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Is Donald Trump heading for his Pierre-Charles Villeneuve moment, again? – politicalbetting.com

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  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    kle4 said:

    It will be your eternity.
    The definition of eternity, arguing with HYUFD. Tio compare with Sartre's.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    Leon said:

    A curious article about overtourism and second homes in St Ives. The thesis is sound but the writer makes some ridiculous claims

    “St Ives is the prettiest town in Britain”. Really?!

    Even more: “after the war St Ives was the world centre of western art” - lol

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/article/2024/aug/10/its-just-a-rich-mans-playground-now-how-st-ives-became-patient-zero-of-british-overtourism

    Indeed.

    We all know that accolade goes to Newent.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544
    edited August 2024
    ydoethur said:

    That’s not Redwall, that’s Martin the Warrior. Different book set even before the building of Redwall.
    The series is Redwall, smart guy.

    Mossflower was actually the first one I read back in the day. I think 5-6 of the series are set before the first published book.

    Though I picked up the first book in the Saga of Reclude the other day, having read it 30 years ago, and apparently of the 20 or so books the first one published is second last chronologically.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited August 2024
    Leon said:

    She lives down there. She’s a good writer but some of those claims are daft

    Prettiest town in Britain is quite a stretch. St ives has a really scenic seaside location but quite a few ugly buildings. I can think of towns in the Cotswolds or the marches that are easily as nice
    Ludlow, Wick, Cromarty ...
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,362

    I think @bondegezou has, in the past, said that it is not certain. But if you read Leon's post, he goes much, much further.

    What is more: if the evidence changes, I have zero doubt that @bondegezou would change his views. I have zero doubt that @Leon would not, because his conspiracy theory is the most dramatic theory (and is a short step away from a deliberate release...)

    My own view, for what it matters, is that we do not know; but I think natural is more likely than lab-leak. I would not be surprised by either. But Leon's cast-iron certainty is hilarious.
    I am on the other side of the "don't know": I think an accidental lab leak is the most likely scenario. Albeit, my definition of lab leak is also a broad one.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,319
    Leon said:

    A curious article about overtourism and second homes in St Ives. The thesis is sound but the writer makes some ridiculous claims

    “St Ives is the prettiest town in Britain”. Really?!

    Even more: “after the war St Ives was the world centre of western art” - lol

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/article/2024/aug/10/its-just-a-rich-mans-playground-now-how-st-ives-became-patient-zero-of-british-overtourism

    Arguably not even the centre of British art.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    Carnyx said:

    Ludlow, Wick, Cromarty ...
    Clovelly, Shaftesbury, Bradford-upon-Avon
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,979
    Andy_JS said:
    Hmm. Trump can be expected to blame his underlings for this trend, and himself for taking bad advice and not going with his gut. Could be interesting....
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,797
    edited August 2024
    Leon said:

    She’s just blown it. Even if she gets to the final two (unlikely) the members won’t vote for that
    I think the strategy seems to be to curry favour with what she must perceive to be a very wet audience of MPs, to get her to the members, then she can do and say as she likes.

    It's vaguely depressing firstly that she's come up with this tripe, and secondly that she feels she has to. What kind of shitty PCP have CCHQ landed us with?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544
    rcs1000 said:

    I am on the other side of the "don't know": I think an accidental lab leak is the most likely scenario. Albeit, my definition of lab leak is also a broad one.
    I don't know enough to make a call, but it did feel as though some people at least hastily ruled out some options early on.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544

    I think the strategy seems to be to curry favour with what she must perceive to be a very wet audience of MPs, to get her to the members, then she can do and say as she likes.

    It's vaguely depressing firstly that she's come up with this tripe, and secondly that she feels she has to. What kind of shitty PCP have CCHQ given us?
    You mean has Sunak given us, given it's the ones left after the loss?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    edited August 2024

    Arguably not even the centre of British art.
    Indeed. She seems to think post war St Ives was artistically more important than New York, which saw the explosion of abstract expressionism - it’s a load of Jackson Pollocks
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,979
    Carnyx said:

    Ludlow, Wick, Cromarty ...
    Wick? Hmm. Well, it's a step up from Thurso. I'm with you on Cromarty tho.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,924
    Purge
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited August 2024

    Wick? Hmm. Well, it's a step up from Thurso. I'm with you on Cromarty tho.
    Pulteneytown, the harbour steps ... Good enough for Lowry, good enough for me.
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,979

    Wick? Hmm. Well, it's a step up from Thurso. I'm with you on Cromarty tho.
    And if you're prepared to go further north, there's always Kirkwall. Glorious little romanesque cathedral for starters.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    edited August 2024

    And if you're prepared to go further north, there's always Kirkwall. Glorious little romanesque cathedral for starters.
    Isn’t that a city, due to the cathedral?

    If is a magnificent cathedral btw. One of my favourites in all the world. So unique and very noomy
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Leon said:

    Isn’t that a city, due to the cathedral?

    If is a magnificent cathedral btw. One of my favourites in all the world. So unique and very noomy
    Then go for Stromness. No cathedral. And a great place.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544
    Leon said:

    Isn’t that a city, due to the cathedral?

    If is a magnificent cathedral btw. One of my favourites in all the world. So unique and very noomy
    Wikipedia says no

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Towns_with_cathedrals_in_the_United_Kingdom
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    edited August 2024
    Carnyx said:

    Then go for Stromness. No cathedral. And a great place.
    Is that also Orkney? I love Orkney. Magnificently wild

    Having over praised France and dissed Britain, for several weeks, France has nothing like Orkney
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited August 2024
    kle4 said:

    Wikipedia says no

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Towns_with_cathedrals_in_the_United_Kingdom
    Because it is a parish kirk? Hasn't been a cathedral since 1690.

    On the same logic Dornoch would be a cathedral city ...
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    Leon said:

    Clovelly, Shaftesbury, Bradford-upon-Avon
    Er... Shaftesbury's nice enough but not even in the top 100. It's got Gold Hill and... that's it.

    I'm going to need to think a bit about the top 5 though.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,682
    Leon said:

    I suggest you - and any truly interested PB-er - watch this debate. It is two highly intelligent, well-informed people arguing freely and openly, and marshalling all the facts on both sides. Matt Ridley versus a renowned Virologist. It is the best actual debate out there, that I can find. It's a long watch, 90 minutes, but educational, and recent

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KVj1awTgb1s

    In my opinion, any sane intelligent person - such as yourself - watching all of this, will conclude it is probable if not very probable it came from the lab. But you may conclude differently, and fair enough

    I offer it for your elucidation. I agree the argument cannot advance much further now. Most people think it came from the lab (as polls show), some hardcore virologists and academics disagree and will never be reconciled to the lab leak idea probably - IMHO - because it is too distressing or menacing for them. As China has refused any further investigation - especially of the lab - we will never get 100% proof

    Ca suffit
    90mins listening to Ridley ?
    Don't be daft.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,797
    TimS said:


    Britain Elects
    @BritainElects
    So far there has been disorder in about four in ten seats where Reform came second in July – that’s 38 of them. In these same areas, the Reform vote averaged 19 percent, compared to the 14 per cent they received nationally.

    Interesting and unsurprising, in a “so far there have been more catholics in places the pope visits th

    Let us say that the probability of a lab leak is X.

    Whereas the probability of a 'natural' cause is:

    Y, the probability of zoonosis, multiplied by Z, the probability that the zoonosis would happen so near the lab.

    Now people can debate what X and Y might be.

    But Z has to be something like 0.0000001 or less.

    So for Y*Z to be more likely than X then Y, zoonosis, needs to be about 1,000,000 more likely than X, lab leak.
    This is a useful way of quantifying the circumstantial evidence / coincidence of the virus starting in Wuhan.

    I’d probably go with a more prudent estimate of Z. Wuhan has a population of about 12 million. Contrary to some stories the actual lab was about 40 minutes away from the market, not just round the corner. So I think we can take 12m as the numerator over global population of 8bn as the denominator. That gives Z of 0.0015. So zoonosis would have to be roughly 666 times as likely. Still a big number.

    There is nobody on this forum who does not believe it was leaked from the lab. Nobody. There are people who believe it, and people who believe it's their duty to argue against it.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544
    Carnyx said:

    Because it is a parish kirk? Hasn't been a cathedral since 1690.

    On the same logic Dornoch would be a cathedral city ...
    Wouldn't matter anyway, plenty of cities without cathedrals and towns with them.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744

    Er... Shaftesbury's nice enough but not even in the top 100. It's got Gold Hill and... that's it.

    I'm going to need to think a bit about the top 5 though.
    It is tricky. And of course it depends on your definition of “town” and “pretty”. Also quite a fun game
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    Wikipedia says Bradford-upon-Avon is a small town. So I’m calling it now. At this very early stage

    Bradford-upon-Avon is the prettiest town in Britain
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    Leon said:

    It is tricky. And of course it depends on your definition of “town” and “pretty”. Also quite a fun game
    Tbf, I'm quite pleased to see Shaftesbury mentioned. Is it the highest town in England? I dunno.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,797
    Leon said:

    It is tricky. And of course it depends on your definition of “town” and “pretty”. Also quite a fun game
    Dunster, no?
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,924

    I think the strategy seems to be to curry favour with what she must perceive to be a very wet audience of MPs, to get her to the members, then she can do and say as she likes.

    It's vaguely depressing firstly that she's come up with this tripe, and secondly that she feels she has to. What kind of shitty PCP have CCHQ landed us with?
    I’m not sure. I have an inkling she’s on a journey?

    Why? Exhibit A: she is a keen student of all things stateside. She has also always had a no nonsense side to her. There is something of the Nicki Haley about her. Might she have watched with admiration Haley’s long, though ultimately fruitless, resistance to Trump?

    Exhibit B: Suella and Kemi may well have irritated her enough to make her set her stall against those imposters. I’m not sure, notwithstanding Farage dancing vids, that Priti was ever a convinced culture warrior.

    Exhibit C: My former colleague knew her parents. They were, by all accounts, not entirely on all fours with their daughter’s political trajectory.

    Might she be on a slow but steady journey back towards, not centrism, but a sort of Theresa May version of authoritarian Toryism?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,362

    She is not a blank slate though. She has been the VP in an unpopular Administration who, until recently, had very dire poll ratings and with justification - she did little and what she did, she did badly.

    She is also bad on the stump. One of the core reasons why she bombed in the Democratic nomination is that she couldn’t deal well with anything remotely critical. She got smashed by Tulsi Gabbard FFS. She hasn’t done a single press interview or taken a question. Trump has asked for three debates with her and there is a reason for that.

    Most Americans at the moment are engrossed with Simone Biles and watching their track athletes smash the rest of the world. Give it a month’s time, and there will be a lot more scrutiny.
    None of that is inaccurate; it just rather ignores the elephant in the room.

    And that is that Ms Harris won't be debating with Tulsi Gabbard, she is going to be head-to-hed with a former President who is suffering from cognitive decline.

    That decline was irrelevant when Trump was up against Biden (who was suffering from far worse decline), but it's going to be much more of an issue when he's facing Harris.

    So, if you're going to talk about her getting more scrutiny, then you need to accept that cuts both ways. Sure, Harris gets gets more scrutiny, but so does Trump's mental fitness for the job. Because he's certainly not the force he was in 2020, let alone 2016.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,790
    Andy_JS said:

    You're doing it yourself now.
    I don't think he was tbf. The question was what Labour policies aimed at improving the lives of our poorest people PB Tories would support.

    "Stop looking down on them" isn't an answer to that. It's just a piece of rhetoric. And it gets a "sigh" because it's not exactly mint fresh.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited August 2024
    Leon said:

    Is that also Orkney? I love Orkney. Magnificently wild

    Having over praised France and dissed Britain, for several weeks, France has nothing like Orkney
    Yes, very much Orcadian.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stromness#/media/File:Stromness_-_Orkney_Islands.jpg
    See photos here
    https://www.orkney.com/explore/stromness

    Ironically - and completelu coincidentally - it has a sort of St Ives thingy. https://www.pierartscentre.com/ Not sure the founding art collection is particularly Orcadian, though these things work both ways of course (and much has been added since too, anyway). But I tend to head for the museum myself, given my interests.

  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,206

    Interesting and unsurprising, in a “so far there have been more catholics in places the pope visits th This is a useful way of quantifying the circumstantial evidence / coincidence of the virus starting in Wuhan.

    I’d probably go with a more prudent estimate of Z. Wuhan has a population of about 12 million. Contrary to some stories the actual lab was about 40 minutes away from the market, not just round the corner. So I think we can take 12m as the numerator over global population of 8bn as the denominator. That gives Z of 0.0015. So zoonosis would have to be roughly 666 times as likely. Still a big number.
    There is nobody on this forum who does not believe it was leaked from the lab. Nobody. There are people who believe it, and people who believe it's their duty to argue against it.

    Siri, show me someone who doesn't understand epidemiology or their fellow man.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    Ooh. Lavenham. Quite hard to beat Lavenham
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    Leon said:

    Wikipedia says Bradford-upon-Avon is a small town. So I’m calling it now. At this very early stage

    Bradford-upon-Avon is the prettiest town in Britain

    Rye. That's it.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    kle4 said:

    Wouldn't matter anyway, plenty of cities without cathedrals and towns with them.
    How many towns have cathedrals? Serious question.

    Rochester, due to a remarkable administrative bungle.

    Brecon, although that’s a grey area.

    Then I’m struggling.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744

    Rye. That's it.
    We’re building a good shortlist

    Lavenham
    Bradford-upon-Avon
    Rye
    Stromness
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    ydoethur said:

    How many towns have cathedrals? Serious question.

    Rochester, due to a remarkable administrative bungle.

    Brecon, although that’s a grey area.

    Then I’m struggling.
    Dornoch, St DAvids?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507

    Rye. That's it.
    I dunno. When it’s wet I find Rye a bit grainy.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,790
    Leon said:

    She lives down there. She’s a good writer but some of those claims are daft

    Prettiest town in Britain is quite a stretch. St ives has a really scenic seaside location but quite a few ugly buildings. I can think of towns in the Cotswolds or the marches that are easily as nice
    I have a treasured photo of me kissing my wife on a hill overlooking St Ives. Face caught at the perfect angle, big beautiful eyes, lustrous hair tossed by the wind. And she looks nice too.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    Leon said:

    We’re building a good shortlist

    Lavenham
    Bradford-upon-Avon
    Rye
    Stromness
    Does Lacock count as a town?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544
    ydoethur said:

    How many towns have cathedrals? Serious question.

    Rochester, due to a remarkable administrative bungle.

    Brecon, although that’s a grey area.

    Then I’m struggling.
    I can only go by wikipedia - Blackburn, Brecon, Bury St Edmunds, Guildford, Rochester, Southwell.

    Not as many as I thought, but still enough.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,362
    MattW said:

    Very interesting article. Fairly weird, unsupported headline.

    The Telegraph thesis is that zonal pricing (ie divide country into 12 zones) will "drive up Home Counties" prices. Yet the zone with the Home Counties runs up to a line from the Bristol Channel to the North side of The Wash, and then includes 1/3 of Wales, which will all have the same prices. Then the entire South of London from Kent to Cornwall is a single zone. Modelling is that the grid will improve and prices will fall.

    Their claim requires that there be choke points in electricity reaching these zones great enough to cause big price differences in the Home Counties, which requires a combination of network not being built, supplies not being developed, a crunch in supply/demand, and interconnectors not smoothing prices enough.

    I'd say - far-fetched. Landing on one low probability outcome and shouting about it. Here's the map (my daily quota):

    I know quite a bit about the electricity transmission grid, and that division makes very little sense.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    ydoethur said:

    I dunno. When it’s wet I find Rye a bit grainy.
    A cereal punster strikes.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    A cereal punster strikes.
    One with a weevil sense of humour, too.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    Carnyx said:

    Dornoch, St DAvids?
    St Davids is a city.

    I was deliberately not counting Scotland as technically they abolished bishops and by implication cathedrals in 1689. So that would cause confusion.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544
    edited August 2024

    Does Lacock count as a town?
    No.

    Places can turn themselves into towns simply by declaring themselves to be such eg they can go from a parish council to a town council, community council, neighbourhood council, or village council (I don't actually know of any that have done the latter 3, community council is the default in Wales) (I think some of these might require a review by the Principal Authority, but going from parish to town does not). This is about the 'style' or status of the civil parish as opposed to the name.

    So there are towns like Mere with around 3k people and 'villages' like Laverstock with 7-8k. Durrington with about 7k is called a village on wikipedia but changed to a town council years ago.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744

    Does Lacock count as a town?
    Google insists it is a village. Tho it has a population of 1100, which to my mind makes it a town
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    edited August 2024
    kle4 said:

    No.

    Places can turn themselves into towns simply by declaring themselves to be such eg they can go from a parish council to a town council, community council, neighbourhood council, or village council (I don't actually know of any that have done the latter 3, community council is the default in Wales) (I think some of these might require a review by the Principal Authority, but going from parish to town does not). This is about the 'style' or status of the civil parish as opposed to the name.

    So there are towns like Mere with around 3k people and 'villages' like Laverstock with 7-8k.
    We shouldn’t use those absurd definitions then

    To my mind a town is anywhere with a population over 1000 with several shops, pubs, schools, official buildings etc

    It becomes a city if it has a cathedral or if its population goes over 50,000
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,790
    Leon said:

    Wikipedia says Bradford-upon-Avon is a small town. So I’m calling it now. At this very early stage

    Bradford-upon-Avon is the prettiest town in Britain

    It has a rather 'heavy' atmosphere though.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,362
    edited August 2024

    There is nobody on this forum who does not believe it was leaked from the lab. Nobody. There are people who believe it, and people who believe it's their duty to argue against it.

    Wait: you believe all the posters who suggest zoonotic origins actually know it came from the lab and are just arguing against it because they believe it is their duty to keep this untruth alive?

    That is truly bonkers.

    I think a lab leak is the most likely hypothesis, because it is an awfully big coincidence that Covid appeared in the same city as the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

    But SARS and MERS and AIDS and a bunch of other diseases made the animal-to-man jump without going via a lab. It's possible, if unlikely, that a decade from now, we discover a cave of bats 60 miles from Wuhan where CV19 is commonly carried; in which case, we'll need to revisit this.

    Because absent a direct admission from someone at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, that's where we are: there's strong circumstantial evidence for it being a lab leak, but there's no smoking gun.

    So your contention is bizarre. Do you really assume that your fellow men just go around lying to each other all the time because...? Do you go around lying to people all the time just because...? If not, why do you assume that other people do?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    rcs1000 said:

    Wait: you believe all the posters who suggest zoonotic origins actually know it came from the lab and are just arguing against it because they believe it is their duty to keep this untruth alive?

    That is truly bonkers.

    I think a lab leak is the most likely hypothesis, because it is an awfully big coincidence that Covid appeared in the same city as the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

    But SARS and MERS and AIDS and a bunch of other diseases made the animal-to-man jump without going via a lab. It's possible, if unlikely, that a decade from now, we discover a cave of bats 60 miles from Wuhan where CV19 is commonly carried; in which case, we'll need to revisit this.

    Because absent a direct admission from someone at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, that's where we are: there's strong circumstantial evidence for it being a lab leak, but there's no smoking gun.

    So your contention is bizarre. Do you really assume that your fellow men just go around lying to each other all the time because...? Do you go around lying to people all the time just because...? If not, why do you assume that other people do?
    I partly agree with @Luckyguy1983

    Deep down we all know it is highly likely it came from the lab. But for some it is an article of faith that
    it didn’t. And faith is the best metaphor here
  • rcs1000 said:

    Wait: you believe all the posters who suggest zoonotic origins actually know it came from the lab and are just arguing against it because they believe it is their duty to keep this untruth alive?

    That is truly bonkers.

    I think a lab leak is the most likely hypothesis, because it is an awfully big coincidence that Covid appeared in the same city as the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

    But SARS and MERS and AIDS and a bunch of other diseases made the animal-to-man jump without going via a lab. It's possible, if unlikely, that a decade from now, we discover a cave of bats 60 miles from Wuhan where CV19 is commonly carried; in which case, we'll need to revisit this.

    Because absent a direct admission from someone at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, that's where we are: there's strong circumstantial evidence for it being a lab leak, but there's no smoking gun.

    So your contention is bizarre. Do you really assume that your fellow men just go around lying to each other all the time because...? Do you go around lying to people all the time just because...? If not, why do you assume that other people do?
    I'm not sure it's that big a coincidence. There must be quite a few virology research labs dotted around the world, and they will generally be in or near big cities, which is where outbreaks of disease are likely to occur.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,881

    Lab worker gets a sniffle, goes shopping.
    Possible and then passes the virus onto several workers in the market who handle the kind of animals that have been the source of similar epidemics in the past. Possible but my point remains. There is evidence linking the start of the epidemic to the market. There is no similar evidence linking it to a lab. Only the kind of speculation we have just noted.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,544
    edited August 2024
    Leon said:

    We shouldn’t use those absurd definitions then

    To my mind a town is anywhere with a population over 1000 with several shops, pubs, schools, official buildings etc

    It becomes a city if it has a cathedral or if its population goes over 50,000
    Some countries have tried to have more logical definitions we use, which is basically its up to what you want to call yourself (a town/village pronoun, as it were) or what the King calls you.

    Part of the issue is ones like the Laverstock example, the reason it is so big is there's the old village and other minor settlements, some of which are now effectively suburbs of the city of Salisbury. So the core may still be an actual village, even as the bulk of it is part of the urban area.

    There are processes to change that, but any change to boundaries does get people riled up. And in planning terms being a village versus a town can make a difference, so even large villages like to stay that way.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,362
    Leon said:

    We shouldn’t use those absurd definitions then

    To my mind a town is anywhere with a population over 1000 with several shops, pubs, schools, official buildings etc

    It becomes a city if it has a cathedral or if its population goes over 50,000
    50,000 people does not make you a city. It makes you a reasonable sized - not even a large - town. 50,000 people doesn't even get you a constituency of your own - that require about 70,000 voters (so probably 90,000 people).
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,362
    Leon said:

    I partly agree with @Luckyguy1983

    Deep down we all know it is highly likely it came from the lab. But for some it is an article of faith that
    it didn’t. And faith is the best metaphor here
    He didn't say "likely", he said "know".

  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,797
    TimS said:

    I’m not sure. I have an inkling she’s on a journey?

    Why? Exhibit A: she is a keen student of all things stateside. She has also always had a no nonsense side to her. There is something of the Nicki Haley about her. Might she have watched with admiration Haley’s long, though ultimately fruitless, resistance to Trump?

    Exhibit B: Suella and Kemi may well have irritated her enough to make her set her stall against those imposters. I’m not sure, notwithstanding Farage dancing vids, that Priti was ever a convinced culture warrior.

    Exhibit C: My former colleague knew her parents. They were, by all accounts, not entirely on all fours with their daughter’s political trajectory.

    Might she be on a slow but steady journey back towards, not centrism, but a sort of Theresa May version of authoritarian Toryism?
    We cannot know the inner-workings of Patel's mind. As for May's authoritarian Toryism, authoritarian it was, Tory it wasn't. To call it a philosophy is to dignify it with more respect than it deserves. It was May doing the blob's bidding, and putting a vaguely Tory spin on it.

    In the same way, the Starmer Government isn't a Labour Government. There isn't a single Labour policy that Starmer would not drop in a heartbeat if it fell from favour at Davos/in Whitehall. Even Osborne, not noted for his rebel status, criticised Reeve's measures for being a direct transposition of the Treasury's wish list. That augers badly for a new Government. They are a moral and intellectual vacuum.

    That tangent aside, the only reason I can think of for Patel to go on this Mayite journey is because she thinks it's what she needs to do for the PCP.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744

    I'm not sure it's that big a coincidence. There must be quite a few virology research labs dotted around the world, and they will generally be in or near big cities, which is where outbreaks of disease are likely to occur.
    Oh ffs. This wasn’t any old virology lab

    This was the biggest lab in the world investigating coronaviruses. It was the ONLY lab in the world investigating coronaviruses in bats and trying to make them more pathogenic to mankind - gain of function - by passing them through humanised mice

    On top of that this precise lab made a proposal to do genetic engineering on the novel bat coronaviruses around 2018 that precisely match the weird evolutions that we see in SARSCOV-2

    And they did this in low level BSL2 labs (280m from the market) that Jeremy Farrar called “Wild West”

    As one of the main virologists in the world said in 2020 “it’s a nightmare of circumstantial evidence”
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    FF43 said:

    Possible and then passes the virus onto several workers in the market who handle the kind of animals that have been the source of similar epidemics in the past. Possible but my point remains. There is evidence linking the start of the epidemic to the market. There is no similar evidence linking it to a lab. Only the kind of speculation we have just noted.
    The market is 280 metres from the lab
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,797
    rcs1000 said:

    He didn't say "likely", he said "know".

    Yes. And I note that whilst you offer the opinion in measured terms, you also believe it. You would have to be a first rate idiot not to believe it. And nobody here is a first rate idiot.
  • Leon said:

    I partly agree with @Luckyguy1983

    Deep down we all know it is highly likely it came from the lab. But for some it is an article of faith that
    it didn’t. And faith is the best metaphor here
    How would you or Luckyguy know what anyone thinks? In my case, you are certainly wrong. My own feeling, from reading up on the scientific evidence, albeit without much expertise in the subject, is that zoonosis is the most likely explanation. I'm about 70% zoonosis, 30% lab leak at the moment.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,797
    Leon said:

    Oh ffs. This wasn’t any old virology lab

    This was the biggest lab in the world investigating coronaviruses. It was the ONLY lab in the world investigating coronaviruses in bats and trying to make them more pathogenic to mankind - gain of function - by passing them through humanised mice

    On top of that this precise lab made a proposal to do genetic engineering on the novel bat coronaviruses around 2018 that precisely match the weird evolutions that we see in SARSCOV-2

    And they did this in low level BSL2 labs (280m from the market) that Jeremy Farrar called “Wild West”

    As one of the main virologists in the world said in 2020 “it’s a nightmare of circumstantial evidence”
    Why is there the discrepancy between 280 metres from the market and 49 minutes from the market? They are very different.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,346
    edited August 2024
    kle4 said:

    Some countries have tried to have more logical definitions we use, which is basically its up to what you want to call yourself (a town/village pronoun, as it were) or what the King calls you.

    Part of the issue is ones like the Laverstock example, the reason it is so big is there's the old village and other minor settlements, some of which are now effectively suburbs of the city of Salisbury. So the core may still be an actual village, even as the bulk of it is part of the urban area.

    There are processes to change that, but any change to boundaries does get people riled up. And in planning terms being a village versus a town can make a difference, so even large villages like to stay that way.
    One thing that intrigues me about the Ukraine War is the way the word 'city' is used to describe small cities. Probably a combination of translation difficulties and geopolitical differences?

    I also can't recall 'town' being used in the Ukraine context either?

    Edit:

    "There are 461 populated places in Ukraine that have been officially granted city status (Ukrainian: місто, romanized: misto) by the Verkhovna Rada, the country's parliament, as of 1 January 2022.[1] Settlements with more than 10,000 people are eligible for city status although the status is typically also granted to settlements of historical or regional importance"

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_in_Ukraine

    10,000 seems very small in terms of population. Although we also have some small cities, e.g. St David's or the City of London
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,414
    edited August 2024
    rcs1000 said:

    50,000 people does not make you a city. It makes you a reasonable sized - not even a large - town. 50,000 people doesn't even get you a constituency of your own - that require about 70,000 voters (so probably 90,000 people).
    It also depends upon context too. Many towns have more population than cities, because of their context.

    As an example in the North-West, Warrington's population is a bit over 200k, 2 Parliamentary constituencies, but sandwiched between Liverpool and Manchester it is quite clearly a town. Nobody would dream of calling it a city.

    Travel up the M6 and there's Preston, with a population of about 125k and just one Parliamentary constituency, yet standing by itself it is a city.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,616
    Carnyx said:

    Ludlow, Wick, Cromarty ...
    Isn't it time that somewhere near Cromarty (promably not there, as it was cut out in 2007) had a Statue of Charles Kennedy?

    Though that does raise the prospect of one of Dennis Skinner in Bolsover, and Ken Clarke in West Bridgford.

    I do quite like the idea of a statue of long-serving MPs in their Constituencies, as long as they are street level statues to represent that MPs are 'one of us'. A good way to represent democracy in our midst, which is important.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    rcs1000 said:

    50,000 people does not make you a city. It makes you a reasonable sized - not even a large - town. 50,000 people doesn't even get you a constituency of your own - that require about 70,000 voters (so probably 90,000 people).
    Useless fact: my nearest town has 35,000 people and no police station. Is that a record?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    MattW said:

    Isn't it time that somewhere near Cromarty (promably not there, as it was cut out in 2007) had a Statue of Charles Kennedy?

    Though that does raise the prospect of one of Dennis Skinner in Bolsover, and Ken Clarke in West Bridgford.

    I do quite like the idea of a statue of long-serving MPs in their Constituencies, as long as they are street level statues to represent that MPs are 'one of us'. A good way to represent democracy in our midst, which is important.
    Fort William surely? It's where he went to school, where he lived, the main town in Lochaber which he represented in Parliament and where he died.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744

    Why is there the discrepancy between 280 metres from the market and 49 minutes from the market? They are very different.
    Because of people trying to obscure the truth. The fact that the Wuhan CDC is 2 minutes walk from the market is so inconvenient people of bad faith strive to ignore it

    The Wuhan CDC had strong links to the WIV. Both did intense research on novel bat coronaviruses, but the Wuhan CDC was much shoddier (BSL2). Initially it was denied that they had bats there, then too much evidence emerged that they did. eg


    "Was there any other possible pathway? We screened the area around the seafood market and identified two laboratories conducting research on bat coronavirus. Within ~280 meters from the market, there was the Wuhan Center for Disease Control & Prevention (WHCDC) (Figure 1, from Baidu and Google maps). WHCDC hosted animals in laboratories for research purpose, one of which was specialized in pathogens collection and identification 4-6. In one of their studies, 155 bats including Rhinolophus affinis were captured in Hubei province, and other 450 bats were captured in Zhejiang province 4. The expert in collection was noted in the Author Contributions (JHT). Moreover, he was broadcasted for collecting viruses on nation-wide newspapers and websites in 2017 and 2019 7,8. He described that he was once by attacked by bats and the blood of a bat shot on his skin. He knew the extreme danger of the infection so he quarantined himself for 14 days 7. In another accident, he quarantined himself again because bats peed on him. He was once thrilled for capturing a bat carrying a live tick 8. "

    https://web.archive.org/web/20200214144447/https:/www.researchgate.net/publication/339070128_The_possible_origins_of_2019-nCoV_coronavirus

    This is from a research paper publushed in Feb 2020, by two Chinese scientists. They concluded the leak came from the Wuhan CDC and spread, as you would expect, in the very nearby wet market. The answer was right there all along, the Chinese admitted it!

    But then the Chinese deleted this paper and I've no idea what happened to the authors. Probably they fell out of a bamboo window



  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744

    How would you or Luckyguy know what anyone thinks? In my case, you are certainly wrong. My own feeling, from reading up on the scientific evidence, albeit without much expertise in the subject, is that zoonosis is the most likely explanation. I'm about 70% zoonosis, 30% lab leak at the moment.
    No, I can accept you sincerely believe you believe this; but you are in a kind of wilful or unknowing denial
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,661
    So that's me just reached the end of Thomas Wolfe's "You Can't Go Home Again". 670 pages; it has taken me a while.

    An interesting story, very well written. A contemporary account of life in America and beyond in the inter-war years.

    Recommended.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    edited August 2024

    One thing that intrigues me about the Ukraine War is the way the word 'city' is used to describe small cities. Probably a combination of translation difficulties and geopolitical differences?

    I also can't recall 'town' being used in the Ukraine context either?

    Edit:

    "There are 461 populated places in Ukraine that have been officially granted city status (Ukrainian: місто, romanized: misto) by the Verkhovna Rada, the country's parliament, as of 1 January 2022.[1] Settlements with more than 10,000 people are eligible for city status although the status is typically also granted to settlements of historical or regional importance"

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_in_Ukraine

    10,000 seems very small in terms of population. Although we also have some small cities, e.g. St David's or the City of London
    Wells, Lichfield, Truro, Ely, Durham, Salisbury, St Asaph...
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,616
    Andy_JS said:

    Useless fact: my nearest town has 35,000 people and no police station. Is that a record?
    No. My town Sutton-in-Ashfield has 48,527 (2019) people and no police station. We share a police annex in the Council Building which is next door in Kirkby-in-Ashfield, which has a population of 21,285 (2021).
  • Alphabet_SoupAlphabet_Soup Posts: 3,587
    As it's a lazy Saturday afternoon in the football season I was wondering how Scottish teams were sorted into the 'Highland' and 'Lowland' leagues. The obvious way is by the elevation of their home grounds above sea level. Does the SFA have a less logical method?
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,009
    Andy_JS said:

    Useless fact: my nearest town has 35,000 people and no police station. Is that a record?
    Well within living memory many villages with a population of under 1000 in Cumberland had police houses with a resident copper.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited August 2024
    MattW said:

    Isn't it time that somewhere near Cromarty (promably not there, as it was cut out in 2007) had a Statue of Charles Kennedy?

    Though that does raise the prospect of one of Dennis Skinner in Bolsover, and Ken Clarke in West Bridgford.

    I do quite like the idea of a statue of long-serving MPs in their Constituencies, as long as they are street level statues to represent that MPs are 'one of us'. A good way to represent democracy in our midst, which is important.
    I thought CK was INverness born? Quite different from Cromarty - Inverness isn't even on the Black Isle but on the other side of the Kessock Strait, and that would hav been a ferry trip or diversion via Beauly when CK was born.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,797
    Leon said:

    Because of people trying to obscure the truth. The fact that the Wuhan CDC is 2 minutes walk from the market is so inconvenient people of bad faith strive to ignore it

    The Wuhan CDC had strong links to the WIV. Both did intense research on novel bat coronaviruses, but the Wuhan CDC was much shoddier (BSL2). Initially it was denied that they had bats there, then too much evidence emerged that they did. eg


    "Was there any other possible pathway? We screened the area around the seafood market and identified two laboratories conducting research on bat coronavirus. Within ~280 meters from the market, there was the Wuhan Center for Disease Control & Prevention (WHCDC) (Figure 1, from Baidu and Google maps). WHCDC hosted animals in laboratories for research purpose, one of which was specialized in pathogens collection and identification 4-6. In one of their studies, 155 bats including Rhinolophus affinis were captured in Hubei province, and other 450 bats were captured in Zhejiang province 4. The expert in collection was noted in the Author Contributions (JHT). Moreover, he was broadcasted for collecting viruses on nation-wide newspapers and websites in 2017 and 2019 7,8. He described that he was once by attacked by bats and the blood of a bat shot on his skin. He knew the extreme danger of the infection so he quarantined himself for 14 days 7. In another accident, he quarantined himself again because bats peed on him. He was once thrilled for capturing a bat carrying a live tick 8. "

    https://web.archive.org/web/20200214144447/https:/www.researchgate.net/publication/339070128_The_possible_origins_of_2019-nCoV_coronavirus

    This is from a research paper publushed in Feb 2020, by two Chinese scientists. They concluded the leak came from the Wuhan CDC and spread, as you would expect, in the very nearby wet market. The answer was right there all along, the Chinese admitted it!

    But then the Chinese deleted this paper and I've no idea what happened to the authors. Probably they fell out of a bamboo window

    The fact that people can know this and still claim to bel
    Leon said:

    No, I can accept you sincerely believe you believe this; but you are in a kind of wilful or unknowing denial
    Self-delusion of that type isn't common - it would be mental. A more logical explanation is our zoonosis people are just arguing. Their argument is more important to them and their world view than what is true. It annoys me because I come to PB for adult discussion, which is based on good faith. However, it is what it is.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    Carnyx said:

    I thought CK was INverness born? Quite different from Cromarty - Inverness isn't even on the Black Isle but on the other side of the Kessock Strait, and that would hav been a ferry trip or diversion via Beauly when CK was born.
    He was born in INverness, which is the maternity hospital for the whole Highland area, but his family farm was I think near Corpach. Somewhere adjacent to the lands of Cameron of Lochiel, anyway.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,616
    edited August 2024
    Another useless fact.

    When I lived at the S End of Bolsover District, our local police station was between the SIXTH and EIGHTH closest in distance terms.

    Is this a record?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,682
    Guaranteed silver in the taekwondo.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    As it's a lazy Saturday afternoon in the football season I was wondering how Scottish teams were sorted into the 'Highland' and 'Lowland' leagues. The obvious way is by the elevation of their home grounds above sea level. Does the SFA have a less logical method?

    Geographical I think. Gala Fairy Dean in the LL is in Galashiels - which - or whose weather station - is, on checking, 161m asl, which is a lot more than some of the coastal HL clubs, though beaten by Strathspey Thistle (at least) at 220m (Grantown). Disappointing lack of effort from Wanlockhead not putting up a club in the LL, they'd easily score at 467m though visiting clubs might need oxygen.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,506
    Luke Tryl
    @LukeTryl
    🧵 We spoke to some pensioners in Leigh last week about the decision to restrict the winter fuel allowance. I expected it to be a negative reaction, but was taken aback by how negative and particularly to the means testing element. Worth sharing quotes some to show the scale...

    https://x.com/LukeTryl/status/1821180783828386127
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744

    The fact that people can know this and still claim to bel Self-delusion of that type isn't common - it would be mental. A more logical explanation is our zoonosis people are just arguing. Their argument is more important to them and their world view than what is true. It annoys me because I come to PB for adult discussion, which is based on good faith. However, it is what it is.
    I’ll use my photo quote to conclude the argument. Here is the location of the Wuhan CDC in relation to the huanan seafood wet market. 280m not “40 minutes and 10km”





    The Wuhan CDC kept thousands of bats, did extensive research alongside the WIV, had a history of accidents, spent months before the outbreak chaotically moving to this location, and worked at a dangerous BSL2 level - or “Wild West” as Jeremy Farrar of the Wellcome institute put it

    I think the phrase is “case closed, m’Lud”

  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    I probably ask this every August…is the 3pm TV football blackout disapplied for the 4th tier at the very start of the season or is there a rule change this year?
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,661
    Leon said:

    Wikipedia says Bradford-upon-Avon is a small town. So I’m calling it now. At this very early stage

    Bradford-upon-Avon is the prettiest town in Britain

    The prettiest place in Britain called Bradford.

    Not much of a competition, however.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    ydoethur said:

    He was born in INverness, which is the maternity hospital for the whole Highland area, but his family farm was I think near Corpach. Somewhere adjacent to the lands of Cameron of Lochiel, anyway.
    Corpach? That's the locks for the south end of the Caledonian Canal at An Gearasdan, aka Fort W., anmd his croft was apparently near there. The croft is "remote in the Highlands" acc to London hacks and the BBC, though they 'd know a smuch about Scottish geography as a pithed marmoset. In reality it seems to have been in the Lochyside area - jwhich matches your location and clan lands.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,797
    Leon said:

    I’ll use my photo quote to conclude the argument. Here is the location of the Wuhan CDC in relation to the huanan seafood wet market. 280m not “40 minutes and 10km”





    The Wuhan CDC kept thousands of bats, did extensive research alongside the WIV, had a history of accidents, spent months before the outbreak chaotically moving to this location, and worked at a dangerous BSL2 level - or “Wild West” as Jeremy Farrar of the Wellcome institute put it

    I think the phrase is “case closed, m’Lud”

    They will still argue.
  • Nunu5Nunu5 Posts: 982
    https://x.com/PA_Voter_34/status/1822234892232495588
    New York Times/Siena College Poll (A+)

    Pennsylvania (PA)
    🔵Harris 50%
    🔴Trump 46%
    August 5th-9th 693 LV

    Michigan (MI)
    🔵Harris 50%
    🔴Trump 46%
    August 5-9th 619 LV

    Wisconsin (WI)
    🔵Harris 50%
    🔴Trump 46%
    August 5th-9th 661 LV
    12:33 PM · Aug 10, 2024
    ·
    42.3K
    Views
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,934

    As it's a lazy Saturday afternoon in the football season I was wondering how Scottish teams were sorted into the 'Highland' and 'Lowland' leagues. The obvious way is by the elevation of their home grounds above sea level. Does the SFA have a less logical method?

    North/South of the Tay.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    Nunu5 said:

    https://x.com/PA_Voter_34/status/1822234892232495588
    New York Times/Siena College Poll (A+)

    Pennsylvania (PA)
    🔵Harris 50%
    🔴Trump 46%
    August 5th-9th 693 LV

    Michigan (MI)
    🔵Harris 50%
    🔴Trump 46%
    August 5-9th 619 LV

    Wisconsin (WI)
    🔵Harris 50%
    🔴Trump 46%
    August 5th-9th 661 LV
    12:33 PM · Aug 10, 2024
    ·
    42.3K
    Views

    That’s nice. Trying not to pay too much attention to polls until September. This does explain the shift on BF today though.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,661
    kle4 said:

    Some countries have tried to have more logical definitions we use, which is basically its up to what you want to call yourself (a town/village pronoun, as it were) or what the King calls you.

    Part of the issue is ones like the Laverstock example, the reason it is so big is there's the old village and other minor settlements, some of which are now effectively suburbs of the city of Salisbury. So the core may still be an actual village, even as the bulk of it is part of the urban area.

    There are processes to change that, but any change to boundaries does get people riled up. And in planning terms being a village versus a town can make a difference, so even large villages like to stay that way.
    Where I live was once a village. Now it is really just part of the town, with continuous housing from the town centre, through our patch and up to the next former village. We still have a "village society", however.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744

    They will still argue.
    Because, in a weird way, they do sincerely believe it. Like creationists confronted with Darwin's Theory of Evolution in the 19th century

    At first their position is logical, or so they think. Then overwhelming evidence emerges which shows they are wrong. So their logical position then evolves into a pious faith, absent rationality. So their belief is sincere, albeit ludicrous, and they manage to silence the doubt in their own minds. That is, I reckon, the process at work

    People like @foxy and @bondegezou have sincerely convinced themselves that it came from the market. You could probably show them a video of the first person with Covid being mauled on the scrotum by a mad frothy bat at the Wuhan lab, surrounded by signs saying Welcome to the Wuhan Bat Lab, and they'd still believe it came from the market. It is a religious tenet

    And that really is it on this topic, for today. Places to see and people to go. Later
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,362

    Yes. And I note that whilst you offer the opinion in measured terms, you also believe it. You would have to be a first rate idiot not to believe it. And nobody here is a first rate idiot.
    There's a very important difference between "thinking likely" (even very likely) and "knowing".

    I know the earth is roughly cylindrical and that it orbits the Sun. It seems staggeringly unlikely that that belief could turn out to be wrong.

    I think it is highly likely that Covid was released as a result of a lab leak of some kind (and I draw the definition of lab leak fairly widely). But if we were to discover a colony of bats 70 miles from Wuhan that were all carrying Covid-19 and who appear to have lived with it for a long time, we would clearly need to adjust the probability for a lab leak rather than a zoonotic event way down. Would it surprise me if such a colony was found? I think it unlikely, but not vanishingly so.

    "Knowing" is more than even "reasonable doubt". It means, essentially, certainty. And I'm not certain, I merely think a lab leak fits the current facts better than an entirely zoonotic explanation.
  • NEW THREAD

  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,593
    Carnyx said:

    Corpach? That's the locks for the south end of the Caledonian Canal at An Gearasdan, aka Fort W., anmd his croft was apparently near there. The croft is "remote in the Highlands" acc to London hacks and the BBC, though they 'd know a smuch about Scottish geography as a pithed marmoset. In reality it seems to have been in the Lochyside area - jwhich matches your location and clan lands.
    Corpach, Lochyside and Banavie just seem suburbs of Fort Bill to me.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,661
    MattW said:

    Isn't it time that somewhere near Cromarty (promably not there, as it was cut out in 2007) had a Statue of Charles Kennedy?

    Though that does raise the prospect of one of Dennis Skinner in Bolsover, and Ken Clarke in West Bridgford.

    I do quite like the idea of a statue of long-serving MPs in their Constituencies, as long as they are street level statues to represent that MPs are 'one of us'. A good way to represent democracy in our midst, which is important.
    Perhaps Sir Philip can use the proceeds of his winning bet towards erecting a life size statue of himself in the centre of Shipley.

    Just in time for City of Culture.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,593
    Leon said:

    We’re building a good shortlist

    Lavenham
    Bradford-upon-Avon
    Rye
    Stromness
    Could you add Tobermory to your list, please?
This discussion has been closed.