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Profiles in leadership – politicalbetting.com

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  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    stodge said:

    To be fair, last night's so called "poll" from YouGov was extrapolated voting intention from the MRP.

    It wasn't a new poll in and of itself.
    Good spot. Do we need to remind pollsters, media (and PBers) to avoid presenting MRP extrapolations as new polls, and also to avoid subsampling under any circumstances without the use of the Subsample Klaxon? I'm not sure OGH would have ever tolerated such wayward behaviour as we see these days on here @TheScreamingEagles @rcs1000
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277

    I don't like the 'refuse to do' narrative. Most people can't do the low paid stuff because you can't afford to live on it. The wages are poor, the work unreliable/far from civilisation and the career prospects non-existent. Importing a new underclass will only exacerbate the shit conditions relative to professional jobs.
    Well up the salaries dramatically and pass the costs on to consumers . Then Brits will moan about that . These are the trade offs which I’m talking about .
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    boulay said:

    It really could go either way. Either Tories who have been saying reform to pollsters to try and kick Cons into more action suddenly think the message is given and return to the fold or they suddenly think that maybe if lots of people also like reform then they aren’t so bad.

    The media have a key roll to play in how it breaks. This morning the bbc radio news was very much saying “Farage has said he is the best alternative to Labour as they beat the Tories in a poll yesterday”. Now the story could equally have been “the Tories have said they are still the best chance to beat Labour after Reform came above them in one of four polls yesterday.

    The first version is painting a picture that is a close up of a situation that changes the narrative massively compared to the zoomed out bigger picture of the second spin.

    There are still a couple of weeks where the Reform manifesto could be “great” or be absolutely pulverised - it’s going to potentially be in the interests of Labour too to attack them soon. There is also the chance that a lot of skeletons can appear from Reform candidates cupboards (and of course other parties) which might have local push we don’t see on a national level.
    Yes, good points. I think Labour will be more worried by Con breaking to Reform from here as Ref have more upside potential, Con are hamstrung by the vast majority just having had enough of them
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,243
    Sandpit said:

    The council meetings were actual meetings, and the opposition to everything the local farmers were trying to do to make money, was very real. He’s running a real farm, and his neighbours are running real farms too, constantly worried about how they can avoid bankruptcy, which Clarkson can avoid because he’s got the cameras following him around.

    Yes there’s going to be some dramatisation and some storylines, but the fact that farmers across the UK have hailed the show as brilliant tells you it’s a fair reflection of that industry. Many farmers see themselves as custodians of the land, much of which has been with families for many generations, and see it as a vocation as much as a job.
    I've spoken to some of the councillors involved in the planning decisions, I know a couple of local farmers, and my kid used to go to the school in Clarkson's village.

    There is no undercurrent of West Oxfordshire District Council being out to screw farmers, either in the current rainbow administration or the previous Conservative one (whose Local Plan is still in effect). There is no undercurrent of Chadlington villagers being M&S/Waitrose weenies - they have a real, long-established family-run butchers' shop which sells actual local meat, unlike Clarkson's shop which is 10% stuff grown on the farm and 90% branded stuff made elsewhere.

    What happened is broadly (1) WODC said to Clarkson "there are a few difficult things in this application such as access and the AONB constraints, let's see if we can sit down and work through them with your planning consultant", (2) Clarkson said "no thanks", (3) the series was filmed with WODC as the pantomime villains and Clarkson as the put-upon hero.

    I'm not going to disagree that the whole situation is unfortunate and that if backs hadn't been put up quite so much then it could all have been handled better, but to restate, it's entertainment and not a snapshot of what "Oxfordshire people... clearly think".
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,482

    Speaking to journalists on Friday, Rishi Sunak defended Biden: "From what I remember, he went to go and shake all their hands. As far as I’m aware, he went over to talk to some of the the parachutes jumpers to say thank you or hello”

    https://x.com/MrHarryCole/status/1801564183550382442

    Whomp whomp, Leon gets it wrong again. Trying to pretend that Biden has dementia just makes you look stupid.

    As if any of the other leaders are going to say "yeah, it don't look good, does it?"
  • MightyAlexMightyAlex Posts: 1,748
    Phil said:

    I think farmers seeing themselves as “custodians of the land” can be a bit self-serving. In reality they are multi-million £ capital intensive businesses with a good line in PR.

    But that doesn’t make local opposition to perfectly reasonable development any less insane. The world changes & we must change with it. Expecting farmers to preserve their land in aspic because local nimbys like the views is not reasonable.
    I do think we may be under pricing the value of our high grade farm land for future food production. The UK's warmer and wetter version of climate change may produce a more productive land when other countries are suffering v-high temps and draught conditions.
  • BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 4,670
    edited June 2024
    Leon said:

    Yeah, Biden is fine. You just gotta look at Biden and you know, wow, guy on top of his brief, never rambles in speeches, fit as a fiddle, could pass for 19, like a younger more virile JFK, also he's totally normal, I mean look at this


    https://x.com/MattWallace888/status/1800770476756836431


    I genuinly don't understand PB lefties who pretend Biden is fine. Are they worried that if they admit the screamingly obviouS - Biden has serious cognitive decline - it somehow helps Trump? Do they think American media pundits scan PB looking for clues as to the health of their POTUS candidates, and if HorseBatteryWotsit says OK Biden is a senile old coot, then the election is lost?

    FWIW I think Trump is ALSO showing major signs of losing it. He rambles much more, his walk and speech are hesitant, his jokes are way less funny. THEY ARE BOTH FAR TOO OLD FOR THE JOB
    You are a Trump fanboy.

    Is Biden doddery, yes. He’s old. Does he have dementia or not know what’s going on? Very little evidence of that.

    I do enjoy people arguing though that the HoL mustn’t be aged capped whilst also saying Biden is too old to serve.

    The reality is that the only person who can beat Trump is Biden. Nobody else can.

    Whatever you say, what Biden has actually done is good. He’s been an objectively good President. The fact he’s smart enough to delegate big decisions shows more for his cognitive function than you would like to believe

    So no, I am not embarrassed. I’d rather have somebody else but there is nobody else.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,389

    Good spot. Do we need to remind pollsters, media (and PBers) to avoid presenting MRP extrapolations as new polls, and also to avoid subsampling under any circumstances without the use of the Subsample Klaxon? I'm not sure OGH would have ever tolerated such wayward behaviour as we see these days on here @TheScreamingEagles @rcs1000
    It was a bona fide poll, conducted on the 12th and 13th of June.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,389

    NEW THREAD

  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,357

    Hmmm. Just been forwarded a letter from the police about safety and security during the campaign. Terrorism threat level is SUBSTANTIAL apparently.

    Not sure I need to worry about Terrorism. Just angry Nats, of which there are quite a few commenting on my FB adverts with "get out of my town" and "fuck off back to England" etc

    One odd comment on our village FB group. The village hall has been bedecked by Saltaires. Some wag tried to complain that the hall should not be used for political propaganda. Erm, its the Fitba, and thats the flag. Not remotely political...

    https://youtu.be/gvi0GtQCEcQ?si=ah1BM0m7G4Rw-q9X

    Ahead of the game tonight... 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,992
    Heathener said:

    MIGRATION

    I have avoided this topic entirely because I find it so toxic and this place is not my kind of natural demographic (I’m on here for betting reasons, so no offence meant). And I certainly do not want to light a touch paper.

    However, I did encounter something I found very strange c. 18 months ago.

    I was moving house and selling a few things which included a fairly new John Lewis mattress. I advertised on FB marketplace and the first person to respond clinched the sale. She sent a driver around with the cash to collect it.

    I thought little more about it until 24 hours later she messaged me to say she wasn’t satisfied with the quality and wanted her money back. I was a bit taken aback (JLP aren’t usually rubbish) but I told her that was fine. Return the mattress and I’d refund her. Her reply was this:

    ’I am a Nigerian nurse who has come over here to work in your Health Service in response to your Government advertising in my country for people to come and help out in Britain. I have no money and I am doing you all a service so please give me the mattress for free.'

    I was, and still am, on several levels astonished.

    Not unusual for Nigerians to be grifters and scammers. Hard to believe anyone would sell or buy a secondhand mattress, pretty disgusting to me.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,616
    Heathener said:

    @TOPPING seems to be ready to jump on any anecdote that doesn’t fit his narrowly-conceived view of the world.

    It’s always the danger in an echo chamber. Someone comes along with an alternate reality and they feel threatened and get personally abusive, aggressive even.

    I’ll leave it there.

    I am Champions League
    You gave an absurd anecdote and sulked when you were called out on it.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    YouGov should have stuck to their old methodology and had the MRP polls kept separate .
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    I've spoken to some of the councillors involved in the planning decisions, I know a couple of local farmers, and my kid used to go to the school in Clarkson's village.

    There is no undercurrent of West Oxfordshire District Council being out to screw farmers, either in the current rainbow administration or the previous Conservative one (whose Local Plan is still in effect). There is no undercurrent of Chadlington villagers being M&S/Waitrose weenies - they have a real, long-established family-run butchers' shop which sells actual local meat, unlike Clarkson's shop which is 10% stuff grown on the farm and 90% branded stuff made elsewhere.

    What happened is broadly (1) WODC said to Clarkson "there are a few difficult things in this application such as access and the AONB constraints, let's see if we can sit down and work through them with your planning consultant", (2) Clarkson said "no thanks", (3) the series was filmed with WODC as the pantomime villains and Clarkson as the put-upon hero.

    I'm not going to disagree that the whole situation is unfortunate and that if backs hadn't been put up quite so much then it could all have been handled better, but to restate, it's entertainment and not a snapshot of what "Oxfordshire people... clearly think".
    Fair enough, you’re a lot closer to it than I am. But what did the council think would happen, when they decided to let Clarkson’s cameras into a meeting where they were going to tell him to do one?
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    It was a bona fide poll, conducted on the 12th and 13th of June.
    According to @Stodge it was not. It was an MRP extrapolation.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,261

    Yes but she only got the sponsorships after winning. She’s been on the downhill ever since. My point is that they backed her way too early.
    A shame about Raducanu. She gets a lot of flak which I think is really undeserved. I don’t blame her for making hay when the opportunities came through to her. I do think she has also been unlucky with injury but it’s also clear she was far from the finished article when she won the US Open and I think there is real resilience training needed. But hey, she doesn’t owe anything to anyone and she’s done something very few people will ever do in winning a tennis grand slam.
  • .
    Leon said:

    Yeah, Biden is fine. You just gotta look at Biden and you know, wow, guy on top of his brief, never rambles in speeches, fit as a fiddle, could pass for 19, like a younger more virile JFK, also he's totally normal, I mean look at this


    https://x.com/MattWallace888/status/1800770476756836431


    I genuinly don't understand PB lefties who pretend Biden is fine. Are they worried that if they admit the screamingly obviouS - Biden has serious cognitive decline - it somehow helps Trump? Do they think American media pundits scan PB looking for clues as to the health of their POTUS candidates, and if HorseBatteryWotsit says OK Biden is a senile old coot, then the election is lost?

    FWIW I think Trump is ALSO showing major signs of losing it. He rambles much more, his walk and speech are hesitant, his jokes are way less funny. THEY ARE BOTH FAR TOO OLD FOR THE JOB
    My mum is 86, and she displays all the traits that Biden does-stumbles, occasionally incoherent, chuckles for no reason, freezes during conversations, confusion. Sometimes she's razor sharp, other times batshit crazy.
    How anyone can say that Biden is fully able to function as president is as barmy as my mum is. The fella is too old, and Trump is just as bad, as well as being, well, Trump!
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,735

    You are clearly unaware of the existence of A* grades.
    Why do you say that? It’s not based on anything I have posted. My first post talks about “straight As” and the document I linked to has a minimum of…. all As.

    If I had meant “all A*s I would have written it”…. I spend a lot of my life dealing with 18 year olds. I suspect far more than you do.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    tlg86 said:

    As if any of the other leaders are going to say "yeah, it don't look good, does it?"
    Well quite, what else was he going to say, “POTUS is totally losing his mind, doesn’t know where he is or what day of the week it is”.

    It’s actually quite sad to watch.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,820
    Cookie said:

    Veering slightly off topic, I have often wondered whether for solar farms, the economics would add up of putting solar on turntables - and using some of the power generated to aim the solar panel at the sun. It feels like this would be more efficient - you would make more in energy than you would lose in powering the movement. But perhaps the capital costs would be unrealistic.

    When solar panels were really expensive, tracking was a thing.
    Now they're cheap, it's not.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,126

    One thing I'm pondering is whether the 'crossover!' Coverage will provoke any panicked firming up of Tory inclined voters? I'm leaning towards no, but it will be interesting to see

    The key recent opinion poll result from about a week ago, was that current Tory voters prefer Farage to Sunak. So most would seem primed to jump ship if Farage looks like the better bet to hold off Labour.

    A Reform-Tory split of 19-18 might rapidly head towards 28-9.

    One factor that might put a dampener on this, as Leon has reported, is that Farage himself is only standing in one seat, and most of the Reform candidates will likely be less appealing than the Tory candidates.

    And then, of course, what is the true level of Reform support? YouGov have crossover, but Survation and More in Common still have a near 2:1 advantage for the Tories over Reform. (25-13 and 23-12, respectively)
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,992

    Hmmm. Just been forwarded a letter from the police about safety and security during the campaign. Terrorism threat level is SUBSTANTIAL apparently.

    Not sure I need to worry about Terrorism. Just angry Nats, of which there are quite a few commenting on my FB adverts with "get out of my town" and "fuck off back to England" etc

    One odd comment on our village FB group. The village hall has been bedecked by Saltaires. Some wag tried to complain that the hall should not be used for political propaganda. Erm, its the Fitba, and thats the flag. Not remotely political...

    Sounds more like you are well liked when you are getting the banter, they will be worried you will be stealing their sheep off them.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,616

    The reason that Clarkson's Farm can avoid bankruptcy is the large fees he makes for... Clarkson's Farm. The actual business of Clarkson's Farm is a side hustle.

    That being said, diversification and specialisation are the classic way to save farms.
    He is lucky in that he has other income so is in a position to run the farm as a control trial to show what in theory the profitability of such activity is. When in the first season I believe he made a profit of 24p or somesuch, rather than that affect his livelihood, as it does so many farmers, many of whom exit either the business or take their own lives as a result, he could show us the reality of running a farm.

    That is an extraordinarily valuable thing and he is to be commended. No surprise that farmers adore him.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,808

    A shame about Raducanu. She gets a lot of flak which I think is really undeserved. I don’t blame her for making hay when the opportunities came through to her. I do think she has also been unlucky with injury but it’s also clear she was far from the finished article when she won the US Open and I think there is real resilience training needed. But hey, she doesn’t owe anything to anyone and she’s done something very few people will ever do in winning a tennis grand slam.
    If any of us could make millions out of sponsorships from outfits with money to burn making useless overpriced products we would take the chance while we could.

    I hope ER will be more than a one hit wonder, but if she is....that's life. Who remembers anything or anyone else from 'Bob Massie's Test Match' in 1972.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,992
    Heathener said:

    I’m keeping out of the dog whistle stuff but @TOPPING I am not Premier League.

    I am Champions League

    Now, BETTING POST: WIMBLEDON LADIES’ SINGLES CHAMPIONSHIP

    Would it be wise to look much beyond Sabalenka (3/1), Swiatek (7/2), or Rybakina (9/2)? Possibly not. All three of those odds have reasons to be attractive bets and a case could be made for any of the three.

    I’m beginning to think @Sandpit that you were correct about Emma Raducanu when you suggested that her US Open win would prove her to be a one-hit wonder. However, she has shown a bit of form in 2024 especially in the Billie Jean Cup and she will be playing back on grass.

    At 33/1, widely available right now, I think she’s worth a flutter.

    This is not a proposition that she is going to win Wimbledon. It’s a proposition that 33/1 is worth a casual bet.


    Raducanu could not beat a carpet.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited June 2024

    Russian bloggers are claiming the Ukrainian drones are virtually invisible - until they land. Or maybe the head of air defence has many online personae...

    Russia is certainly in a dilemma. Crimea is now almost as useless for basing aircraft as it is for surface vessels. The S-300 and S-400 systems are being knocked off as target practice by the Ukrainians. Hundreds of millions of dollars worth a time (although good luck getting any foreign power to pay that, Russia...). Meanwhile, tens of thousands of troops gloomily based there wait for the visiting HIMARS. They COULD be out helping the push towards Kharkiv - but that would leave Crimea open to an assault. Losing Crimea would be terminal to Putin. But keeping it is costing him too - the daily tally of manpower and material of lost under-resourced troops in the north and east is unsustainable.

    Putin's strategy of going for broke in the expectation that Ukraine and its backers would have to fold has not worked. Forward momentum to take a village here, a field there has slowed to a snail's pace; they are now more likely to lose hundreds of men and the handful of vehicles they can scrape together to retake acreage they have recently relinquished, rather than make a push forwards. Meanwhile, scarce air defence is getting scarcer. Huge swathes of Russia have nothing to stop drones travelling 1,000 km or more to damage refining plants or manufacturing plant.

    It is an absolute mess for Russia. Serves them right!
    Yup, a total mess for Russia.

    The various Ukranian drones, from the cheap cardboard ones aimed at tanks, to much larger ones resembling light aircraft but without the man inside, have totally changed the direction of the war. The rest of the world can also learn from what Ukraine has achieved in only a couple of years, using hobby drones for reconnaissance and to spot for artillery, using them to carry grenades, and now using them to take out planes at airfields hundreds of miles away.

    I’d like to think that, if I were Ukranian, I’d be a drone pilot. I know how to fly a plane, and understand the physics, but am too old and too unfit to go to the Top Gun school.

    Thankfully, Western resolve to defeat Putin is still there, and it feels closer to the end in the last few days than it has in a long time.
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,528

    Greens opposing solar farms in AONBs, nature reserves etc doesn't mean they oppose them everywhere. A handful of cherry-picked local examples doesn't mean it's their national policy.
    Are we in a climate emergency or not? If we are then building out easily reversible solar farms in AONBs is just fine: It’s literally just lines of solar panels on steel frames in the grass & you can graze sheep underneath them. Opposing them is the height of hypocrisy frankly.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,126

    Subsamples should always be marked as such. You should know that, being from Scotland!! Just ask @StuartDickson :smile:
    Nah mate, nah, nah, nah. I iz from Sowf Lundun innit? Yoo 'avin' a larf? Scotlund woz jus' sumwhere I 'ad my gaff fer a while. I ain't from dere, know what I mean?

    But point taken on the subsamples.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    malcolmg said:

    Raducanu could not beat a carpet.
    Rick Astley and Emma Raducanu, king and queen of the one-hit wonder.

    Hope she’s invested some of her sponsorship millions, because she’s got a lot of life left to live.
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,528

    I do think we may be under pricing the value of our high grade farm land for future food production. The UK's warmer and wetter version of climate change may produce a more productive land when other countries are suffering v-high temps and draught conditions.
    The neat thing about solar farms is how easily reversible they are: You can stick the panels & frames on the back of a bunch of flatbed trucks & take them to another field somewhere else whenever you want, so long as you can finagle a grid connection.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,126

    Good spot. Do we need to remind pollsters, media (and PBers) to avoid presenting MRP extrapolations as new polls, and also to avoid subsampling under any circumstances without the use of the Subsample Klaxon? I'm not sure OGH would have ever tolerated such wayward behaviour as we see these days on here @TheScreamingEagles @rcs1000
    They're new polls. I don't understand stodge's objection. They use a different weighting method for processing the sample, which is the same as that used in the MRP, but that doesn't make them not a poll.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,992

    I don't like the 'refuse to do' narrative. Most people can't do the low paid stuff because you can't afford to live on it. The wages are poor, the work unreliable/far from civilisation and the career prospects non-existent. Importing a new underclass will only exacerbate the shit conditions relative to professional jobs.
    Why do it when you get more on benefits for doing nothing
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited June 2024
    Oh dear, Putin’s been speaking in the last hour.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2024/06/14/ukraine-russia-war-latest-news9/

    “We can negotiate a ceasefire tomorrow” (If Ukranian soldiers withdraw on current boundaries, and Ukraine says they’ll never join NATO)

    “The G7 security agreements are ‘just pieces of paper’.” (They’re commitments to billions in military aid).

    “Western ‘theft’ of Russian assets shows that ‘anyone’ could be next” (Anyone who invades another European country, maybe).

    “I never planned to storm Kiev” (but the vehicles blown up in the original assault south from Chernobyl contained a load of military #1 uniforms and large Russian flags)

    He’s totally deranged.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,992
    edited June 2024

    A shame about Raducanu. She gets a lot of flak which I think is really undeserved. I don’t blame her for making hay when the opportunities came through to her. I do think she has also been unlucky with injury but it’s also clear she was far from the finished article when she won the US Open and I think there is real resilience training needed. But hey, she doesn’t owe anything to anyone and she’s done something very few people will ever do in winning a tennis grand slam.
    She is photogenic ( many of them look like the back end of a horse ) and the sponsors will be doing all right out of her. Good luck to her.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,666

    I hadn't heard that either. Best wishes to @NickPalmer for a speedy recovery. Don't work too hard sir and hope to see you back on the site soon.
    Thanks! The stroke was reasonably serious (4 days completely blotted out from my memory, but apparently I was in hospital), but it's left few physical marks - a tendency to want to sleep in the day now and then. Mentally it's left gaps when I'm tired - I was puzzling over the names of close relatives last night, which seem absolutely clear now - but I'm gradually returning to normal.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,157
    biggles said:

    Why do you say that? It’s not based on anything I have posted. My first post talks about “straight As” and the document I linked to has a minimum of…. all As.

    If I had meant “all A*s I would have written it”…. I spend a lot of my life dealing with 18 year olds. I suspect far more than you do.
    Two relevant bits of data:

    Nationwide, about fifteen percent of A Level students end up with AAB or higher. That's not AAA, sure, but it's the one the government tracks and publishes. You can argue that there are some brilliant potential doctors outside that academic range, but I'm not sure. Even now, you have to assimilate a lot of information to do medicine well. (I know what students with a B or C in science look like.)

    Also, there is something of a dirty secret among universities. It suits them to rack up entry grades- partly to reduce the number of applicants to a manageable level, and partly because of a Stella Artois "reassuringly selective" league table effect. If you can be really selective, that shows how good you are. So the published entry criteria don't always match what happens on results day. (I think the Office for Students have caught on to this and are looking to get data on the grades places actually accept.)

    Bottom line is that the UK can have more medical students if it wants- but probably not a huge number more. But as a course which the government accepts it has to subsidise, that boils down to how many it is prepared to pay for.
  • MonksfieldMonksfield Posts: 2,859

    .

    My mum is 86, and she displays all the traits that Biden does-stumbles, occasionally incoherent, chuckles for no reason, freezes during conversations, confusion. Sometimes she's razor sharp, other times batshit crazy.
    How anyone can say that Biden is fully able to function as president is as barmy as my mum is. The fella is too old, and Trump is just as bad, as well as being, well, Trump!
    My mum is 83 and sharp as a tack. She still walks several miles a day. But she keeps herself going, as I’m sure Joe Biden does.
  • MonksfieldMonksfield Posts: 2,859
    Sandpit said:

    Oh dear, Putin’s been speaking in the last hour.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2024/06/14/ukraine-russia-war-latest-news9/

    “We can negotiate a ceasefire tomorrow” (If Ukranian soldiers withdraw on current boundaries, and Ukraine says they’ll never join NATO)

    “The G7 security agreements are ‘just pieces of paper’.” (They’re commitments to billions in military aid).

    “Western ‘theft’ of Russian assets shows that ‘anyone’ could be next” (Anyone who invades another European country, maybe).

    “I never planned to storm Kiev” (but the vehicles blown up in the original assault south from Chernobyl contained a load of military #1 uniforms and large Russian flags)

    He’s totally deranged.

    He’s also looking increasingly desperate.
  • sarissasarissa Posts: 2,085
    Cookie said:

    Veering slightly off topic, I have often wondered whether for solar farms, the economics would add up of putting solar on turntables - and using some of the power generated to aim the solar panel at the sun. It feels like this would be more efficient - you would make more in energy than you would lose in powering the movement. But perhaps the capital costs would be unrealistic.

    Solar furnaces have to have that feature.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odeillo_solar_furnace

    The most incogrous one is the 1949 original experimental one nearby - I came acreoss it while walking round Vauban's historic fortifications and voila!
    https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a3/Four_solaire_Mont-Louis_France.JPG
  • sarissasarissa Posts: 2,085

    If I'm tapping away on here its as a distraction from the endless client project meetings I am in. Campaigning being done digitally, and physically outside work time. Still have two more trips south before polling day.

    From what I can see of the campaigns:
    SNP: Candidate and teams out practically full time
    LD: Limited doorknocking in selected pockets to dip for mood. Which feeds into digital campaigning specifically targeted on issues. Big spend increase this week with another next week. Last week campaign in plan
    Con: Has put up pictures of a doorknocking session. But a lot of him being away elsewhere. The visible campaign of David Duguid has essentially stopped. Haven't seen leaflets or social media
    Lab: Candidate having a great time walking various parts of Aberdeenshire some of which may be in the constituency albeit without actual voters
    RefUK: No clue
    Starmer and Labour parking their tanks on your lawn!
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cxee3j31p1no
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,243
    Sandpit said:

    Fair enough, you’re a lot closer to it than I am. But what did the council think would happen, when they decided to let Clarkson’s cameras into a meeting where they were going to tell him to do one?
    I honestly couldn't tell you! It seems a weird decision... maybe a well-intentioned one?

    (The Conservative district councillor for Clarkson's ward stood down at the May elections with the stated reason that he'd had too much hassle and public oppobrium from the Diddly Squat planning issues. Instead, he did a (free-range) chicken run to the ward in Witney, where he actually lives. He came third behind a Green and a LibDem.)
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,846

    Rishi leans in to the super majority goblin fear nonsense in interviews this morning.
    Weak, weak, weak

    It's genius. To prevent a Labour landslide vote Tory (for a small Con majority)
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,110

    Following your posts, I had a little flutter on you winning your seat at 66/1.
    So, could you please:

    1. Stop posting on here and get out campaigning. I don't imagine there are many PBers in your constituency.
    2. Pretend you're Scottish for a few weeks.
    3. Don’t mention how you voted on Brexit.
    4. Don’t mention the SLD’s full throated support for the GRR & Hate Crime bills.
    5. Water ski across Portsoy harbour towed by a fishing boat.

    Game’s a good ‘un.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,921

    3. Don’t mention how you voted on Brexit.
    4. Don’t mention the SLD’s full throated support for the GRR & Hate Crime bills.
    5. Water ski across Portsoy harbour towed by a fishing boat.

    Game’s a good ‘un.
    6 Do a HALO jump from a A400m and land in the town square trailing a Union Jack Parachute. Plus points if you unzip your flight suit to reveal a white jacket and place a carnation in the lapel.
  • FlannerFlanner Posts: 437

    I honestly couldn't tell you! It seems a weird decision... maybe a well-intentioned one?

    (The Conservative district councillor for Clarkson's ward stood down at the May elections with the stated reason that he'd had too much hassle and public oppobrium from the Diddly Squat planning issues. Instead, he did a (free-range) chicken run to the ward in Witney, where he actually lives. He came third behind a Green and a LibDem.)
    Don't the accounts here rather over-simplify the politics?

    Clarkson's wilful (and lying) characterisation of WODC started when it was an unchallenged, single-party, Tory fiefdom, with the ward where Diddly Squat is based (Churchill) represented by a generally absent Tory. Mostly, the local population were highly iffy about what Clarkson was up to - but Clarkson insisted in his pre-Amazon propaganda (his Sunday Times columns) that he was the victim of LibDem meddling (which would have been impressive, given how few LD councillors there were at the time). For some reason, Clarkson's never pointed out that he's not actually on the electoral register in Oxfordshire: doubtless, the point slipped his mind.

    From an administrative point of view, of course, the problem's quite different from how Clarkson presents it. Pre-Amazon, his ideas were unpopular in the area because they made no attempt to deal with the traffic chaos likely to result. For all its uselessness on many things, the Tory-run WODC tried (legally and diligently) hard to reconcile Clarkson's commercial needs, local sentiment and planning law. None of those changed when the composition of WODC changed - and the LD-dominated Council generally maintained its predecessors' policies, as Amazon filmed what Clarkson previously wrote about.

    Allowing that filming might make WODC look silly around the world. But it's quite popular locally, because it lets West Oxonians see what's being done in their name. And, given Clarkson's general local unpopularity, the majority of people in the ward support the council's actions under LD domination as much as they did under Tory control.

    My understanding, BTW, is that Clarkson's Tory councillor was normally absent because he managed to lose his driving licence. So he connived at making himself incapable of visiting his ward (though he could walk to the District offices for Council meetings) - and never managed to get to the regular local parish council meetings.

    Maybe if the Tory councillor had taken his role seriously. Maybe if the Tories had funded a decent bus service in rural Oxfordshire. Maybe if Clarkson, pre-Brexit, had explained to his ST readers the catastrophe his paymaster Rupert was advocating for farmers like Clarkson.

    But Rupert's main interest in the Churchill ward at the time was securing the future of his Churchill-resident chum, Rebekah Brooks.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,236
    Flanner said:

    Don't the accounts here rather over-simplify the politics?

    Clarkson's wilful (and lying) characterisation of WODC started when it was an unchallenged, single-party, Tory fiefdom, with the ward where Diddly Squat is based (Churchill) represented by a generally absent Tory. Mostly, the local population were highly iffy about what Clarkson was up to - but Clarkson insisted in his pre-Amazon propaganda (his Sunday Times columns) that he was the victim of LibDem meddling (which would have been impressive, given how few LD councillors there were at the time). For some reason, Clarkson's never pointed out that he's not actually on the electoral register in Oxfordshire: doubtless, the point slipped his mind.

    From an administrative point of view, of course, the problem's quite different from how Clarkson presents it. Pre-Amazon, his ideas were unpopular in the area because they made no attempt to deal with the traffic chaos likely to result. For all its uselessness on many things, the Tory-run WODC tried (legally and diligently) hard to reconcile Clarkson's commercial needs, local sentiment and planning law. None of those changed when the composition of WODC changed - and the LD-dominated Council generally maintained its predecessors' policies, as Amazon filmed what Clarkson previously wrote about.

    Allowing that filming might make WODC look silly around the world. But it's quite popular locally, because it lets West Oxonians see what's being done in their name. And, given Clarkson's general local unpopularity, the majority of people in the ward support the council's actions under LD domination as much as they did under Tory control.

    My understanding, BTW, is that Clarkson's Tory councillor was normally absent because he managed to lose his driving licence. So he connived at making himself incapable of visiting his ward (though he could walk to the District offices for Council meetings) - and never managed to get to the regular local parish council meetings.

    Maybe if the Tory councillor had taken his role seriously. Maybe if the Tories had funded a decent bus service in rural Oxfordshire. Maybe if Clarkson, pre-Brexit, had explained to his ST readers the catastrophe his paymaster Rupert was advocating for farmers like Clarkson.

    But Rupert's main interest in the Churchill ward at the time was securing the future of his Churchill-resident chum, Rebekah Brooks.
    A good diatribe but miles away from reality when it comes to Clarkson and his views. In case you missed it he was vehementlly opposed to Brexit and stated it often and loudly in his columns.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,410
    viewcode said:

    6 Do a HALO jump from a A400m and land in the town square trailing a Union Jack Parachute. Plus points if you unzip your flight suit to reveal a white jacket and place a carnation in the lapel.
    Far more seemly than my suggestion of where he places his carnation.
This discussion has been closed.