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This is what having momentum looks like – politicalbetting.com

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  • MisterBedfordshireMisterBedfordshire Posts: 2,252
    edited July 2024
    Nunu5 said:

    Wait, so if I have naked baby pics of myself and brother saves on my phone I could be arrested?! Who wrote such a law?
    Harriet Harman, long before t'internet was invented, with case law interpreting digital matters.
  • Sandpit said:

    But the Band D property in London looks very different to a Band D property in Yorkshire. The comparison shouldn’t be between properties in the same band, but between properties of the same size. The average 2-bed flat, or 4-bed house, would likely pay similar council tax in both places.
    Which means that those who own a property outright in an expensive area pay relatively peanuts and gain a load from prices rising. With inevitable consequences.

    Make tax a percentage of house prices/land value. For those who are renting/buying it will be comparable to what they're paying anyway for the main cost (the rent or purchase) but it will mean those who own outright aren't immunised from the costs of exorbitant land costs.
  • Which means that those who own a property outright in an expensive area pay relatively peanuts and gain a load from prices rising. With inevitable consequences.

    Make tax a percentage of house prices/land value. For those who are renting/buying it will be comparable to what they're paying anyway for the main cost (the rent or purchase) but it will mean those who own outright aren't immunised from the costs of exorbitant land costs.
    You could call it "Rates"
  • eekeek Posts: 29,555

    You could call it "Rates"
    Nope rates is based on land value which is a faff to calculate. Sold house price (with a reckoner to calculate current value) is readily available and a reasonable substitute given what you are trying to achieve...
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    eek said:

    Oh the end result is that they may be paying the same amount but it's going to look absolutely horrendous - and it's going to have a whole set of unintended consequences.

    so the best approach really would be x% of the current market value, something that wasn't possible in 1990 but is incredibly easy to do nowadays.
    Disagree completely. The concept of council tax is sound, that the tax rates are set locally.

    Anything involving a national scale of house prices will be massively distorted North to South, and East to West, and will leave tens of millions of people often significantly worse off to the tune of potentially tens of thousands of pounds a year.

    What a revaluation will do is capture areas that have been significantly gentrified since 1991, for example parts of East London.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    And almost as long as Braverman's first stint too.
    Reminded of HYUFD gleefully posting the stats for the decline of the UK's economy in comparison with others, the other day, and crowing how it proved Labour was shite or words to that effect. But failing to spot that the data period ended in 2023.
  • Nunu5Nunu5 Posts: 981

    Harriet Harman, long before t'internet was invented, with case law interpreting digital matters.
    Madness.
  • eek said:

    Nope rates is based on land value which is a faff to calculate. Sold house price (with a reckoner to calculate current value) is readily available and a reasonable substitute given what you are trying to achieve...
    Land value is better.

    People developing land or people leaving land undeveloped should pay the same tax.

    If someone is improving land they should make the gain from that, by themselves. If someone wants to bank land they should pay every penny as much tax as all the houses that could be built on that land if it weren't being banked.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,722

    This seems to be a new take from the British Right (I've heard similar on here): 'Look, I'm not saying ethnic minorities are to blame for all the country's ills, but the fact that a lot of the natives think that way means their very presence is in some way to blame for the national mood of disquiet.'
    In all fairness, I've also seen this line of argument used by the American woke - e.g. in the Jussie Smollett case - i.e. the fact that I even thought his attack might be genuine shows that there is a problem. And it's equally nonsensical there.



    Also, didn't Claire Fox used to be a raving communist?
  • Sandpit said:

    Disagree completely. The concept of council tax is sound, that the tax rates are set locally.

    Anything involving a national scale of house prices will be massively distorted North to South, and East to West, and will leave tens of millions of people often significantly worse off to the tune of potentially tens of thousands of pounds a year.

    What a revaluation will do is capture areas that have been significantly gentrified since 1991, for example parts of East London.
    So what?

    Why shouldn't those who've seen gains in prices because they've objected to construction near them pay the cost of their choices? I lack a violin small enough.

    Taxes that mean people are better off if land value goes down and pay more tax if it goes up would correct an imbalance in the market currently and mean there's no opting out of facing the consequences of ever-higher prices just because you happened to buy a long time ago.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,003
    Stocky said:

    State betting is up on BF. (Apologies if this has already been posted.)

    I did earlier.
    No interesting idea yet. Unless you think she might win Florida.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,555
    edited July 2024

    Land value is better.

    People developing land or people leaving land undeveloped should pay the same tax.

    If someone is improving land they should make the gain from that, by themselves. If someone wants to bank land they should pay every penny as much tax as all the houses that could be built on that land if it weren't being banked.
    That's way more worth though and open to major arguments. There is very little you can argue about if you are being asked to pay tax based on the price you bought a property for...

    Remember I get a ringside seat via Eek Twin A on the arguments used to revalue commercial property and there are times the arguments are so stupid they manage to make 2 points that contradict each other...
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,163
    Shapiro now clear favourite for veep nominee for Dems.

    Kelly out to 6.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Land value is better.

    People developing land or people leaving land undeveloped should pay the same tax.

    If someone is improving land they should make the gain from that, by themselves. If someone wants to bank land they should pay every penny as much tax as all the houses that could be built on that land if it weren't being banked.
    You could use land value, but again it would have to be based on a local rather than a national scale, with each local authority deciding what %age of land value should be paid in tax.

    Unless you want to make it impossible for anyone not earning six figures to live anywhere near London, by massively pumping rents and increase overcrowded living and HMOs.
  • eek said:

    That's way more worth though and open to major arguments. There is very little you can argue about if you are being asked to pay tax based on the price you bought a property for...
    There's arguments either way.

    On the price you bought it for, or the price others bought similar ones nearby for, for instance.

    Someone who moved into a house yesterday shouldn't pay any more than someone who moved into the same house next door 40 years ago.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,867
    Cookie said:

    In all fairness, I've also seen this line of argument used by the American woke - e.g. in the Jussie Smollett case - i.e. the fact that I even thought his attack might be genuine shows that there is a problem. And it's equally nonsensical there.



    Also, didn't Claire Fox used to be a raving communist?
    Buried in all this, somewhere, is a sensible point.

    That is - redacting details about such incidents, while publishing others, creates the starting point for the conspiracy theories and then the violence.

    We need to get ahead of the lies by publishing the truth faster.
  • SirNorfolkPassmoreSirNorfolkPassmore Posts: 7,268
    edited July 2024
    Nunu5 said:

    Wait, so if I have naked baby pics of myself and brother saves on my phone I could be arrested?! Who wrote such a law?
    Firstly, you need to distinguish arrest and conviction. Even where something isn't a strict liability offence, you can be arrested on suspicion. If, say, I'm found in your house late at night without your permission, I might reasonably be arrested on suspicion of burglary - it might turn out I'm a sleepwalker who came in through an open door and had no intention to steal, but it's not an unreasonable suspicion for Police to hold that I'm a burglar.

    Secondly, you'd not be convicted as its strict liability in the sense the Crown don't need to prove intent BUT there are statutory defences (i.e. the burden of proof is effectively flipped). One of these is "legitimate reason" and that's pretty obviously made out when it's a picture of yourself or a family photo.
  • Sandpit said:

    You could use land value, but again it would have to be based on a local rather than a national scale, with each local authority deciding what %age of land value should be paid in tax.

    Unless you want to make it impossible for anyone not earning six figures to live anywhere near London, by massively pumping rents and increase overcrowded living and HMOs.
    Current land and house prices already make living anywhere near London challenging with exorbitantly high rents and land prices, which some people have an incentive to push ever higher.

    What I propose is spreading that pain so that everyone in an area shoulders the cost of higher prices, not just those who've recently purchased or rent.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,401
    .

    Though presumably if someone could reasonably demonstrate that they had not done anything untoward and it reached the court they could request a jury trial and the jury could in theory apply common sense and acquit them?
    The CPS wouldn’t prosecute in such a case. And, of course, the judge in their sentencing has a lot of room.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303
    Every year you get owners to self-value. The trick is they have to sell at that price if someone offers them the money…
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,124

    Every year you get owners to self-value. The trick is they have to sell at that price if someone offers them the money…

    isn't that what Donald Trump did?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited July 2024

    Current land and house prices already make living anywhere near London challenging with exorbitantly high rents and land prices, which some people have an incentive to push ever higher.

    What I propose is spreading that pain so that everyone in an area shoulders the cost of higher prices, not just those who've recently purchased or rent.
    Your suggestion would make living anywhere near London significantly more expensive than it is already.

    Okay, so what should the council tax on a 3-bed council house worth £1m be? £10k a year?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,003
    I said there'd be a load more of these.

    WATCH: JD Vance go after GOAT Simone Biles after she withdrew from the 2020 Tokyo #Olympics

    "I think it reflects pretty poorly on our sort of therapeutic society that we try to praise people, not for moments of strength... but for their weakest moments."

    https://x.com/American_Bridge/status/1818363346225447389
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303
    edited July 2024
    ydoethur said:

    isn't that what Donald Trump did?
    I think he was coming up with different values depending on who asked.

    While you are here, I think you might be interested in this, which is the entire text of one of my grandmother’s finals paper for her history degree. I found it while going though some of her old books.

    ESSAYS.
    THE VICTORIA UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER.
    HONOURS SCHOOL OF HISTORY.
    PART II.
    V.
    June 7th, 1929, 9-45-12-45.
    Write an Essay on one of the following subjects :
    Livery and Uniform.
    The Alps in History.
    Diplomacy:
    Historical Impartiality.
    Poetry and Politics.


    Edited to delete an extraneous “l’m”.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,401

    Not sure on that one.

    Some people want to deliberately import people on unskilled low wages, precisely because they don't want to pay a higher wage or see costs go up.

    If that's happening as a matter of policy, I'm not sure it should be controlled for in analysis. It's right perhaps to say this is a problem and paying higher wages rather than importing people to work on minimum wage may be required.
    The analysis was of ethnicity (and religion), not on immigration status. Most people not identifying as White in the UK are not immigrants.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,276
    edited July 2024
    Sandpit said:

    Okay, so what should the council tax on a 3-bed council house worth £1m be? £10k a year?
    I believe 0.7% would be more than enough to eliminate both Stamp Duty and Council Tax, so £7k.

    Which would give an incentive to people not to have their land double in value, as doing so doubles their taxes.

    What is the rent on a £1m house? Or the mortgage?

    And if we had this change and the result was a 10% fall in the value to £900k (so tax fell to £6,300) and the rent and mortgage costs fell commensurately for someone looking to rent or buy in the area, then what would be the net impact? Bearing in mind stamp duty is eliminated in this scheme too.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,555
    edited July 2024
    Sandpit said:

    Your suggestion would make living anywhere near London significantly more expensive than it is already.

    Okay, so what should the council tax on a 3-bed council house worth £1m be? £10k a year?
    Why not - provided we provide a solution that allows those unable to pay it immediately to pay it later when the house was sold.

    We've argued over the need to have a wealth tax for years and the only sane way to do that is to attach it to an item that isn't particularly mobile (i.e. property).
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,442
    I know this is going to trigger some but being a veggie/Muslim/Jewish has some benefits.

    Cutting out bacon and sausages ‘could reduce dementia risk’

    Researchers found that swapping meat for plant-based proteins such as nuts helps to prevent the disease


    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/healthcare/article/cutting-out-bacon-and-sausages-could-reduce-dementia-risk-3b2x9bgvd

    Now back to a meeting on capital adequacy requirements and reporting.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,124

    I think he was coming up with different values depending on who asked.

    While you are here, I think you might be interested in this, which is the entire text of one of my grandmother’s finals paper for her history degree. I found it while going though some of her old books.

    ESSAYS.
    THE VICTORIA UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER.
    HONOURS SCHOOL OF HISTORY.
    PART II.
    V.
    June 7th, 1929, 9-45-12-45.
    Write an Essay on one of the following subjects :
    Livery and Uniform.
    The Alps in History.
    Diplomacy:
    Historical Impartiality.
    Poetry and Politics.


    Edited to delete an extraneous “l’m”.
    Gosh. Three hours on one of those. Fun...

    I think I'd go for 'historical impartiality' on the grounds that it's easy to demonstrate, contrary to Ranke's naivety, that it doesn't exist.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,161
    "Lobster dinner for King Charles cost France €450,000"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4ng50pj2l8o
  • eekeek Posts: 29,555
    ydoethur said:

    isn't that what Donald Trump did?
    He did the first bit - if New York had implemented the second bit - Trump would have had to sell his properties immediately as other people sought a bargain.
  • I know this is going to trigger some but being a veggie/Muslim/Jewish has some benefits.

    Cutting out bacon and sausages ‘could reduce dementia risk’

    Researchers found that swapping meat for plant-based proteins such as nuts helps to prevent the disease


    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/healthcare/article/cutting-out-bacon-and-sausages-could-reduce-dementia-risk-3b2x9bgvd

    Now back to a meeting on capital adequacy requirements and reporting.

    Declaring a vested interest, but I'm calling bullshit!
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,401

    Buried in all this, somewhere, is a sensible point.

    That is - redacting details about such incidents, while publishing others, creates the starting point for the conspiracy theories and then the violence.

    We need to get ahead of the lies by publishing the truth faster.
    Racists on social media create conspiracy theories. Let’s do something about that before upending mechanisms to ensure a fair trial.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,555

    I know this is going to trigger some but being a veggie/Muslim/Jewish has some benefits.

    Cutting out bacon and sausages ‘could reduce dementia risk’

    Researchers found that swapping meat for plant-based proteins such as nuts helps to prevent the disease


    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/healthcare/article/cutting-out-bacon-and-sausages-could-reduce-dementia-risk-3b2x9bgvd

    Now back to a meeting on capital adequacy requirements and reporting.

    Have you got someone poking you every 5 minutes to keep you awake?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,442
    eek said:

    Have you got someone poking you every 5 minutes to keep you awake?
    I admire your optimism. Every 2 mins.

    Facking hell, accountants are the most boring people in the world.
  • A problem with that is that it is illegal to show the image to a jury. They are just told that an expert has deemed it to be a category 1 or 5 etc image.
    That's not the case as there is a statutory defence in relation to making images for the purposes of criminal proceedings.

    It's fair to say courts are cautious about it, as they are for other upsetting material. Often, the defence and prosecution will agree on the category of material so there is absolutely no need to show the jury - court cases don't dwell on agreed facts.Partly, it's just a bad look for a defendant to sit there while the jury look at an upsetting image and lawyers quibble over the category, so there is a strong incentive to agree on category.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,555

    I admire your optimism. Every 2 mins.

    Facking hell, accountants are the most boring people in the world.
    It's the sort of meeting which is perfect for Zoom, you can keep on dealing with emails at the same time..
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,003
    GW Bush was the guy who started the 'weird' meme - in 2017.

    "That was some weird shit," George W. Bush said of Trump's inauguration,
    https://x.com/sahilkapur/status/847286695863107584
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,534

    Though presumably if someone could reasonably demonstrate that they had not done anything untoward and it reached the court they could request a jury trial and the jury could in theory apply common sense and acquit them?
    The judge would explain the law to the jury, who would almost certainly convict.

    Jury nullification is very rare in this country - not completely unknown but generally juries follow the direction of the judge on the law. Insisting on a jury trial in the hope that a jury will find you not guilty of a crime you are clearly guilty of is a high risk strategy that occasionally works for sympathetic defendants.

    Note that the sentencing guidelines are public & are reasonably lenient to first time / borderline offenders: Edwards’ lawyers would have a good idea of the likely sentence that he would be given before they even entered the courtroom.
  • TresTres Posts: 2,782
    Nigelb said:

    I said there'd be a load more of these.

    WATCH: JD Vance go after GOAT Simone Biles after she withdrew from the 2020 Tokyo #Olympics

    "I think it reflects pretty poorly on our sort of therapeutic society that we try to praise people, not for moments of strength... but for their weakest moments."

    https://x.com/American_Bridge/status/1818363346225447389

    Vance pic of the day


  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,722
    I've just passed a prominent and what I think (?) is a mildly uplifting graffito in Manchester City Centre: "Unite Allah and Jahweh!" Which I'm interpreting as a call for greater understanding between Muslim and Jew.
    I feel very tempted to add "That would be an ecumenical matter."
  • @Sandpit buying a £1m property requires £41k of Stamp Duty alone. To be paid up-front along with a deposit.

    So yes, even if you made the annual rate £10k per annum, it would still be cheaper to move there than it is currently for the first four years or so.

    Lumping all our taxes on those who are mobile, and ensuring only those mobile pay the cost of higher prices, just incentivises those who are immobile to seek to extract higher prices they are immune to.

    Ending that immunity is a good thing and makes things cheaper for those who are mobile. Especially if prices subsequently fall as suddenly everyone now pays for high costs not just the mobile.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,442
    Tres said:

    Vance pic of the day


    I suspect there’s only a few PBers who will understand that meme.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303
    ydoethur said:

    Gosh. Three hours on one of those. Fun...

    I think I'd go for 'historical impartiality' on the grounds that it's easy to demonstrate, contrary to Ranke's naivety, that it doesn't exist.
    I think my grandmother went for Diplomacy, though I’m not sure.

    The openness of the questions would be a shock for modern students I think. You would also have difficulty getting ChatGTP to give you anything useful I expect.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,722

    Racists on social media create conspiracy theories. Let’s do something about that before upending mechanisms to ensure a fair trial.
    Actually, I don't credit the likes of the Southport mob with the ability to do the strategic thinking to go round creating anything. Russians create conspiracy theories. Racists just happily feed on them.

  • prh47bridgeprh47bridge Posts: 468

    I appear to have a similar background to you (except on track, rather than driving...), and I'm actually more on @ydoethur 's side on this. For instance, I don't think the linespeed on Stone to Colwich is 50 MPH? I'm pretty sure it can't really be classed as a branch line; more of a subsidiary/secondary main line.
    To be fair, I was referring to his comments suggesting that a branch line can't have expresses and that looking at the track means he knows what he is talking about. Re this route, I agree that it is probably a secondary rather than strictly a branch, but one can argue all day about definitions here. The LMS would have classed it as secondary. BR would have had it as class B or class C.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303

    I admire your optimism. Every 2 mins.

    Facking hell, accountants are the most boring people in the world.
    I thought actuarial work was for those who found accountancy too stimulating.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,722
    Nigelb said:

    I said there'd be a load more of these.

    WATCH: JD Vance go after GOAT Simone Biles after she withdrew from the 2020 Tokyo #Olympics

    "I think it reflects pretty poorly on our sort of therapeutic society that we try to praise people, not for moments of strength... but for their weakest moments."

    https://x.com/American_Bridge/status/1818363346225447389

    I remember that at the time, and to be honest I didn't disagree with him.
    I thought she should be sympathised with. But she was lauded like a champion. It was an odd moment. Still, 2020 and its aftermath was a pretty odd time.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,161
    edited July 2024

    I know this is going to trigger some but being a veggie/Muslim/Jewish has some benefits.

    Cutting out bacon and sausages ‘could reduce dementia risk’

    Researchers found that swapping meat for plant-based proteins such as nuts helps to prevent the disease


    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/healthcare/article/cutting-out-bacon-and-sausages-could-reduce-dementia-risk-3b2x9bgvd

    Now back to a meeting on capital adequacy requirements and reporting.

    It's common sense that eating a lot of bacon and sausages is not a good idea if you value your health.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,251

    I suspect there’s only a few PBers who will understand that meme.
    They may need some couching...
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,407

    I suspect there’s only a few PBers who will understand that meme.
    I think it's clear the black sofas are trying to promote AV.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,442
    eek said:

    It's the sort of meeting which is perfect for Zoom, you can keep on dealing with emails at the same time..
    I’ll remember that for next time.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,003
    A Harris campaign aide cautioned us against reading too much into the first city chosen for the tour ...
    https://x.com/EugeneDaniels2/status/1818446340570923098
  • Phil said:

    The judge would explain the law to the jury, who would almost certainly convict.

    Jury nullification is very rare in this country - not completely unknown but generally juries follow the direction of the judge on the law. Insisting on a jury trial in the hope that a jury will find you not guilty of a crime you are clearly guilty of is a high risk strategy that occasionally works for sympathetic defendants.

    Note that the sentencing guidelines are public & are reasonably lenient to first time / borderline offenders: Edwards’ lawyers would have a good idea of the likely sentence that he would be given before they even entered the courtroom.
    No, this isn't right. There can be statutory defences to a strict liability offence (i.e. prosecution don't need to prove mens rea beyond reasonable doubt but defence can say on the balance of probabilities that a statutory defence applies. That's the case here, and one statutory defence is legitimate reason and a parent having a picture is very likely to constitute a legitimate reason.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,722

    To be fair, I was referring to his comments suggesting that a branch line can't have expresses and that looking at the track means he knows what he is talking about. Re this route, I agree that it is probably a secondary rather than strictly a branch, but one can argue all day about definitions here. The LMS would have classed it as secondary. BR would have had it as class B or class C.
    I think we're entering the third straight day of this conversation. Heroic stuff from all concerned.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,596
    Just had my first glimpse of BMX gymnastics.

    Do we have a rival here to synchronised swimming for the silliest Olympic sport?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,163
    Rachel Reeves has argued that the social care cap, set in motion by the Boris Johnson administration, is unaffordable, but her decision to scrap it represents yet another abnegation of responsibility by a government unwilling to grapple with this slow motion disaster. There ought to be a proper insurance scheme enabling people to protect themselves and their assets against the catastrophic costs of longtime social care. For various reasons, the market is unwilling to provide this, so it must fall to the Government to provide solutions. Instead, we get sticking plasters.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/07/30/this-is-just-the-start-of-labour-war-on-pensioners/
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,161
    "Theodore Dalrymple
    Cultural Decay Can Hardly Go Further
    On France’s sordid Olympic spectacle"

    https://www.city-journal.org/article/on-frances-sordid-olympic-spectacle
  • Rachel Reeves has argued that the social care cap, set in motion by the Boris Johnson administration, is unaffordable, but her decision to scrap it represents yet another abnegation of responsibility by a government unwilling to grapple with this slow motion disaster. There ought to be a proper insurance scheme enabling people to protect themselves and their assets against the catastrophic costs of longtime social care. For various reasons, the market is unwilling to provide this, so it must fall to the Government to provide solutions. Instead, we get sticking plasters.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/07/30/this-is-just-the-start-of-labour-war-on-pensioners/

    🎻🎻🎻
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,401
    Andy_JS said:

    "Theodore Dalrymple
    Cultural Decay Can Hardly Go Further
    On France’s sordid Olympic spectacle"

    https://www.city-journal.org/article/on-frances-sordid-olympic-spectacle

    Blah blah, Theodore, just regurgitating the same claptrap. Zero actual analysis.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,877

    Racists on social media create conspiracy theories. Let’s do something about that before upending mechanisms to ensure a fair trial.
    I'm not convinced the social media conspiracy theorists are all racists.

    I think a lot of the noise is from bad actors which then results in actual racists getting angry. We've seen this before - eg with the racist stuff posted about footballers which when examined comes 95% from overseas.

    In this case conspiracies seem to have died off a bit because a more believable story has done the rounds.

    How do we stop the trolls? A licence to use the internet with Digital ID for everyone? I'm not sure I want to live on that planet.


    One minor point though - if 16 year olds are going to get the vote, should that change any other age boundaries?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,442
    Tres said:

    Vance pic of the day


    A pedant has informed me that there should be five black sofas not four.
  • That's not the case as there is a statutory defence in relation to making images for the purposes of criminal proceedings.

    It's fair to say courts are cautious about it, as they are for other upsetting material. Often, the defence and prosecution will agree on the category of material so there is absolutely no need to show the jury - court cases don't dwell on agreed facts.Partly, it's just a bad look for a defendant to sit there while the jury look at an upsetting image and lawyers quibble over the category, so there is a strong incentive to agree on category.
    Hopefully things are better done than during the witchhunts at the turn of the century when thousands were rounded up after US authorities busted a paywalled website and send the credit card details of UK creditcard holders on their books to Scotland Yard.

    This resulted in thousands being raided in the night and arrested and having their computers examined, where they found nothing, they did them for "inciting distribution" based on the US company having their credit card numbers and them being done because they were unable to prove their credit card had been hacked/stolen. Lots of ruined marriages and suicides resulted.

    I would like to think the CPS wouldn't charge in the situations you mention but, unless you can afford expensive lawyers, you are wholly at their mercy and you only need an individual who has an axe to grind or a target to meet or sees it all as a "game" they have to win mentality and game over.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,555
    edited July 2024

    Rachel Reeves has argued that the social care cap, set in motion by the Boris Johnson administration, is unaffordable, but her decision to scrap it represents yet another abnegation of responsibility by a government unwilling to grapple with this slow motion disaster. There ought to be a proper insurance scheme enabling people to protect themselves and their assets against the catastrophic costs of longtime social care. For various reasons, the market is unwilling to provide this, so it must fall to the Government to provide solutions. Instead, we get sticking plasters.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/07/30/this-is-just-the-start-of-labour-war-on-pensioners/


    Remember what happened to the last Party Leader who tried to fix Social care, she went from a reasonable majority to a coalition with the DUP to remain in power.

    Social care is sadly in the too complex, no upside, blooming expensive box which means the can will continue to be kicked down the road...

    And anything that increases what the Government ends up paying is definitely not going to last 30 seconds with the current state of the Governments budget. remember Bozo / Rishi's fix for social care was to add 2.5% to employer & employee NI. And then instead of it increasing by 2.5%, Hunt reduced employee NI by 4% using every trick in the book to justify the unafforded tax cut.
  • DumbosaurusDumbosaurus Posts: 835

    I suspect there’s only a few PBers who will understand that meme.
    That'll admit it, anyway...
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,003
    Cookie said:

    I remember that at the time, and to be honest I didn't disagree with him.
    I thought she should be sympathised with. But she was lauded like a champion. It was an odd moment. Still, 2020 and its aftermath was a pretty odd time.
    He'd prefer that we encourage people not to be open about mental health issues ?

    This is also the guy who argues it's best for kids for women to stay in violently abusive marriages.

    Something of a pattern there.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,401

    I'm not convinced the social media conspiracy theorists are all racists.

    I think a lot of the noise is from bad actors which then results in actual racists getting angry. We've seen this before - eg with the racist stuff posted about footballers which when examined comes 95% from overseas.

    In this case conspiracies seem to have died off a bit because a more believable story has done the rounds.

    How do we stop the trolls? A licence to use the internet with Digital ID for everyone? I'm not sure I want to live on that planet.


    One minor point though - if 16 year olds are going to get the vote, should that change any other age boundaries?
    Social media companies need to do more to crack down on bad actors and statements that are libellous. It’s not rocket science. It doesn’t need radical change.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,847

    Firstly, you need to distinguish arrest and conviction. Even where something isn't a strict liability offence, you can be arrested on suspicion. If, say, I'm found in your house late at night without your permission, I might reasonably be arrested on suspicion of burglary - it might turn out I'm a sleepwalker who came in through an open door and had no intention to steal, but it's not an unreasonable suspicion for Police to hold that I'm a burglar.

    Secondly, you'd not be convicted as its strict liability in the sense the Crown don't need to prove intent BUT there are statutory defences (i.e. the burden of proof is effectively flipped). One of these is "legitimate reason" and that's pretty obviously made out when it's a picture of yourself or a family photo.
    This is all true but a difficulty remains. In the curerent climate there is limited trust in all levels of state authority to act sensibly and rationally in this entire area. So it is possible to imagine almost anyone finding themselves subject to a random witch hunt on the part of zealous police/prosecutors etc.

    And also, in the current climate, once an allegation is made or arrest or interview under caution, then in many communities you are from that point on a pariah for ever, whatever the outcome and however innocent you are.

    Which is why pictures which only a few yeas ago were innocent and charming - baby bath time and all that, shared among loving and admiring family - may now be unwise. And as for the family archive, digital and otherwise going back decades of bath, baby and small yellow duck, it is hard to know what to say.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,003
    Cookie said:

    I think we're entering the third straight day of this conversation. Heroic stuff from all concerned.
    I've lost track, and can no longer see the point.
  • eek said:


    Remember what happened to the last Party Leader who tried to fix Social care, she went from a reasonable majority to a coalition with the DUP to remain in power.

    Social care is sadly in the too complex, no upside, blooming expensive box which means the can will continue to be kicked down the road...
    It also should be low priority.

    People with assets paying for their own care at the end of their life - what's wrong with that?

    People with a "rainy day fund" paying for their own care when they have a rainy day - what's wrong with that?

    If the only downside is people get less of an inheritance, then taxpayers money should not be there to fund your inheritance. Get a job instead.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,555

    I’ll remember that for next time.
    It's also the sort of meeting I wouldn't allow on Zoom for the exact reasons why I recommend doing it on Zoom...
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,534

    No, this isn't right. There can be statutory defences to a strict liability offence (i.e. prosecution don't need to prove mens rea beyond reasonable doubt but defence can say on the balance of probabilities that a statutory defence applies. That's the case here, and one statutory defence is legitimate reason and a parent having a picture is very likely to constitute a legitimate reason.
    I was assuming that Barty’s “not done anything untoward” implied that the person prosecuted was unable to avail themselves of any of the statutory defences.

    Eg, one could reasonably argue that the police chief we discussed earlier had “not done anything untoward” yet she was still prosecuted & found guilty, no matter how unfair that seems.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,877

    Social media companies need to do more to crack down on bad actors and statements that are libellous. It’s not rocket science. It doesn’t need radical change.
    Knowing who is a bad actor and who isn't is hard.

    Admittedly X and other social media companies probably also don't want to admit that 80% of their 'users' are fictional but getting 100% accuracy on that is near impossible.

    Also, what do you do when a statement is legal in one country but not another?
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022

    … and poverty, or index of multiple deprivation.
    The figures on sex were not provided. Black people are 5% of under 18s according to those ONS figures.

    Of course you can control for other factors but then ask the question why are (x) so much more likely to be in poverty etc?

    Here's Tony Blair in 2007 talking about black culture and crime. Political correctness not helping apparently.

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2007/apr/12/ukcrime.race

    Here's Obama talking about absent black fathers.

    https://www.politico.com/story/2008/06/obama-talks-tough-on-awol-fathers-011096

    Would any mainstream figure say this now?
  • Nigelb said:

    I've lost track, and can no longer see the point.
    Point of order, the key conflict point at Colwich Junction is a Diamond Crossing not a set of Points. Oh yes.

    #Colwichgate
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,003

    Point of order, the key conflict point at Colwich Junction is a Diamond Crossing not a set of Points. Oh yes.

    #Colwichgate
    So I had that bit right, then ?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,124
    Cookie said:

    I think we're entering the third straight day of this conversation. Heroic stuff from all concerned.
    It's been difficult.

    We've been helped by the fact that at night it's been kept up by sleeper agents.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,090

    Though presumably if someone could reasonably demonstrate that they had not done anything untoward and it reached the court they could request a jury trial and the jury could in theory apply common sense and acquit them?
    One would hope so, but my understanding is that certain defences are not allowed.
  • It also should be low priority.

    People with assets paying for their own care at the end of their life - what's wrong with that?

    People with a "rainy day fund" paying for their own care when they have a rainy day - what's wrong with that?


    If the only downside is people get less of an inheritance, then taxpayers money should not be there to fund your inheritance. Get a job instead.
    That people might decide sod-it, take their pension in cash, sell up and blow that on their savings on a luxury lifestyle, then when the money runs out live the rest of their lives on benefits and get that and all their care paid for by the state.

    Moral Hazard.

    That said the 86,000 cap was useless anyway as you had to be really wealthy to avoid it (noting that it didnt include "hotel" costs).

    What has gone with it is the lower means teating limit going up from 14k to 20k and the upper means testing limit going up from 23k to 100k

  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,877
    edited July 2024

    It also should be low priority.

    People with assets paying for their own care at the end of their life - what's wrong with that?

    People with a "rainy day fund" paying for their own care when they have a rainy day - what's wrong with that?

    If the only downside is people get less of an inheritance, then taxpayers money should not be there to fund your inheritance. Get a job instead.
    The downside is moral hazard. Why save when those who haven't saved get the same treatment for free?
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,421
    More than 200 dead in floods/landslides in Kerala.

  • M
    Nigelb said:

    So I had that bit right, then ?
    It might be one of those switchable diamond crossings they use on faster lines which could get into all sorts of Tram / Train / Filioque arguments.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022

    That people might decide sod-it, take their pension in cash, sell up and blow that on their savings on a luxury lifestyle, then when the money runs out live the rest of their lives on benefits and get that and all their care paid for by the state.

    Moral Hazard.

    That said the 86,000 cap was useless anyway as you had to be really wealthy to avoid it (noting that it didnt include "hotel" costs).

    What has gone with it is the lower means teating limit going up from 14k to 20k and the upper means testing limit going up from 23k to 100k

    What are annual social care costs? Fair number of people do rent properties out when someone goes into care. If a house costs £300,000 what is the rental income per year? £15,000? State pension of £10,000 plus usually some more pension of £5-10,000?

    Alternatively sell the property and put the money in a savings account and get £10-15,000 per year. I'm also seeing that happen a bit now.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,217

    I'm not convinced the social media conspiracy theorists are all racists.

    I think a lot of the noise is from bad actors which then results in actual racists getting angry. We've seen this before - eg with the racist stuff posted about footballers which when examined comes 95% from overseas.

    In this case conspiracies seem to have died off a bit because a more believable story has done the rounds.

    How do we stop the trolls? A licence to use the internet with Digital ID for everyone? I'm not sure I want to live on that planet.


    One minor point though - if 16 year olds are going to get the vote, should that change any other age boundaries?
    Probably, but it won't.
  • algarkirk said:

    This is all true but a difficulty remains. In the curerent climate there is limited trust in all levels of state authority to act sensibly and rationally in this entire area. So it is possible to imagine almost anyone finding themselves subject to a random witch hunt on the part of zealous police/prosecutors etc.

    And also, in the current climate, once an allegation is made or arrest or interview under caution, then in many communities you are from that point on a pariah for ever, whatever the outcome and however innocent you are.

    Which is why pictures which only a few yeas ago were innocent and charming - baby bath time and all that, shared among loving and admiring family - may now be unwise. And as for the family archive, digital and otherwise going back decades of bath, baby and small yellow duck, it is hard to know what to say.
    The state failing to act reasonably isn't a problem specific to strict liability offences though. You could be charged with any manner of criminal offence if the Police don't listen to you and continue to investigate, CPS don't listen to you and decide to prosecute, and judge doesn't listen to you and won't dismiss the case. You may end up with the matter being argued out in court in front of a jury or magistrate.

    Certainly, strict liability offences require less of the prosecution. However, as I say there are statutory defences for some statutory offences and if you can persuade the Police, CPS, judge or jury that one applies to your case, that's it.

    In terms of whether there should be strict liability offences, the argument is the same as when they were first introduced to deal with the inability of the criminal law to deal with factory owners playing fast and loose with safety. There are categories of offence where placing the burden on the prosecution to prove beyond reasonable doubt what was in someone's mind is so difficult it is contrary to the public interest to have the burden on them rather than the defence. That can be because the offence is trivial (nobody would get a parking ticket if you had to go to court to prove beyond reasonable doubt they'd seen and understood the sign rather than just they were parked in a restricted area). Or it can be because the nature of the offence is serious and the nature of the offending makes circumstantial evidence of mental state scarce.

    In this case, it's really hard to prevent the creepy uncle nobody has ever trusted, and his friends, sharing images without making it a bit more risky for doting parents - although the reality is the doting parents are a lot safer than this thread has suggested.
  • That people might decide sod-it, take their pension in cash, sell up and blow that on their savings on a luxury lifestyle, then when the money runs out live the rest of their lives on benefits and get that and all their care paid for by the state.

    Moral Hazard.

    That said the 86,000 cap was useless anyway as you had to be really wealthy to avoid it (noting that it didnt include "hotel" costs).

    What has gone with it is the lower means teating limit going up from 14k to 20k and the upper means testing limit going up from 23k to 100k

    C'est la vie.

    If they make that choice, they make that choice.

    Similarly if we tax working people too much, they may decide "sod it" and not work.

    Which at the cliff edges absolutely does happen.

    If there's money going to reduce moral hazard, I'd rather it go to fixing our broken tax system for those working for a living, than to protect the assets of those who are not.
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,534

    I believe 0.7% would be more than enough to eliminate both Stamp Duty and Council Tax, so £7k.

    Which would give an incentive to people not to have their land double in value, as doing so doubles their taxes.

    What is the rent on a £1m house? Or the mortgage?

    And if we had this change and the result was a 10% fall in the value to £900k (so tax fell to £6,300) and the rent and mortgage costs fell commensurately for someone looking to rent or buy in the area, then what would be the net impact? Bearing in mind stamp duty is eliminated in this scheme too.
    Essentially this is replacing a capped ~ 0.3% council tax (averaged over the country ish) + a very unevenly distributed national property tax that only falls on house buyers with a 0.3% council tax + a 0.4% property tax.

    The only quibble I would add is that, if such a change is made, people who have recently moved should have their stamp duty counted as a prepayment of the property tax element for the relevant number of years. Otherwise it’s incredibly unfair to doubly tax people who have just moved who are almost certainly at the time in their lives when their finances are most stretched already.

    Otherwise it’s clearly the economically correct thing to do & will push older people living in homes that are far too big to downsize which can only be a good thing.
  • The downside is moral hazard. Why save when those who haven't saved get the same treatment for free?
    Why work if all your earnings are taken off you?

    Lets fix those cliff edges first, before we fix theoreticals.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,555

    The downside is moral hazard. Why save when those who haven't saved get the same treatment for free?
    In which case you better fix the housing market quickly. Because if you are 40/50 years old there is zero point saving for a pension only to see the money disappear in rent..

  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    M

    It might be one of those switchable diamond crossings they use on faster lines which could get into all sorts of Tram / Train / Filioque arguments.
    Eh, they had the argument in Roman times? But I shoulkd have remembered ...

    https://x.com/OptimoPrincipi/status/1302641014310604802
  • eekeek Posts: 29,555
    Phil said:

    Essentially this is replacing a capped ~ 0.3% council tax (averaged over the country ish) + a very unevenly distributed national property tax that only falls on house buyers with a 0.3% council tax + a 0.4% property tax.

    The only quibble I would add is that, if such a change is made, people who have recently moved should have their stamp duty counted as a prepayment of the property tax element for the relevant number of years. Otherwise it’s incredibly unfair to doubly tax people who have just moved who are almost certainly at the time in their lives when their finances are most stretched already.

    Otherwise it’s clearly the economically correct thing to do & will push older people living in homes that are far too big to downsize which can only be a good thing.
    Good catch - any stamp duty paid in the past year (tapering down to by 20% for the past 5 years) should be included as an allowance for the property tax part. I would equally restrict it to 5 years maximum but it's not a massive concession to make things plausible.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,666
    edited July 2024

    Just had my first glimpse of BMX gymnastics.

    Do we have a rival here to synchronised swimming for the silliest Olympic sport?

    It's a bit like Formula 1

    Completely pointless, but you watch on the off-chance someone bins it in spectacular fashion...
  • Phil said:

    Essentially this is replacing a capped ~ 0.3% council tax (averaged over the country ish) + a very unevenly distributed national property tax that only falls on house buyers with a 0.3% council tax + a 0.4% property tax.

    The only quibble I would add is that, if such a change is made, people who have recently moved should have their stamp duty counted as a prepayment of the property tax element for the relevant number of years. Otherwise it’s incredibly unfair to doubly tax people who have just moved who are almost certainly at the time in their lives when their finances are most stretched already.

    Otherwise it’s clearly the economically correct thing to do & will push older people living in homes that are far too big to downsize which can only be a good thing.
    That's a very reasonable point and amendment. Quite happy to agree to that, as a sensible transitional arrangement.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,442
    edited July 2024
    Scott_xP said:

    It's a bit like Formula 1

    Completely pointless, but you watch on the off-chance someone bins it is spectacular fashion...
    Are you dissing the 🐐 Sir Lewis Hamilton?
  • RichardrRichardr Posts: 99

    Rachel Reeves has argued that the social care cap, set in motion by the Boris Johnson administration, is unaffordable, but her decision to scrap it represents yet another abnegation of responsibility by a government unwilling to grapple with this slow motion disaster. There ought to be a proper insurance scheme enabling people to protect themselves and their assets against the catastrophic costs of longtime social care. For various reasons, the market is unwilling to provide this, so it must fall to the Government to provide solutions. Instead, we get sticking plasters.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/07/30/this-is-just-the-start-of-labour-war-on-pensioners/

    The social care issue has been kicked down the road since at least 1997. The Blair government set up the Royal Commission on Long-Term Care otherwise known as the Sutherland commission. Every government and PM has continued to kick the issue into touch.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,464
    eek said:

    Nope rates is based on land value which is a faff to calculate. Sold house price (with a reckoner to calculate current value) is readily available and a reasonable substitute given what you are trying to achieve...
    In a time of rising prices, it's a big disincentive on people to move houses - much better to keep that valuation of 30 years ago. Also a huge penalty on people in the better areas of the country.

    I think a local VAT is the way forward for local government finance. It can be added on to exisiting VAT and it would encourage healthy competition between boroughs to deliver the lowest rates.
  • Carnyx said:

    Eh, they had the argument in Roman times? But I shoulkd have remembered ...

    https://x.com/OptimoPrincipi/status/1302641014310604802
    That is an Ecumenical Matter
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,003
    Autocrats got to stick together.

    Hungary blocks EU bid for unified statement on Venezuela election
    https://www.politico.eu/article/hungary-block-eu-statement-venezuela-election-results-foreign-policy-josep-borrell/

This discussion has been closed.