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Lib Dems! Winning here? – politicalbetting.com

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  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405
    TimS said:

    Have we done the latest Ed Davey stunt? Being drunk.

    https://x.com/christiancalgie/status/1801268147749638260?s=46

    That certainly says "skin full" to me.
  • No they don't. They directly overlook their own gardens and indirectly overlook the neighbours. I'm suggesting that they could extend backwards and build over their own garden entirely and put balconies facing sideways. Are you ok with that? If not then you have to concede that you need planning rules.
    They already do overlook the neighbours. If someone stands at a 115° angle on that balcony they're looking directly into the neighbours garden.

    If you're asking me if I have a problem if that were a 90° angle instead, then no of course I would not. What frigging difference does it make?

    If one of those properties didn't have the balcony and the other did then standing on the edge of that balcony would be directly on the perimeter as discussed, and anyone looking at 90° would see what you're moaning about, no different.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,618
    TimS said:

    Have we done the latest Ed Davey stunt? Being drunk.

    https://x.com/christiancalgie/status/1801268147749638260?s=46

    Yes, he's really coming over as a man you'd like to go for 6 pints with.
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,385
    kinabalu said:

    Yes, he's really coming over as a man you'd like to go for 6 pints with.
    Can confirm
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263
    TimS said:

    QTWTAIN
    If you look back to the posts on PB.com in 1924 you can see the same confidence that the Conservative-Liberal duopoly would soon re-emerge.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,292
    edited June 2024
    Carnyx said:

    Where I live is towns and villages with fields. Some have grown more thasn others. It's my town that I experience. Not some local authority. And not as village.


    You ought to be bloody happy some places have grown that much. Go and bother some real Nimbies somewhere3 else. Rather than generate new Nimbies with your attitude and your discourtesy.

    So undeveloped rural towns and villages?

    Kind of the place that needs to be developed to get millions of new homes.

    Care to put a figure on this alleged tripling of houses? How many tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of villages in your town alone are you talking about?
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173

    It will be tempting to take the Blair approach and do nothing in term 1 for fear of not getting term 2. For the sake of the country, I hope he doesn't, and that he uses "we're in a bigger hole than I feared" excuse as a cover.

    But he's not a young man, which would point towards a need to hurry.
    I'm hoping that the "it's even worse than we thought" excuse will be deployed quickly and lead to an immediate raid to repair the public finances and vital public services, but it would be best to move quickly and with force at the start of the Parliament and get the pain out of the way quickly. I'm not sure that this lot are bold enough to contemplate such measures.

    If they are then obvious targets include:

    *Equalisation of CGT and income tax rates
    *Abolishing or substantially raising the cap on council tax rises, along possibly with substantial reform (at a minimum, more bands to force owners of expensive properties to cough up a lot more)
    *Abolition of higher rate tax relief on pension contributions
    *A wealth tax

    They could also raise a lot of money by lowering inheritance tax thresholds and raising rates, but the level of public dislike for IHT borders on rabid so that's likely not happening under any circumstances.
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592
    Are England thick?

    They need a big net run rate improvement and they choose to field first, which is a best case scenario leaves them a minimal chase which will make far less different to the average figure than batting first and sticking 250 on them.

    Just braindead.
  • Reform party political broadcast is just 5 mins of blank screen saying “Britain is broken, Britain needs Reform” with no audio
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    So undeveloped rural towns and villages?

    Kind of the place that needs to be developed to get millions of new homes.

    Care to put a figure on this alleged tripling of houses? How many tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of villages in your town alone arre you talking about?
    I have told you several times that my town has been developed greatly. I was not talking about other towns in the same arbitrary local authority.

    No point in discussing thingfs with you if you think I'm lying rather than that you might just possibly be wrong.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,697

    They already do overlook the neighbours. If someone stands at a 115° angle on that balcony they're looking directly into the neighbours garden.

    If you're asking me if I have a problem if that were a 90° angle instead, then no of course I would not. What frigging difference does it make?

    If one of those properties didn't have the balcony and the other did then standing on the edge of that balcony would be directly on the perimeter as discussed, and anyone looking at 90° would see what you're moaning about, no different.
    I can't tell if you're being contrarian or obtuse.

    Just to be 100% clear, the premise is that you have a row of terraced houses and someone extends backwards to build on the entirety of their plot, and puts balconies on the side elevation looking over their neighbours' gardens directly, not at an angle. You think that's ok?
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    Reform party political broadcast is just 5 mins of blank screen saying “Britain is broken, Britain needs Reform” with no audio

    It's about time someone didn't say it
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405

    So undeveloped rural towns and villages?

    Kind of the place that needs to be developed to get millions of new homes.

    Care to put a figure on this alleged tripling of houses? How many tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of villages in your town alone are you talking about?
    How do you put hundreds of thousands of villages in a town?
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,828
    If FPTP gifts the Lib-Dems main opposition status due to obliterating the Tories, will they still be agitating for PR? ;)
  • PJHPJH Posts: 799
    Well, earlier I asked where Labour were targetting because I hadn't seen any campaigning anywhere... but I've just been canvassed by them, for the first time at any election since I moved to Romford in 2002.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,834
    edited June 2024
    GIN1138 said:

    It's 100 years since the Liberal Party was destroyed in the 1924 general election, so maybe after a Century it's time for a Liberal renaissance?
    Even now the Liberals are forecast to get fewer seats than Charles Kennedy got in 2005.

    If there was any change in the 2 party system it would be Reform overtaking the Tories on voteshare this election, maybe even on seats too in time and Reform then becoming the main party of the right in the UK. Probably taking over the Tories in due course too with Farage Leader of the Opposition to a Starmer government ultimately
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,961

    They are Roy Jenkinsites, not Liberals
    Speak for yourself! I am a Liberal.

    Even so, you do need to bear in mind that when Roy Jenkins stopped being President of the EU and returned to this country, he wanted to join the Liberal Party It was David Steel who persuaded him to found the SDP and split the Labour Party - with the objective of achieving the reform of the left.

    It nearly worked.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,828
    HYUFD said:

    Even now the Liberals are forecast to get fewer seats than Charles Kennedy got in 2005.

    If there was any change in the 2 party system it would be Reform overtaking the Tories on voteshare this election, maybe even on seats too in time and Reform then becoming the main party of the right in the UK. Probably taking over the Tories in due course too
    Will you be jumping ship to REF soon, Hy?
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,243
    Muesli said:

    Is it not a bit odd that YouGov sought favourability ratings for Carla Denyer and Richard Tice (who isn't even Reform UK leader now) and not Sir Ed Davey? And Vaughan Gething but nobody else from either Wales or Scotland? Do they have a fixed list of names from the main two parties and then draw a few wildcards out of a hat?

    This was exactly my thought when I read the list. Very poor from Yougov I would suggest. I am not even a LD fan but I would expect the leader of the third-ish national party in the country to be included in these sorts of lists.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,096
    TimS said:

    Have we done the latest Ed Davey stunt? Being drunk.

    https://x.com/christiancalgie/status/1801268147749638260?s=46

    It's a couple of years old it seems, but not bad publicity. Ed Davey is going for the "fun Dad" vote.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Foxy said:

    Bet 365 have Vaz at 41 in Leicester East. Its a crazy constituency with both major parties split and 10 candidates. I reckon that is value. Likely Lab hold, but Vaz is a big man locally...

    Value loser I think.

    Meanwhile, McQuestion Time Leaders Debate from Auld Reekie on BBC1 now for those that just can’t get enough!
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,828

    Nigel Farage’s Reform party has overtaken the Conservatives in a poll for the first time in a symbolic moment that deals another blow to Rishi Sunak’s electoral hopes.

    The YouGov survey for The Times found that support for Reform had increased by two points to 19 per cent while the Tories were unchanged on 18 per cent.



    https://www.thetimes.com/article/cdc8d582-17fc-4757-8f4b-ddcee80fdfdb

    Nigel! :open_mouth:
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,697

    Nigel Farage’s Reform party has overtaken the Conservatives in a poll for the first time in a symbolic moment that deals another blow to Rishi Sunak’s electoral hopes.

    The YouGov survey for The Times found that support for Reform had increased by two points to 19 per cent while the Tories were unchanged on 18 per cent.



    https://www.thetimes.com/article/cdc8d582-17fc-4757-8f4b-ddcee80fdfdb

    The Tories are Broken.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,263
    edited June 2024

    Nigel Farage’s Reform party has overtaken the Conservatives in a poll for the first time in a symbolic moment that deals another blow to Rishi Sunak’s electoral hopes.

    The YouGov survey for The Times found that support for Reform had increased by two points to 19 per cent while the Tories were unchanged on 18 per cent.



    https://www.thetimes.com/article/cdc8d582-17fc-4757-8f4b-ddcee80fdfdb

    Goodness me. 😲
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,096

    Value loser I think.

    Meanwhile, McQuestion Time Leaders Debate from Auld Reekie on BBC1 now for those that just can’t get enough!
    Probably a loser, but don't underestimate his (industrial washing) machine.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,618

    The fence between my garden and my neighbours garden is directly on the perimeter of my garden and their garden.

    If instead of a fence there's a balcony that goes above the garden that adjoins with the neighbours balcony, then its directly on the same perimeter, just like a fence might be.
    But then you'd be sat there staring at each other, wouldn't you? Bit intense.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    edited June 2024
    Labour down to 37 with YouGov too. All happening
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,953
    pigeon said:

    I'm hoping that the "it's even worse than we thought" excuse will be deployed quickly and lead to an immediate raid to repair the public finances and vital public services, but it would be best to move quickly and with force at the start of the Parliament and get the pain out of the way quickly. I'm not sure that this lot are bold enough to contemplate such measures.

    If they are then obvious targets include:

    *Equalisation of CGT and income tax rates
    *Abolishing or substantially raising the cap on council tax rises, along possibly with substantial reform (at a minimum, more bands to force owners of expensive properties to cough up a lot more)
    *Abolition of higher rate tax relief on pension contributions
    *A wealth tax

    They could also raise a lot of money by lowering inheritance tax thresholds and raising rates, but the level of public dislike for IHT borders on rabid so that's likely not happening under any circumstances.
    40% CGT would be one of the highest rates in the world and would close the UK for investment.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,697
    That poll has Labour sliding again, and Reform + Tories = Labour.

    Lab: 37% (-1)
    Reform: 19% (+2)
    Con: 18% (nc)
    Lib Dem: 14% (-1)
    Green: 7 (-1)
    SNP: 3 (+1)
    Plaid: 1 (nc)
    Other: 2 (+1)

    https://x.com/Steven_Swinford/status/1801329280858591268
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Foxy said:

    It's a couple of years old it seems, but not bad publicity. Ed Davey is going for the "fun Dad" vote.
    Fun fact: The pub is the Prince of Wales in Surbiton.
  • Carnyx said:

    I have told you several times that my town has been developed greatly. I was not talking about other towns in the same arbitrary local authority.

    No point in discussing thingfs with you if you think I'm lying rather than that you might just possibly be wrong.
    I think your version of "greatly" differs to mine.

    Are you talking a hundred thousand extra homes? Two hundred thousand extra homes? What are we talking about here?

    I'll give context, Warrington in 1968 had 65,000 population, its now a quarter of a million, an increase of nearly 200,000, which is roughly a four-fold increase so more than what you're talking about and that increase is nowhere near enough for the population growth we've had in this country.

    So how hundreds of thousands of population has your town grown by and why is that "enough"?

    No need to name the town, just round it if you'd like to the nearest hundred thousand population growth.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited June 2024

    If you look back to the posts on PB.com in 1924 you can see the same confidence that the Conservative-Liberal duopoly would soon re-emerge.
    What do we believe of the chances of that young chap Mr Mosley taking over the new Labour-men, though ? He has joined them in this election, and both Mr Maynard Keynes and Mr Ramsey Macdonald, consider him as the future of the Left in this country.

    Also, I have heard it said widely that Mr Wells believes that the Martians should soon be invading our shores, by hot-air balloon.
  • Andy_JS said:

    Goodness me. 😲
    "Only 22 per cent of Reform voters thought Labour would win any kind of majority."

    Not expecting Reform voters to have very effective tactical voting...
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173

    The main problem with Labour getting c.500 seats is practical - the layout of the Commons. You'd have to have around 100 Labour MPs sitting on the opposition benches. Hilarious.
    Perhaps they'd finally take the opportunity to repair Parliament and move elsewhere for a few years.
    Clacton would be perfect.

    They won't repair it. They're waiting for it to burn down so they can have a new one.
  • MonksfieldMonksfield Posts: 2,861
    GIN1138 said:

    If FPTP gifts the Lib-Dems main opposition status due to obliterating the Tories, will they still be agitating for PR? ;)

    Yes
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,924
    edited June 2024

    Either he carries it throughout his first term, or he drops it and gets down to business.

    Which will it be?
    Starmer has been massacred by all the right-on thinkers (TLS today is a recent example, in a review by Tom Clark of Will Hutton's 'This Time No Mistakes') but unless I have missed something, I have heard no serious attacks on him from the centre left/social democrat people who have ever had to try to win a general election; he starts 124 seats away from a majority of 1.

    My intuition (ie guess) is that he has learned from the past and this election is the most important and epoch making since 1945. Even more than 1979. Fewer Ming vases after 5th July.
  • kinabalu said:

    But then you'd be sat there staring at each other, wouldn't you? Bit intense.
    Only if you look that way. Which direction you look is up to you, not the property.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,074
    edited June 2024
    Reform/Tory crossover KLAXON!

    And Mr Pedley taking election questions on LBC for this hour
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,096
    pigeon said:

    They won't repair it. They're waiting for it to burn down so they can have a new one.
    They could make a fortune raffling tickets to light the fuse...
  • MonksfieldMonksfield Posts: 2,861

    That poll has Labour sliding again, and Reform + Tories = Labour.

    Lab: 37% (-1)
    Reform: 19% (+2)
    Con: 18% (nc)
    Lib Dem: 14% (-1)
    Green: 7 (-1)
    SNP: 3 (+1)
    Plaid: 1 (nc)
    Other: 2 (+1)

    https://x.com/Steven_Swinford/status/1801329280858591268

    It’s Lab+LD you need to be worried about William. Especially as they’re in different places.
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592

    That poll has Labour sliding again, and Reform + Tories = Labour.

    Lab: 37% (-1)
    Reform: 19% (+2)
    Con: 18% (nc)
    Lib Dem: 14% (-1)
    Green: 7 (-1)
    SNP: 3 (+1)
    Plaid: 1 (nc)
    Other: 2 (+1)

    https://x.com/Steven_Swinford/status/1801329280858591268

    Time for the Tories to do the honourable thing and stop splitting the right if they want to stop Labour
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,444
    edited June 2024

    That poll has Labour sliding again, and Reform + Tories = Labour.

    Lab: 37% (-1)
    Reform: 19% (+2)
    Con: 18% (nc)
    Lib Dem: 14% (-1)
    Green: 7 (-1)
    SNP: 3 (+1)
    Plaid: 1 (nc)
    Other: 2 (+1)

    https://x.com/Steven_Swinford/status/1801329280858591268

    Extraordinary. Will the Conservatives hit the 9% they got in the 2019 Euros?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,550

    NEW THREAD

  • pingping Posts: 3,805
    edited June 2024
    The Bastards Won.
  • PJHPJH Posts: 799

    That poll has Labour sliding again, and Reform + Tories = Labour.

    Lab: 37% (-1)
    Reform: 19% (+2)
    Con: 18% (nc)
    Lib Dem: 14% (-1)
    Green: 7 (-1)
    SNP: 3 (+1)
    Plaid: 1 (nc)
    Other: 2 (+1)

    https://x.com/Steven_Swinford/status/1801329280858591268

    I had assumed the 15% for the LDs in the previous poll was a massive outlier, and they would be -4 in the next one. Clearly not, and supported by a slight uptick in most of the others this week.

    Double cross-over coming?
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,057

    Re; the Ultraterrestrial paper, it's quite interesting.

    The "as yet to be peer reviewed" is nevertheless a hint of amusement, a bit like Wikipedia's "Citation Needed." At the same time, we could be in for some surprises in the next few decades on this topic, though. I don't think most people have adjusted to , or are aware of the greater expert interest in the topic, at the moment.

    The final sentence in the article states:
    "For me, the leap to speculations about aliens is a leap too far. But it is important to retain an open mind as we solve this mystery."

    I interpret it as - It is a mystery that deserves investigation but aliens probably are not the answer.
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592

    Labour down to 37 with YouGov too. All happening

    Jezza's going to beat Keir isn't he! Delicious.
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,385
    GIN1138 said:

    If FPTP gifts the Lib-Dems main opposition status due to obliterating the Tories, will they still be agitating for PR? ;)

    Yes. Our Victorian political system needs a serious overhaul.
  • I can't tell if you're being contrarian or obtuse.

    Just to be 100% clear, the premise is that you have a row of terraced houses and someone extends backwards to build on the entirety of their plot, and puts balconies on the side elevation looking over their neighbours' gardens directly, not at an angle. You think that's ok?
    If they extend backwards on the entirety of their plot then any balconies would be by definition need to be on their neighbours plot instead, so it would not be OK, of course.

    If they've not built over their entire plot and so instead put the balcony onto their own land, then yes of course its OK.
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405

    I think your version of "greatly" differs to mine.

    Are you talking a hundred thousand extra homes? Two hundred thousand extra homes? What are we talking about here?

    I'll give context, Warrington in 1968 had 65,000 population, its now a quarter of a million, an increase of nearly 200,000, which is roughly a four-fold increase so more than what you're talking about and that increase is nowhere near enough for the population growth we've had in this country.

    So how hundreds of thousands of population has your town grown by and why is that "enough"?

    No need to name the town, just round it if you'd like to the nearest hundred thousand population growth.
    An Englishman's two favourite sights are uninterrupted green fields giving way to blue remembered hills, and the monthly Halifax house price data.
  • MuesliMuesli Posts: 202
    This thread has been overtaken by Reform.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,148

    That poll has Labour sliding again, and Reform + Tories = Labour.

    Lab: 37% (-1)
    Reform: 19% (+2)
    Con: 18% (nc)
    Lib Dem: 14% (-1)
    Green: 7 (-1)
    SNP: 3 (+1)
    Plaid: 1 (nc)
    Other: 2 (+1)

    https://x.com/Steven_Swinford/status/1801329280858591268

    I know that still has Labour on twice the Tories, and with an 18pp lead over Reform, but 37% is a low score for Labour. The Tories received 36.9% of the vote at the 2010GE. 42% was the lowest poll score for Labour during the 1997GE campaign.
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,961
    GIN1138 said:

    Will you be jumping ship to REF soon, Hy?
    Noooooooooooo, Young HY.......... Don't do it........

    Here on PB we really do need one sensible Tory to remind us all what the Conservative Party used to be like..... Even though we disagree.

    You may suffer for a while, but we really do need to have moderate decent Conservatives around,

    Once we get electoral reform, and voting by STV, you can still vote Conservative, but you can say which sort of Conservative you prefer.....

    Come on, Young HY. No jumping ship to REF. Please.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    HYUFD said:

    Even now the Liberals are forecast to get fewer seats than Charles Kennedy got in 2005.

    If there was any change in the 2 party system it would be Reform overtaking the Tories on voteshare this election, maybe even on seats too in time and Reform then becoming the main party of the right in the UK. Probably taking over the Tories in due course too with Farage Leader of the Opposition to a Starmer government ultimately
    If (and it's still a big if) the Conservative vote share collapses far enough then very strange things can and will start to happen.

    A scenario in which a heavily split popular vote has Reform in second place with anything between 0 and 2 seats is also, of course, eminently possible.

    In a steeplechase between Con, LD and Ref all on values in the mid-to-high teens, efficient distribution of the vote (particularly for Con and LD in the marginals that they're contesting) becomes all important. Could easily end up with 100 seats for one and 30 for the other in either direction.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,697

    If they extend backwards on the entirety of their plot then any balconies would be by definition need to be on their neighbours plot instead, so it would not be OK, of course.

    If they've not built over their entire plot and so instead put the balcony onto their own land, then yes of course its OK.
    What if they leave a foot gap to the perimeter of their plot? Would it be ok then?
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,057
    Leon said:

    There’s a very astute comment under that tweet from a Spanish guy. Who points out that such is the state of video fakery (superb) even if we now get the most compelling footage in history people will dismiss it as fake, indeed they are MORE likely to dismiss it as fake the better it is

    So we are now past the moment when any piece of video or photo evidence, no matter how good, will do “the job”

    And also many people are inclined to dismiss anything anyway, as we see

    That’s got me thinking - what next? This evolution leaves us with eye witness testimony, but that is all too easily dismissed as “he’s a loony” - or we may get very senior people saying “yes we have evidence” but that can likewise be dismissed as psy-ops, contagion, mass hallucination

    The conclusion is that we will now never have evidence for UFOs that convinces anyone, and indeed we will never have clinching evidence of anything - anything at all - ever again - and everyone can live in denial of anything they choose. It’s going to be mad. We will all live in our own tiny bubble of personal reality, no objective reality will exist, not any more

    The wet market hypothesis was arguably an early test run of this: post truth reality
    Objective reality has never existed. Reality depends on subjective observers, our own personal realities. Objective reality is a very useful illusion based on the overlap of myriad personal realities, and close enough to the underlying truths to be useful for science and technology and indeed our survival.





    Copyright: Pseuds Corner
  • What if they leave a foot gap to the perimeter of their plot? Would it be ok then?
    So you're asking if they build a balcony on the perimeter of their house, up to the perimeter of their property, would that be OK. Yes, of course, why not?

    And the neighbour would of course be perfectly entitled to do as they please with their own land, such as building a wall upto their perimeter so the balcony looks directly onto a brick wall. Which is why people tend not to do as you suggest.
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,961
    edited June 2024
    Cicero said:

    Yes. Our Victorian political system needs a serious overhaul.
    Yes, we tried it a hundred years ago, but then the First World War got in the way.

    The Kaiser has a lot to answer for.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,697

    So you're asking if they build a balcony on the perimeter of their house, up to the perimeter of their property, would that be OK. Yes, of course, why not?

    And the neighbour would of course be perfectly entitled to do as they please with their own land, such as building a wall upto their perimeter so the balcony looks directly onto a brick wall. Which is why people tend not to do as you suggest.
    No, people don't do it because it's against the planning rules. You're being naive about the kind of abuse that would go on if it were a free-for-all.
  • sladeslade Posts: 2,156

    I’ve been wondering about just betting Lib Dem in basically every Scotland seat individually and seeing if it profits…
    Argyll and Bute?
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,118
    Nigelb said:

    .

    "..But I, that am not shaped for sportive tricks,
    Nor made to court an amorous looking-glass;
    I, that am rudely stamp'd, and want love's majesty
    To strut before a wanton ambling nymph;
    I, that am curtail'd of this fair proportion,
    Cheated of feature by dissembling nature,
    Deformed, unfinish'd, sent before my time
    Into this breathing world, scarce half made up,
    And that so lamely and unfashionable
    That dogs bark at me as I halt by them;
    Why, I, in this weak piping time of peace,
    Have no delight to pass away the time,
    Unless to spy my shadow in the sun
    And descant on mine own deformity:.."
    I used to know that speech word for word. It wasn't the one I did at school, but in a place where I was staying the Laurence Olivier version was one of the few videos we had. Here it is

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-5JF9Gq5tL4
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,133

    Long enough to know about Timmy robinson and his mates
    Has Tommy Ten Names changed his name to Timmy Ten Names?

    Anyway this is good old Blighty. It is more likely the ghost of Peter Wright installing Boris Johnson or Prince Andrew as titular Prime Minister than rioting on Parliament Green.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    3.1 overs. Is that a record?
This discussion has been closed.