is, as Darwin noted, cruel and painful and inefficient. But as humans we have created an understanding of morality where we want to reduce unnecessary pain and suffering. To me that includes eating factory farmed meat or the tearing apart of a fox by dogs for the amusement of some toffs. That doesn't preclude me from wanting to bring back extinct predators (to potential benefit of the environment and biodiversity as a whole) if it also helps deal with other man made problems.
    I rather like the idea of wolves on the Ashridge estate (which is teeming with deer), but I expect I'm in a very small minority.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,200
    edited June 2024
    MattW said:

    It's alleged conduct not conduct. That's important.

    Labour have done the right thing suspending, as they have time to appoint a new candidate.

    Some corners of UK politics are filthy enough that such allegations can be faked up and used to knock people out of the game. That happened to Jason Zadrozny in 2015, when he was a real possibility for Ashfield MP for the Lib Dems. I'm very critical of his current behaviour, but he has my sympathy for 2015.

    Old sexual rumours miraculously reappeared shortly before the Election in the press and he had to stand down.

    The CPS / Police kept him hanging for 2 years under investigation then collapsed their case at the door of the Court.

    I make no comment on the Barking case.
    Didn't something similar happen to Lloyd Russell-Moyle, an old accusation brought to light at a convenient time. The specifics of which we do not know and I am not implying anything in that respect, just drawing a parallel. Also raised at a time where the candidate has no time to really defend themselves.

    I think he was poorly treated and stitched up.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,955

    Labour really do hate the working classes as they ban my favourite working class meal.

    🔴 NEW: Labour will ban foie gras imports if they win the general election, the shadow environment secretary has announced

    https://x.com/TelePolitics/status/1797907892743385443

    "Modern British politics consists in not building anything, banning stuff, telling people off, and calling anyone you disagree with evil/a racist/unworthy of holding an opinion." - Aaron Bastani via Twitter, 12 Jun 2023

    This election does have an air of "meet the new boss, same as the old boss" about it. :(
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,135
    edited June 2024

    The problem is that what people think is their best is nowhere near good enough to be effective. People respond considerably better in terms of actual behaviour when bad stuff is taxed sufficiently to make it an occasional luxury, but good luck getting elected on that platform.
    Climate change is a huge global problem that involves replacing just about every piece of energy-related infrastructure in our economy over a period of a few decades.

    Why would anyone think that this was something that could be achieved by asking the public to follow the prescriptions in a, "ten things you can do to stop global warming," article from The Guardian?

    It's a category error. In most respects it shouldn't involve any change of individual behaviour.

    Edit: And where it does involve change in behaviour it should be possible that this is mostly in the form of encouragement with a carrot, for something better, rather than making the status quo worse to force that change.
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    edited June 2024
    Leon said:

    1400 girls were raped/abused/tortured in
    Rotherham according to the official report. Rotherham has a population of 260,000, about 0.3% of the UK. We know this pattern of rape and grooming has occurred all across the UK - basically wherever it is sought, it is found

    300 x 1400 = 420,000

    I’ve reduced it by 75% so you don’t have conniptions; you can thank me later
    These are arse numbers - these are numbers you pull out of your arse. Because that's the only way to make any of your positions make sense.

    And it still doesn't tackle the underlying issue - even in the world where your numbers are correct: immigrants are not the majority of perpetrators. So how do we deal with that? We would need to... increase infrastructure spending on criminal justice, community building, outreach and education (including sex education to kids, as it is the best proven method of kids being able to talk about being assaulted), empowering women and children, etc. etc. all of these things you would call the woke nanny state intervening in the business of the family, no?

    Look, you just want to go "I'm out here protecting the innocence of my white women". I know you do. You have to make arse numbers up to try and justify it but really, at the end of the day, we both not what you're saying.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,295
    boulay said:

    It’s Nazis, as Frederick Forsyth predicted, they will do anything to stop Odessaphiles.
    Could be nothing. Could be random

    Alternatively perhaps those that needed to come and go from Ukraine have come and gone. Now the border is quiet. The men that wanted to flee the draft have fled. The volunteers who wanted to return have returned

    This is it. Feels much more like Ukraine is on its own

    This young woman on the bus looks like a Hollywood actress from the 1950s. She’s so beautiful it’s unnerving. She’s notably beautiful even by Ukrainian standards

    She keeps looking at me and I’d like to think it’s fierce sexual interest but sadly I reckon she’s just intrigued. I’m the only male on the bus. Who am I and what am I doing going to Odesa?
  • biggles said:

    Well yes, exactly. I have this argument with younger relatives all the time. It’s all very well to take a full on “Thunberg” position, but you’ll never get elected; and if you do then you won’t get reelected and it’ll be reversed.

    Democracy = pragmatism.
    Which means we're probably fucked unless some sort of global eco-dictatorship can be established.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,017
    Nigelb said:

    "Real people" encompasses both types.
    And also just because they don't chat about politics doesn't mean they lack string feeling about it.
    Face to face my views would be both heavily moderated and if presented with someone elses strong opinions a mix of agreement and gently challenging them, whether I agreed or not. On the latter point not sure why I do that, but it feels right.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,698

    I thought the only reason the South East was crowded was because it's swamped with people desperate to escape the decaying, crime-ridden, impoverished North.
    I don't think I'm being overly parochial to say that the North of England is the most beautiful part not only of England, but of the world. Around 40% of our geography (too keen to make a point to check exact figure) is made up of our four and a half national parks, with a good chunk more being any one of the multiple AONBs.

    But I think northerners also have a slightly jaded impression of the South. London forms a disproportionate part of our idea of the south, and the route to London from the North is through the least remarkable bit of the country. Look at this map:
    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/image_data/file/51423/nat-parks-map-960x640.jpg

    Without wanting to deride the countryside around the southern half of the M1 and M6, it's not terribly exciting. But it's most northerners idea of what the south looks like (also a noisy traffic jam across Bromford Viaduct.)
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,848
    148grss said:

    But like I said, this isn't just about culling, it's about changing deer behaviour to be less damaging. Human hunting isn't something that keeps deer on edge and anxious like having natural predators does. Anxiety reduces breeding, reduces congregating in certain spots, makes spooking behaviour more pronounced. Short of sending out people tasked with guns to mow deer down, even if we increase hunting licenses for deer, I don't see human action making enough of a dent.

    And the issue with animal suffering and efficiency and such is less to do with the existence of it; nature is, as Darwin noted, cruel and painful and inefficient. But as humans we have created an understanding of morality where we want to reduce unnecessary pain and suffering. To me that includes eating factory farmed meat or the tearing apart of a fox by dogs for the amusement of some toffs. That doesn't preclude me from wanting to bring back extinct predators (to potential benefit of the environment and biodiversity as a whole) if it also helps deal with other man made problems.
    Keeping deer in a state of fear and anxiety does not seem very humane, even if it is done by natural predators.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,617
    148grss said:

    But like I said, this isn't just about culling, it's about changing deer behaviour to be less damaging. Human hunting isn't something that keeps deer on edge and anxious like having natural predators does. Anxiety reduces breeding, reduces congregating in certain spots, makes spooking behaviour more pronounced. Short of sending out people tasked with guns to mow deer down, even if we increase hunting licenses for deer, I don't see human action making enough of a dent.

    And the issue with animal suffering and efficiency and such is less to do with the existence of it; nature is, as Darwin noted, cruel and painful and inefficient. But as humans we have created an understanding of morality where we want to reduce unnecessary pain and suffering. To me that includes eating factory farmed meat or the tearing apart of a fox by dogs for the amusement of some toffs. That doesn't preclude me from wanting to bring back extinct predators (to potential benefit of the environment and biodiversity as a whole) if it also helps deal with other man made problems.
    If only animals understood irony.

    As it was being eaten alive - because that's how it works - the deer could ponder that such a death inflicted upon it was to satisfy your social ethical imperative while dreaming of being killed near-instantly by a pack of hounds or marksman's bullet.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,201
    Taz said:

    Didn't something similar happen to Lloyd Russell-Moyle, an old accusation brought to light at a convenient time. The specifics of which we do not know and I am not implying anything in that respect, just drawing a parallel. Also raised at a time where the candidate has no time to really defend themselves.

    I think he was poorly treated and stitched up.
    He's been suspended I think.

    I am not aware of the details of that one.
  • NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,375
    Taz said:

    The Guardian does seem to have little time for the Labour Party. Plenty of articles having a dig.

    Sharon Graham of Unite. Critical of Labour who will not rebalance in favour of her demands the workers.

    Zero hours contracts are useful for some people. My wife has one and it is great for her.

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/will-labour-rebalance-the-country-in-favour-of-working-people-i-don-t-think-so/ar-BB1nB1t4?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=6a53ea6388f94e748c04b7df37122fda&ei=12

    The mad thing about this election is that the tories at the top of the party are more left wing than the current Labour Party. When Blair came into power Labour spent fortunes increasing people's benefits, there is no way SKS will do that. UC is a very very generous benefit especially if you got children and there are other benefits which exist now which are incredible. My friend is recovering from bowel cancer and has had a PiP assessment. He is entitled to a payment of £2000 per month for 3 years. This money is not taken into account if you work or receive other benefits. Its completely tax free. He was suffering for 3-4 months following his operation due to Chemo etc but is fine now. How many other countries have a benefit system that generous?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    ToryJim said:

    Solid Victorian values and as The Great Lady herself said “Victorian values were the values when our country was great”. 😉
    Of course, a lot of them were stolen from the Nonconformists/Presbyterians (depending on location) and their work ethic. Including the Society of Friends, Independents, and other unspeakable republican anti-establishment types. Chapel rather than Church in Wales, and so on and so forth.

    Never forgotten reading the eponymous book published by the British Academy back in 1992, though the details grow dim. Now free on line., bless their collective little cotton socks.

    https://www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/publishing/proceedings-british-academy/78/

    Fort instance, R. Samuel on Mrs T and those values:

    ' But it is a sad irony of our time that
    Mrs Thatcher, though espousing the work ethic, presided over a decade
    which saw more job losses than at any other time in twentieth-century
    British history, and which witnessed (or confirmed) a decisive shift from
    a manufacturing to a service economy. There is no reason to doubt the
    sincerity of Mrs Thatcher’s professions of faith, but if one were to look
    for those who, during her period of office, most obstinately stood out for
    Victorian Values generally, whether one interpreted them in terms of family
    solidarity, the dignity of work, the security of the home, or simply the right
    of the Free-born Englishman to stay put, it would be not the Prime Minister,
    but the miners defeated in the strike of 1984-5 - her 'enemy within' - who would have the stronger claim.'
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,735

    Which means we're probably fucked unless some sort of global eco-dictatorship can be established.
    Nah, on that subject we just accept 2-2.5 degrees of warming based on current policies plus improved technology. Which is fine, unless you live in the Maldives or similar places, and we can help them.

    We’ve fixed global warming.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,660
    Cookie said:

    What about Rochdale? Did that feel like home?

    I'm fascinated by the concept of home. I lived in the suburbs of Nottingham for 9 years - it was pleasant, I had good friends there, but it never felt like home. It seems churlish to complain about living too far south when you are only 50 miles south of where you are born, but there you are.
    But I've also lived in Sheffield and that DID feel like home.
    My own gwlad - the land which stirs my soul - is quite large. It encompasses almost all of the North West (with the exception of Cumbria west of Scafell, and Crewe), and about two thirds of Yorkshire (with the boundary roughly being the M1 up as far as Tadcaster, and some vague line somewhere in the North York Moors north of that). It doesn't include much of the North East, but does include the western fringes of County Durham and the south western bit of Northumberland (the Pennines, basically). Oh, and the northern half of the Peak District.

    I'd then add a tier-2 homeland which I don't feel I'm entitled to but which elictis the same sort of feelings: Western Shropshire, Herefordshire, Worcestershire, Gloucestershire, Devon, Somerset, the Scottish Borders, the Lothians, Stirlingshire, Perthshire. (I could claim ancestral connections to those areas of Scotland but I could also claim ancestral connections to South East London, and that doesn't feel the same).

    There is a danger of course in just saying that places which are nice are those which feel like home. But obviously as @RochdalePioneers points out it's much easier for somewhere to feel like home if it's nice!
    I don't remember the date, but I do remember where I was when I decided I would leave Rochdale and never return. In the back of my dad's car on the A680 dropping off the moors past 'Owd Betts pub with Rochdale visible in its entirety through the windscreen.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,491
    148grss said:

    These are arse numbers - these are numbers you pull out of your arse. Because that's the only way to make any of your positions make sense.

    And it still doesn't tackle the underlying issue - even in the world where your numbers are correct: immigrants are not the majority of perpetrators. So how do we deal with that? We would need to... increase infrastructure spending on criminal justice, community building, outreach and education (including sex education to kids, as it is the best proven method of kids being able to talk about being assaulted), empowering women and children, etc. etc. all of these things you would call the woke nanny state intervening in the business of the family, no?

    Look, you just want to go "I'm out here protecting the innocence of my white women". I know you do. You have to make arse numbers up to try and justify it but really, at the end of the day, we both not what you're saying.
    Do you think it's important to look at per capita rates of offending rather than just raw numbers?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Interesting guest list at Farage’s event yesterday, including plumbing entrepreneur Charlie Mullins and property developer Nick Candy. The Mail, being the Mail, is more interested in the actress wife of the latter, than in those who might be funding Farage and Reform UK.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-13492107/Holly-Valance-Nigel-Farage-General-Election-Reform-UK-Clacton.html
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,332
    Sandpit said:

    Interesting guest list at Farage’s event yesterday, including plumbing entrepreneur Charlie Mullins and property developer Nick Candy. The Mail, being the Mail, is more interested in the actress wife of the latter, than in those who might be funding Farage and Reform UK.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-13492107/Holly-Valance-Nigel-Farage-General-Election-Reform-UK-Clacton.html

    A pretty sinister bunch indeed.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,274
    TOPPING said:

    I mean a wolf killing a deer would be a pretty long, drawn out, bloody, and painful affair do you really want to inflict that on a deer rather than a single bullet.

    It's not like a pack of hounds killing a fox which was a super efficient means of pest control.
    They used to get 10,000 people watching the public beheadings in Riyadh after Friday prayers. Families were encouraged to come. No one was too young. A super efficient way to entertain the population.

    Matter of opinion I suppose
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173

    I am of the opinion that conservatives attracted to Reform have already left and the remaining 20-25% in the polls are probably similar to myself who reject Farage and the right totally, and hope that after the carnage on July 4th there will be sufficient conservatives in the country to start the long round back to sanity
    What happens next is down to the scale of the post rejection tantrum on the part of the party membership. What the country wants don't come into it, and hasn't for some time.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,295
    148grss said:

    These are arse numbers - these are numbers you pull out of your arse. Because that's the only way to make any of your positions make sense.

    And it still doesn't tackle the underlying issue - even in the world where your numbers are correct: immigrants are not the majority of perpetrators. So how do we deal with that? We would need to... increase infrastructure spending on criminal justice, community building, outreach and education (including sex education to kids, as it is the best proven method of kids being able to talk about being assaulted), empowering women and children, etc. etc. all of these things you would call the woke nanny state intervening in the business of the family, no?

    Look, you just want to go "I'm out here protecting the innocence of my white women". I know you do. You have to make arse numbers up to try and justify it but really, at the end of the day, we both not what you're saying.
    You’re quite insane yet reasonably well educated and not totally dumb. You probably have an IQ of about 115? - which is actually the same as the average Ashkenazi Jewish IQ

    Is that right? 115? I’m usually good at this
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,502
    Sandpit said:

    Interesting guest list at Farage’s event yesterday, including plumbing entrepreneur Charlie Mullins and property developer Nick Candy. The Mail, being the Mail, is more interested in the actress wife of the latter, than in those who might be funding Farage and Reform UK.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-13492107/Holly-Valance-Nigel-Farage-General-Election-Reform-UK-Clacton.html

    What's the deal with Mullins? He was anti-Brexit six years ago.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,201
    Sandpit said:

    Interesting guest list at Farage’s event yesterday, including plumbing entrepreneur Charlie Mullins and property developer Nick Candy. The Mail, being the Mail, is more interested in the actress wife of the latter, than in those who might be funding Farage and Reform UK.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-13492107/Holly-Valance-Nigel-Farage-General-Election-Reform-UK-Clacton.html

    The photo with Nick Candy, Nigel Farage, and Donald Trump is interesting.

  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,491
    Cicero said:

    A pretty sinister bunch indeed.
    Yes, the last thing we need is builders and plumbers gaining influence over our politics. We've got too much development as it is!
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Leon said:

    Could be nothing. Could be random

    Alternatively perhaps those that needed to come and go from Ukraine have come and gone. Now the border is quiet. The men that wanted to flee the draft have fled. The volunteers who wanted to return have returned

    This is it. Feels much more like Ukraine is on its own

    This young woman on the bus looks like a Hollywood actress from the 1950s. She’s so beautiful it’s unnerving. She’s notably beautiful even by Ukrainian standards

    She keeps looking at me and I’d like to think it’s fierce sexual interest but sadly I reckon she’s just intrigued. I’m the only male on the bus. Who am I and what am I doing going to Odesa?
    If you think you’ll get funny looks on a bus going to Ukraine, wait until you see the looks you’ll get as a man leaving Ukraine.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,201
    MattW said:

    It's alleged conduct not conduct. That's important.

    Labour have done the right thing suspending, as they have time to appoint a new candidate.

    Some corners of UK politics are filthy enough that such allegations can be faked up and used to knock people out of the game. That happened to Jason Zadrozny in 2015, when he was a real possibility for Ashfield MP for the Lib Dems. I'm very critical of his current behaviour, but he has my sympathy for 2015.

    Old sexual rumours miraculously reappeared shortly before the Election in the press and he had to stand down.

    The CPS / Police kept him hanging for 2 years under investigation then collapsed their case at the door of the Court.

    I make no comment on the Barking case.
    I should also add that there's quite a lot of colour in the background.
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c722dzpmrl0o
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155

    Do you think it's important to look at per capita rates of offending rather than just raw numbers?
    It can be, but as was pointed out by one of the summaries and the criticism that this issue is under policed - the demographics who are over represented are also the demographics who are over policed and were indeed targeted specifically for this kind of policing after these allegations. But, again, even if they are over represented in the statistics based on their representation in population it doesn't change the underlying point - the one that started this whole conversation.

    Blocking immigrants from coming in the country does not solve the issue - it is just a good scapegoat for the problem. To deal with sexual abuse properly would require campaigning and resources - things that are not provided for under the ideology of cuts cuts cuts to anything, especially if it can be construed as "woke", which I'm sure these things would be.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192
    tlg86 said:

    What's the deal with Mullins? He was anti-Brexit six years ago.
    He’s an attention seeker
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited June 2024
    tlg86 said:

    What's the deal with Mullins? He was anti-Brexit six years ago.
    I was thinking the same! He was understandably against leaving the EU, given how many plumbers he recruited from there, but he appears to be a somewhat unlikely, and therefore interesting, character to now turn up at a Farage rally. IIRC a former Conservative donor from the Cameron years.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,502
    MattW said:

    The photo with Nick Candy, Nigel Farage, and Donald Trump is interesting.

    R*E*V*E*R*S*E
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,902
    Was this a failed coup attempt ?
    https://x.com/UB1UB2/status/1797594347405480219
  • biggles said:

    Nah, on that subject we just accept 2-2.5 degrees of warming based on current policies plus improved technology. Which is fine, unless you live in the Maldives or similar places, and we can help them.

    We’ve fixed global warming.
    Er, no, we really haven't. Thus far we have made virtually no impact whatsoever on the rate of increase of CO2 in the atmosphere and are currently heading for at least 3 degrees of warming. The Maldives are already doomed, but so too are large areas of coastal plains around the world, not to mention those areas that will be made uninhabitable by heat and shifts in weather patterns. None of this will be fixed by imploring people to "do their best".
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    Leon said:

    You’re quite insane yet reasonably well educated and not totally dumb. You probably have an IQ of about 115? - which is actually the same as the average Ashkenazi Jewish IQ

    Is that right? 115? I’m usually good at this
    Okay, is this where I learn that Leon has been a Poe this entire time, right? Come on, the man who screeches about the end of the West due to wokeness is insinuating I'm an insane overeducated left wing Jew. Is Jeremey Beadle going to come up behind me and tell me this entire forum has been a specifically designed honey pot for me?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,295
    Wow. Quite a lot of Dark Noom in southeast Moldova as we approach Ukraine

    Thick forests. Driving rain. Abandoned buidings abutting lush green vineyards

    A beautiful young woman stares silently ahead; her toddler gurgles happily in the empty seats, as the bus trundles slowly towards an appalling war, which has murdered half a million people
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,491
    148grss said:

    It can be, but as was pointed out by one of the summaries and the criticism that this issue is under policed - the demographics who are over represented are also the demographics who are over policed and were indeed targeted specifically for this kind of policing after these allegations. But, again, even if they are over represented in the statistics based on their representation in population it doesn't change the underlying point - the one that started this whole conversation.

    Blocking immigrants from coming in the country does not solve the issue - it is just a good scapegoat for the problem. To deal with sexual abuse properly would require campaigning and resources - things that are not provided for under the ideology of cuts cuts cuts to anything, especially if it can be construed as "woke", which I'm sure these things would be.
    When looking at crimes against the person, you can't ignore the aspect of who is targetting whom and why.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,423
    Are we already for today’s Battle of Britain match?

    A boost for the SNP if Scotland pull off a surprise.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,695
    edited June 2024
    Now looking like the BJP won't get a majority. Quite a turnup for the books. And I suppose a reason to remain cautious about any polls projecting landslides, as consistently happened ahead of the Indian election.

    Has there ever been a month like this for global participation in elections? We had Mexico (pop. 130 million), now India (pop 1.42bn), then the EU elections later this week (pop 448 million) and finally the UK on the 4th (pop 67 million). Any I've missed?

    That's 2.07 billion people affected by (admittedly not all voting in) elections in the space of 5 weeks, over a quarter of the world.

    EDIT: I forgot South Africa (60 million) and there are a few other smaller ones.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,698
    148grss said:

    It can be, but as was pointed out by one of the summaries and the criticism that this issue is under policed - the demographics who are over represented are also the demographics who are over policed and were indeed targeted specifically for this kind of policing after these allegations. But, again, even if they are over represented in the statistics based on their representation in population it doesn't change the underlying point - the one that started this whole conversation.

    Blocking immigrants from coming in the country does not solve the issue - it is just a good scapegoat for the problem. To deal with sexual abuse properly would require campaigning and resources - things that are not provided for under the ideology of cuts cuts cuts to anything, especially if it can be construed as "woke", which I'm sure these things would be.
    I thought the whole point of Rotherham, Rochdale etc was that the perpetrators had been under-policed - i.e. largely left to their own devices, and the victims told to go away?
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,392

    Use the Trainline app – far easier than paper tickets.
    Trainline charge and both Journey Planner and Trainline got it wrong as well. None could decide what to charge me. The problem was repeated at the station, but the guy made a very very very long phone call.

    All too complicated.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,092
    ((Dan Hodges)))
    @DPJHodges
    ·
    22m
    Told Tory MPs phoning senior Reform officials pleading with them to withdraw candidates in their seats. Meanwhile Red Wall MPs outraged at "wet" Tory candidates being parachuted into safe seats. It's starting to come apart.

    https://x.com/DPJHodges/status/1797945342937506035
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,374
    Sandpit said:

    Marbles, plural? Sounds rather optimistic!

    Not sure there’s a single marble left between the pair of them.
    Biden is deftly applying pressure to Israel to move forward a peace plan. Trump is denying he ever said “Lock her up”. I think Biden has more marbles than Trump.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,491
    edited June 2024
    tlg86 said:

    What's the deal with Mullins? He was anti-Brexit six years ago.
    I don't think he's changed his mind on Brexit. You need to compare Reform with populist right parties on the continent who were always more ambivalent about EU membership.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,617
    Roger said:

    They used to get 10,000 people watching the public beheadings in Riyadh after Friday prayers. Families were encouraged to come. No one was too young. A super efficient way to entertain the population.

    Matter of opinion I suppose
    Careful of that ant, Roger.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    ((Dan Hodges)))
    @DPJHodges
    ·
    22m
    Told Tory MPs phoning senior Reform officials pleading with them to withdraw candidates in their seats. Meanwhile Red Wall MPs outraged at "wet" Tory candidates being parachuted into safe seats. It's starting to come apart.

    https://x.com/DPJHodges/status/1797945342937506035

    Fuck me he's an hysterical old twit. Dan Hodges, redefining mewling bed wetter for the 2020s
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,017
    Err - there is no difference. She wants the world to have no nuclear weapons. The policy is for the UK to have nuclear weapons because other countries, including realistic potential enemies, have them. She agrees with the policy, her desire on something that is not going to happen in our lifetimes is irrelevant.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,274
    Angela Rayner is the hero of Labour's campaign so far. She's Labour's heart and Sir Keir's it's head. I doubt that was planned by their ad agency but it could hardly have worked out better
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,617

    Er, no, we really haven't. Thus far we have made virtually no impact whatsoever on the rate of increase of CO2 in the atmosphere and are currently heading for at least 3 degrees of warming. The Maldives are already doomed, but so too are large areas of coastal plains around the world, not to mention those areas that will be made uninhabitable by heat and shifts in weather patterns. None of this will be fixed by imploring people to "do their best".
    What is the timing for the demise of the Maldives out of interest.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,767
    Roger said:

    Angela Rayner is the hero of Labour's campaign so far. She's Labour's heart and Sir Keir's it's head. I doubt that was planned by their ad agency but it could hardly have worked out better
    I quite like Rayner, she'll provide endless amusement as SKS tries to make it look as he's in charge,
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,295
    lol. The bus is suddenly full - including several obvious soldiers returning to the front - and there is now an almost jolly atmos

    Dark Noom dispelled. First impressions entirely wrong
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,841
    TOPPING said:

    If only animals understood irony.

    As it was being eaten alive - because that's how it works - the deer could ponder that such a death inflicted upon it was to satisfy your social ethical imperative while dreaming of being killed near-instantly by a pack of hounds or marksman's bullet.
    The deer is suffering from false consciousness of its place in the socio-economic-environmental matrix.

    It’s better to be eaten alive by working class wolves than it is to die a quick death at the hands of an upper middle class stalker.
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    TOPPING said:

    If only animals understood irony.

    As it was being eaten alive - because that's how it works - the deer could ponder that such a death inflicted upon it was to satisfy your social ethical imperative while dreaming of being killed near-instantly by a pack of hounds or marksman's bullet.
    Look, nature tooth and claw. I don't think meat eating is inherently morally wrong as a human - I just think when we can sustain ourselves without harming animals and the method by which we do mass meat farming is contributing to massive deforestation and ecological destruction that it's a bad idea. If you keep chickens in your back garden and decide to eat them when they start getting old, or if you're poor and have no other choice, that's fine.

    I'm not an Auditor from the Discworld, demanding that all life stop to preserve order or my idea of what is moral. The natural world is immoral. Humans are able to stand against the pressures of nature in ways basically all other animals cannot, and we have the luxury and capability of developing and acting in moral ways.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,017
    kjh said:

    Trainline charge and both Journey Planner and Trainline got it wrong as well. None could decide what to charge me. The problem was repeated at the station, but the guy made a very very very long phone call.

    All too complicated.
    Trainline charged me £2.49 extra fee recently for 2 tickets purchased online. How much do you value an hour of your time?
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,698

    I don't remember the date, but I do remember where I was when I decided I would leave Rochdale and never return. In the back of my dad's car on the A680 dropping off the moors past 'Owd Betts pub with Rochdale visible in its entirety through the windscreen.
    A nice little vignette. Poetic. But raises many more question than it answers! How old were you? Why? Was Owd Betts pub significant? What prompted this? I'm fascinated. Not least because I feel so strongly about home.
    Feel free to cheerfully ignore. But you have piqued my interest. This is like the first line to a great novel.

    Have to confess though, while I sketched out the sea of my homeland earlier, the island within that of Oldham, Rochdale, Bacup and Burnley is one I can't find too much enthusiasm for. So I can perhaps sympathise.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192
    Another Labour candidate jumps out of the race

    https://x.com/tomorrowsmps/status/1797952000061284693?s=61

    It’s not a good sign if candidates are abandoning the fight whatever the reasons. Suggests that not everything will be plain sailing on the good ship Starmer.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,092
    Britain Trump latest...


    Tom Peck
    @tompeck

    He’s gonna win by miles

    https://x.com/tompeck/status/1797948238575870365
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,295
    edited June 2024

    Fuck me he's an hysterical old twit. Dan Hodges, redefining mewling bed wetter for the 2020s
    He’s a journalist looking for a story. Nowt wrong with that

    And if his info is even halfway right then that’s fascinating
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,826
    Cookie said:

    I don't think I'm being overly parochial to say that the North of England is the most beautiful part not only of England, but of the world. Around 40% of our geography (too keen to make a point to check exact figure) is made up of our four and a half national parks, with a good chunk more being any one of the multiple AONBs.

    But I think northerners also have a slightly jaded impression of the South. London forms a disproportionate part of our idea of the south, and the route to London from the North is through the least remarkable bit of the country. Look at this map:
    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/image_data/file/51423/nat-parks-map-960x640.jpg

    Without wanting to deride the countryside around the southern half of the M1 and M6, it's not terribly exciting. But it's most northerners idea of what the south looks like (also a noisy traffic jam across Bromford Viaduct.)
    You are very balanced and quite right. And there is more. In Cumbria there is huge joy to be had entirely outside the national park areas, and it is mostly empty. Visited Long Meg (not in a national park) recently with no-one there at all, one of the great numinous neolithic sites. Free. Almost no signposts. No fences. No barriers. No-one cares. It's part of a real working farm.

    M1 and M6 not the greatest approach to London. Go A1 instead, and then you can stop off in Lincolnshire, no national park, a bit of AONB, have it completely to yourself (more noom than the whole of France) and change your mind about going to London.
This discussion has been closed.