Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

As predicted Jenrick is now the favourite to succeed Sunak – politicalbetting.com

1235»

Comments

  • City and St George's are nowhere near each other, academically or geographically. One's a medical school in Tooting and the other's not a medical school in the City. What's going on?
    Probably financial desperation. Stand by for more.

    And whilst Tooting and the City aren't the same place, there are other universities that are more geographically incoherent.

    (And I'm not talking about the University of Cambridge and the College of Hitchin Girton.)
  • Southport not Stockport. I'll hang my head in shame.

    They both have crap football teams that keep getting relegated to the Vauxhall Conference
  • MuesliMuesli Posts: 202

    So he could organise a piss up in a brewery?
    Having been drinking with James Cleverly, I can confirm this is true.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,552
    kinabalu said:

    Hey so it's YORKSHIRE DAY. I hope people realize this and are doing something apt.

    I'm drinking a can of John Smiths and being taciturn with the wife.

    I'm spending it being curmudgeonly.

    And bar t'at.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,642
    edited August 2024
    We seem to be close to crossover in the US Presidential market.

    Can it really be that a majority of american voters are begining to notice there's something a bit flaky about Trump?
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,336
    edited August 2024
    Pagan2 said:

    Perhaps if people stopped trying to make excuses for evil bastards and instead told them they are evil bastards instead of handing them excuses "Its not you fault because you (came from a broken family/were in lockdown at a certain period/ too poor/ etc) delete as applicable"
    How would that have worked before this lad came to unfortunate prominence? Do you possess unerring evil bastard radar?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    Pagan2 said:

    I voted tory until 2010, you wont be ever getting me back frankly simple as that. I rather not vote than vote for your party of idiots
    They did Brexit for you. Why no gratitude for that?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,729
    kinabalu said:

    But I suppose the Donald - who is "not like normal politicians" - could have done it with a single phone call. No need for all these complex machinations.
    If so, why did he not free the just released U.S. marine, who has been a hostage for six years ?

    Couldn't be bothered ?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,248
    Pagan2 said:

    Perhaps if people stopped trying to make excuses for evil bastards and instead told them they are evil bastards instead of handing them excuses "Its not you fault because you (came from a broken family/were in lockdown at a certain period/ too poor/ etc) delete as applicable"
    I certainly did not use it as an excuse, but if we ignore the social and economic roots of violent and criminal behaviour we will struggle to control and prevent it.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,729

    I see Mr Starmer only takes the knee to certain sets of rioters and is very cross about other sets of rioters.

    Seek a better optician, then.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,796

    How would that have worked before this lad came to unfortunate prominence? Do you possess unerring evil bastard radar?
    When I was growing up bad people were bad people no excuses, we didnt have these sort of incidents nearly as frequently, the more people make exuses for these acts about why the bad guy did it the more we seem to get of them. Sorry if thats blunt but its also true
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,867
    Pagan2 said:

    I voted tory until 2010, you wont be ever getting me back frankly simple as that. I rather not vote than vote for your party of idiots
    Never is a long time...
  • Am watching the Olympic ballet. Does anyone know when the sport begins?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,729
    ydoethur said:

    John Smith's? You're lucky. All I can afford is a can of cat's piss.
    Count thiself lucky, lad.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,367
    Sandpit said:

    Oh okay, so under New Twitter these things get sorted out within hours, whereas under Old Twitter these things would run for months on end or result in permanent bans.
    'Sort out within hours' if there's a massive stink thrown up about it (and it's odd you hadn't heard of it...), and it is so egregious that even most Musky Baby fans see that it was stoopid.

    And your only answer are counter-factuals. "They're just as bad!" is not an excuse for bad actions. You're essentially admitting that 'New Twitter' is as bad as Old Twitter.

    (Hint: it is worse.)
  • Selebian said:

    Yep, that little bit of detail suggests maybe no agenda (of course there may be more to come out). I wondered from frank booth's comment whether i'd missed something significant
    High functioning autism explains nothing about this dreadful crime, where there is no apparent connection between killer and killed or even their location. Unless there was third party involvement, we might never know why three girls lie dead and more hospitalised.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,796
    kinabalu said:

    They did Brexit for you. Why no gratitude for that?
    I didn't vote for them in 2015 nor did cameron want brexit...he expected to be in coalition with the shit dems and have to give up the referendum as the price. I do not believe for a minute he actually wanted it
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,336
    Pagan2 said:

    When I was growing up bad people were bad people no excuses, we didnt have these sort of incidents nearly as frequently, the more people make exuses for these acts about why the bad guy did it the more we seem to get of them. Sorry if thats blunt but its also true
    What excuses were made for Rudakubana before his terrible act? You speak with such unerring certainty I assume you must know.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,392

    But if rents were allowed to fall to their natural level, and shops let for less or sold, a whole new cohort of shopkeepers, Mum who's always wanted to try her hand at selling candles, Uncle who'd like to have a whisky shop, become viable. In my parents town, the High Street has many empty shops, but a set of traffic lights on from the High Street where rents are far smaller is thriving.
    Landlords of commercial properties have always preferred voids to accepting lower rents; this isn't a new thing. Hence the fact that high streets got absolutely hammered in the early 1990s as interest rates rose. (I would also point out that there have been commercial property real estate trusts that have owned massive numbers of shops for at least 70 years, and so there's lots of historic commentary and results for you to dig through should you be so inclined.)

    These companies have followed the principle that (a) vacancies have always been temporary, while (b) you can be stuck with lower rents for five years or so. Worse is (c), which is that if you raise the rent after five years, you are likely stuck with a void anyway inbetween tenants.

    Where you are absolutely correct is that these real estate firms have not appreciated that the world has fundamentally changed, and that unless they change their attitudes towards rent levels, then they will go out of business. And not only will they go out of business, but they'll do an awful lot of damage to high streets around the UK in the interim.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546
    Nigelb said:

    Count thiself lucky, lad.
    Tbf, there isn't much difference between the two.

    DO NOT ask me how I know.

    Well, if you must know, I once drank some for a bet.

    Never, ever again. It tasted disgusting.

    Since then, whenever I so much as see a can of John Smith's I shudder.
  • Am watching the Olympic ballet. Does anyone know when the sport begins?

    On the BBC? Shortly before the medal ceremony if we are lucky.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    Pagan2 said:

    When I was growing up bad people were bad people no excuses, we didnt have these sort of incidents nearly as frequently, the more people make exuses for these acts about why the bad guy did it the more we seem to get of them. Sorry if thats blunt but its also true
    How does that apply to this case? Are you suggesting SKS knew he was bad but didn’t lock him up? You really need to emerge into the real world rather than your little privileged shelter. To speak the truth about Planet Earth you have to live on it.
  • MuesliMuesli Posts: 202
    ydoethur said:

    John Smith's? You're lucky. All I can afford is a can of cat's piss.
    Cat’s piss? Luxury! All we get is sip o’ rain water from David Herdson’s flat cap… and we’re grateful fer it too!
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,796
    Foxy said:

    I certainly did not use it as an excuse, but if we ignore the social and economic roots of violent and criminal behaviour we will struggle to control and prevent it.
    Because there are no roots frankly, plenty of people grow up in those situations and don't go on to commit those sort of insanities. Giving them a reason however to excuse their actions is giving them permission
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    HYUFD said:

    Unless the LDs become fiscally conservative Orange Book and a centre right party that won't happen and in any case would only really be in Remain seats in the South (and of course most Southern seats did still vote Leave) and lead to its social democratic voters defecting to Labour
    Approx 3/4 of English seats voted Leave, I think? 2016 was a landslide in this respect. People forget this sometimes. Eg in calls for Labour to embrace Rejoin. Not doing that was one of Starmer's easier decisions.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,796
    GIN1138 said:

    Never is a long time...
    Not long enough to make me vote for a tory
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,392
    HYUFD said:

    Nonetheless in 1979 Callaghan was the centrist leader, Thatcher the rightwinger. Sunak was also on the centrist wing of the Tory party and lost this year.

    In 2019 Boris did a pact with Farage and won a Tory landslide, as long as we have FPTP Farage needs a deal with the Tories to gain seats as much as the Tories need a largely clear run from Reform to gain seats. After all Labour only put up paper candidates with no central support in LD target seats this year and the LDs only put up paper candidates in Labour target seats too
    Would this be the same Jim Callaghan who went begging to the IMF when the UK ran out of money?

    I just want to make sure that we're not talking about different Jim Callaghan's.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,729
    ydoethur said:

    Tbf, there isn't much difference between the two.

    DO NOT ask me how I know.

    Well, if you must know, I once drank some for a bet.

    Never, ever again. It tasted disgusting.

    Since then, whenever I so much as see a can of John Smith's I shudder.
    It reminds you of the cat piss you tried for a bet ?
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,458

    Four leavers in your list.
    I compiled my list from the Guardian. Perhaps you are confusing 'Leave the ECHR' with being a Leaver? Easy mistake to make with such an eclectic list

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/article/2024/jul/29/who-are-the-conservative-leadership-candidates
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,921
    edited August 2024
    If I may go back to yesterday's conversation about house completions, I fixed the map. Thank again to Pulpstar for sorting out the data.

    Selby seems to be doing all the building for York...







  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,458

    Four leavers in your list.
    I compiled my list from the Guardian. Perhaps you are confusing 'Leave the ECHR' with being a Leaver? Easy mistake to make with such an eclectic list

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/article/2024/jul/29/who-are-the-conservative-leadership-candidates
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,796

    What excuses were made for Rudakubana before his terrible act? You speak with such unerring certainty I assume you must know.
    I didn't say they were before but I am sure there will be plenty made now...oh he was abused, he grew up in poverty etc we should be lenient it was societies fault....just watch the guardian
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546
    Nigelb said:

    It reminds you of the cat piss you tried for a bet ?
    Much worse.

    It reminds me of the John Smith's I drank for a bet...
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,796
    DougSeal said:

    How does that apply to this case? Are you suggesting SKS knew he was bad but didn’t lock him up? You really need to emerge into the real world rather than your little privileged shelter. To speak the truth about Planet Earth you have to live on it.
    My privileged little shelter, the one I cant afford to buy a house? the one I make less than a junior doctor? the one when I will likely retire on 20% of the pension a public sector worker gets? The one where I grew up in a council house with one fire in one room? That privileged little corner when most of you are whinging about the cliff edges of earning more than 100k? Do fuck off.

    I didnt say it was known before, I am saying he knew people like you will make excuses for him after he does it
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,043
    Pagan2 said:

    As a right winger can I just say I don't want anything to do with the tory party, you are a bunch of cupids as mr everett used to say. I would love your party to die
    Yes well as you haven't voted Tory since 2010 anyway, we can probably manage without you.

    You sound like the type of voter who now swings between Reform and the English Democrats, has a Tommy Robinson poster in his bedroom and wouldn't touch any of the main parties with a bargepole!
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    Pagan2 said:

    I didn't vote for them in 2015 nor did cameron want brexit...he expected to be in coalition with the shit dems and have to give up the referendum as the price. I do not believe for a minute he actually wanted it
    Yes but Cameron fell and it became a party of Brexit and the populist right.

    What's not to like?
  • rcs1000 said:

    Would this be the same Jim Callaghan who went begging to the IMF when the UK ran out of money?

    I just want to make sure that we're not talking about different Jim Callaghan's.
    We did not run out of money. The IMF loan was not drawn, and it was just another case of wildly inaccurate official economic statistics.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,729
    ydoethur said:

    Much worse.

    It reminds me of the John Smith's I drank for a bet...
    The most common name for a cat in Yorkshire is John Smith.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,458
    ydoethur said:

    Don't ask.

    What happened in Stockport stays in Stockport.
    Phil Foden happened in Stockport
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    ydoethur said:

    Tbf, there isn't much difference between the two.

    DO NOT ask me how I know.

    Well, if you must know, I once drank some for a bet.

    Never, ever again. It tasted disgusting.

    Since then, whenever I so much as see a can of John Smith's I shudder.
    Best on draft with a big soapy head.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,796
    HYUFD said:

    Yes well as you haven't voted Tory since 2010 anyway, we can probably manage without you.

    You sound like the type of voter who now swings between Reform and the English Democrats, has a Tommy Robinson poster in his bedroom and wouldn't touch any of the main parties with a bargepole!
    No I am the type of voter that has now withdrawn my mandate and regards the state and all its institutions in total contempt....we are the only demographic growing so think about that
  • We did not run out of money. The IMF loan was not drawn, and it was just another case of wildly inaccurate official economic statistics.
    We still did the cuts though. Suspect the point of it was to get cover for the cuts "the nasty men at the IMF made us do it"
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295

    We seem to be close to crossover in the US Presidential market.

    Can it really be that a majority of american voters are begining to notice there's something a bit flaky about Trump?

    Looks like it. I expect crossover in the next few days.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,392
    Sandpit said:

    Oh okay, so under New Twitter these things get sorted out within hours, whereas under Old Twitter these things would run for months on end or result in permanent bans.
    There are a number of things that are better about new Twitter: I think the community notes feature generally works well, and I like the ability to only see posts from people I follow. On the other hand, quite a few people I previously followed have left the platform, and it seems a little less essential than it did before.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    Nigelb said:

    If so, why did he not free the just released U.S. marine, who has been a hostage for six years ?

    Couldn't be bothered ?
    That would be my take, yes. No effort free Reality TV moment available.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,392

    We did not run out of money. The IMF loan was not drawn, and it was just another case of wildly inaccurate official economic statistics.
    He still went begging to the IMF. I grant you that it later turned out to be unnecessary,
  • KnightOutKnightOut Posts: 147
    kinabalu said:



    Yes but Cameron fell and it became a party of Brexit and the populist right.

    What's not to like?


    Well, that.

    I was ambivalent on Brexit and only voted Remain because I was worried - entirely rightly as it turned out - that a Leave win might mean the end of a government that I actually liked.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,248
    Pagan2 said:

    Because there are no roots frankly, plenty of people grow up in those situations and don't go on to commit those sort of insanities. Giving them a reason however to excuse their actions is giving them permission
    So what's your reason for turning out as such a misanthropic paranoid git?
  • Pagan2 said:

    I didn't say they were before but I am sure there will be plenty made now...oh he was abused, he grew up in poverty etc we should be lenient it was societies fault....just watch the guardian
    I think you're the first to mention poverty or abuse. ASD has been mentioned, in which case we're talking mad not bad (though the practical outworking can be similar.)

    And that's the problem with tidy moralities. Sometimes, people turn out dysfunctional, and it's nobody's fault, not even the perpetrator and all society can do is manage the situation as well as it can. And it's infuriating not having control of the situation, and it's horrible being on the receiving end. But it is what it is.
  • Let's all hope that "John Smith" is NOT the liquid equivalent of "Soylent Green"?

    That is, brewed from the well-fermented remains of former Labour Party Leaders!

    "Soylent Green Is People!"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b2aH9tu4s30
  • NEW THREAD

  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,796
    Foxy said:

    So what's your reason for turning out as such a misanthropic paranoid git?
    Well not finding most people worthwhile humans accounts for being misanthroptic, paranoid I am however not I merely know to much about the surveillance state politicians and companies are bring in by stealth to be comfortable. But you know what...I come from a poor background, a broken home....I never once felt the need to go stab little girls in a dance class
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045
    KnightOut said:


    Indeed. Most of the Lib Dem gains were a product of highly coordinated tactical voting by people who are first and foremost anti-Tory and who aren't there to be 'won back' because they're never going to be voting Tory in the first place.

    Comparing the increases in vote share to the LDs and to Labour in very similar, often neighbouring seats reveals a pattern of deliberate, explicit collusion on a scale never before seen.

    To pick just two not particularly standout examples:

    North Cornwall: LDs up 18%, Labour down 4%; but
    St Austell & Newquay: LDs down 0.5%, Labour up 7.5%

    Bicester & Woodstock: LDs up 12%, Labour down 0.5%; but
    Buckingham & Bletchley: LDs down 6.5%, Labour up 9%


    Nothing remotely resembling a 'Uniform Swing', and no evidence of genuine popularity for either party, just a concerted effort to vote out incumbent Tories.

    These are votes cast by transients on the basis of hate, not hope. So going after this cohort would be an absolute fools errand and a misreading of the numbers.

    So voters who stayed at home, Reform voters and even those who've never voted before who haven't bought into a life of bitter Toryphobic bile are all a more fertile source of potential votes next time.
    Reading West and Mid-Berkshire: Labour up 12.1, LDs down 5.9
    Didcot and Wantage: LD up 8.5, Labour down 1.3

    You may call it “… deliberate, explicit collusion,” but I think Nick Palmer and I might disagree.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,796

    I think you're the first to mention poverty or abuse. ASD has been mentioned, in which case we're talking mad not bad (though the practical outworking can be similar.)

    And that's the problem with tidy moralities. Sometimes, people turn out dysfunctional, and it's nobody's fault, not even the perpetrator and all society can do is manage the situation as well as it can. And it's infuriating not having control of the situation, and it's horrible being on the receiving end. But it is what it is.
    I mentioned them because you will no doubt see them trotted out in papers like the guardian and he will be claimed to actually be a victim instead of a nasty little shit
  • Pagan2 said:

    No I am the type of voter that has now withdrawn my mandate and regards the state and all its institutions in total contempt....we are the only demographic growing so think about that
    In the days when I had chickens and you didn't have to register them with Defra, a Libdem friend contacted me to advise me that Defra were advertising in their area for people to register their birds voluntarily due to Bird Flu and had I registered mine?

    My response that what Defra don't have to know they are not going to know was met with total incomprehension. He saw such agents of the state as benign helpers building society.

    Alas they are long dead now, the last one aged nine shortly before Defra imposed a six month lockdown on the poor creatures.

    Now registration is compulsory even if you only have one.
  • ydoethur said:

    Much worse.

    It reminds me of the John Smith's I drank for a bet...
    I can beat that. I once drank a pint of Brains.

    Never again.
  • TresTres Posts: 2,819

    Do we have any inkling of a motive regards this Stockport killer? His appearance in court suggests he had an agenda. Or just a pure sadist?

    This Stockport thing is v useful it allows one to immediately identify who is getting their news from rightist bots on the cess pit formerly known as Twitter.
  • KnightOutKnightOut Posts: 147
    GIN1138 said:

    Never is a long time...

    Absolutely ruling anything out for ever is silly.

    I might even theoretically vote Labour if they somehow reinvent themselves some day as a small-state, pro-individual Libertarian party...

    More realistically I suppose I did technically once vote Labour - Frank Dobson as my second choice in the inaugural London Mayor election in a futile attempt to stop Ken. And soon realised that SV doesn't work as a system if your preferences don't align.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    Pagan2 said:

    Have you also hidden a ferret in your trousers?
    Pagan.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,796
    KnightOut said:


    Absolutely ruling anything out for ever is silly.

    I might even theoretically vote Labour if they somehow reinvent themselves some day as a small-state, pro-individual Libertarian party...

    More realistically I suppose I did technically once vote Labour - Frank Dobson as my second choice in the inaugural London Mayor election in a futile attempt to stop Ken. And soon realised that SV doesn't work as a system if your preferences don't align.
    Chances of me dying before the tory part once gets back to someone worth voting for slim to nil. Never is till I die as I probably won't vote from the grave
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,796
    kinabalu said:

    Pagan.
    Kinablu
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,264

    High functioning autism explains nothing about this dreadful crime, where there is no apparent connection between killer and killed or even their location. Unless there was third party involvement, we might never know why three girls lie dead and more hospitalised.
    I meant the unwilling to leave house and communicate with family bit, which may indicate distress.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,458
    kinabalu said:

    Hey so it's YORKSHIRE DAY. I hope people realize this and are doing something apt.

    I'm drinking a can of John Smiths and being taciturn with the wife.

    https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-e&q=john+smoths+gone+fishing+ad#fpstate=ive&vld=cid:a62538b1,vid:pJlqt1bIIBo,st:0
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,796
    kinabalu said:

    Pagan.
    Kinablu
    kinabalu said:

    Yes but Cameron fell and it became a party of Brexit and the populist right.

    What's not to like?
    They became a left of centre party not populist right if you watch what they did not what they said....increased immigration, highest tax and spend
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,821
    Fishing said:

    Yes retail shops are definitely yesterday's technology in most cases. We need to speed up the end of the high street, by making it much easier for shops to be converted back to residences. Of course the Luddites will protest for a while, and invoke lots of sentimental drivel to hold back progress, but hopefully they will be ignored.
    I disagree, and that isn't the implication of what I am saying. What I'm saying is that physical retail in towns can very much thrive if the free market is allowed to operate in the high street property market, rather than large owners of commercial property bed-blocking it because they don't want to admit their portfolios are not worth what they say they are.

    There is a big issue in this country with pension funds becoming massive blockers of progress. That's partly because Governments forced them away from investing in a more varied portfolio - once again, the state fucking up the economy. Rachel Reeves is right that these funds need to vary their portfolios and invest in 'economic growth' - the trouble is that to make 'economic growth' worth a damn, you have to create the conditions for it, and Labour don't just not know how, they don't want to know how.
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,963

    I quite like the fact that Cleverly got his degree in hospitality management studies.
    Was that Oxford or Cambridge?
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,290

    Am watching the Olympic ballet. Does anyone know when the sport begins?

    (narrator: a sport is when you can tell who won without a judge. :) )
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650
    edited August 2024
    Pagan2 said:

    I didn't say they were before but I am sure there will be plenty made now...oh he was abused, he grew up in poverty etc we should be lenient it was societies fault....just watch the guardian
    It's not really about excuses; it's about explanations in order to understand causes. And to learn how to prevent it happening again if we can find the cause. That is a different question to the individual's behaviour.

    "Lock him up and throw away the key" may get *him* out of society and give us satisfaction - but what about the catching the next one in advance if there is an identifiable cause?

    For this guy we don't know enough to understand causes. The only *potential* relevant context I can spot is that his parents came from Rwanda; did they go through the genocide as children? What has the impact been on him?

    Are there implications for PTSD refugees from places where killing, rape and torture are routine settling in Europe? We already know how our former servicemen can be impacted after leaving the military.

    One of my grandads was a wife-beater. He had been in the trenches in WW1 (PTSD etc), and also had Huntington's Chorea. Impulsive, unpredictable aggression and anger are behavioural symptoms of both. His wife did not manage it - basically just took his behaviour in a stoic fashion.

    My uncle also had the condition (my dad did not, and it does not skip generations), and was also impulsive and I think violent. I think that one thing which may have helped him manage *to an extent* was that he had a fairly ritualised life as a High Church Vicar, with a strong daily pattern.

    It does not condone the behaviour, however it does help explain, and potentially help manage it.

    Rather than the knee jerking populist reactions of certain people and pols (and I include my own MP in that, who is race-baiting), which will help solve nothing, we need a little more reflection.
  • Interestingly, I am seeing it reported that, like the Trump Assasin, he appaently had no social media profile(s).

    Which must be greatly disappointing to various journalists
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,425
    edited August 2024
    ...
  • MisterBedfordshireMisterBedfordshire Posts: 2,252
    edited August 2024
    Deleted as Bartholomew deleted the original I was replying to
  • ianian Posts: 23
    For reasons I cannot quite explain I have always thought of Jenrick as being like an insufferably smug minor canon in a provincial cathedral.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,627

    I can beat that. I once drank a pint of Brains.

    Never again.
    I had a half of Madri, the quality authentic Spanish beer last weekend.

    Not something I’ll rush to repeat.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,627
    Andy Murray’s Twitter bio was quickly updated

    https://x.com/awaarahoon/status/1819116692213309513?s=61
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108

    Old thread

This discussion has been closed.