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It’s not Priti for Patel or Tom Tugendhat – politicalbetting.com

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  • I do. I see loyalty as a virtue.

    It's a shame it's not more common IMHO
    I also value loyalty, but, to paraphrase something I read on a different website earlier today:

    What does “loyalty” mean in a country where the people you failed are angry, and you despise what the party has become?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,353

    I’m talking about the working age population, to emphasise that it has grown, contrary to @Foxy’s post.

    https://www.statista.com/statistics/280032/uk-economic-activity-rate/
    I can't see the source, but I think that is male labour force participation rate rather than total. Statista just copies other people's data.

    The underlyingies are here: https://www.oecd.org/en/data/indicators/employment-rate.html
  • I'm surprised you have the energy to peel apart your semen-encrusted sheets in the morning :lol:
    Why?

    After I've had a good night's sleep I'm well-rested.
  • An illiterate comment. If we were “Eurocentric” then Europe would be the centre, not the West, in the same manner as China sees itself as the centre.
    Anatolia is the Near East, Italy is indisputably in the West, so the midpoint seems to be Greece or thereabouts. Suez at the rightmost. That looks Eurocentric to me.

  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,273
    edited September 2024
    rcs1000 said:

    Well, d'uh.

    She wouldn't be in politics if she wasn't.
    1. Her performance against Hislop on QT on the infamous death penalty issue was woeful.

    2. She was a massive disappointment in office, and didn't seem to achieve anything but was adept at blaming others

    3. She has a history of dishonesty

    4. She is full of self-confidence but it seems to be baseless.

    5. She has a nice laugh and smile.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,813
    edited September 2024
    rcs1000 said:

    I can't see the source, but I think that is male labour force participation rate rather than total. Statista just copies other people's data.

    The underlyingies are here: https://www.oecd.org/en/data/indicators/employment-rate.html
    You could be right, but the point stands that the working age population has expanded.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,673

    Japan isn't Western for "most" definitions of the West. Western is not a synonym for developed.
    Japan is, in any event, taking small steps towards encouraging immigration.
    Which will probably accelerate.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,166
    JohnO said:

    Preferences are Stride, Cleverly, Tugendhat….shrugs shoulders…then Badenoch but NEVER Jenrick.
    I will never get over Jenrick's decision to paint over Disney characters at an Asylum detention centre. I just cannot relate to someone who would want to do that. Frightened, bewildered children and he wants to remove any sense of joy for something more dystopian. It is beyond vile. It is sick. Such an unbelievable lack of empathy makes him barely fit to be a member of the human race, let alone the leader of a political party.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,353

    That has the UK on 78%…
    No, it has male labour force participation on 78%
  • Australia can be called Western by virtue of being an extension of British civilisation, yes, but not because it’s democratic or developed.
    I read that as you saying the Australians aren't civilised which, well... no comment.
  • Where would you put the zero longitude line?
    Greenwich.

    What the fuck is wrong with being Eurocentric?

    Britain helped the modern world and set international maritime standards and law, so why shouldn't the meridian be here. It's one reason our financial markets are so well placed.

    Other countries might like to see themselves as the centre. Tough. They're not. But they might have better weather or some interesting geography or antiquities instead.

    Thems the breaks.

  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,667

    It's literally not possible for someone to write an illiterate comment, just saying.
    Flgjaghgrhhhagjkadgvk;vjk
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,353

    You could be right, but the point stands that the working age population has expanded.
    I'm sure it has, but you haven't actually provided me any data showing the increase in the working age population in either absolute terms or as a total of the population.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,353

    Flgjaghgrhhhagjkadgvk;vjk
    You typed that.
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,601

    Productivity has only ever improved by improving the process - generally through mechanisation.

    So, when it comes to kerbside refuse collection - how can we make it possible for the employee to collect the more refuse for the same or *less* effort and time? Better trucks? Better bins that can be automatically emptied into the trucks?
    Do it like Amsterdam does:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0JtoSafhvLM

    Above-ground bins that lead to large underground vaults that are lifted entire into a bin lorry whenever they fill up.
  • Productivity has only ever improved by improving the process - generally through mechanisation.

    So, when it comes to kerbside refuse collection - how can we make it possible for the employee to collect the more refuse for the same or *less* effort and time? Better trucks? Better bins that can be automatically emptied into the trucks?
    You know the problems there.

    One is that mechanisation means spending upfront to save over the following decades.

    The other is that changing processes makes people unhappy, and they don't like that. See also: self-checkouts in supermarkets. You can (and many places elsewhere do) have systems where you take your rubbish bags to a local collection point (something like this: https://resource.co/article/could-underground-waste-collection-come-uk-11351) but good luck getting it through in an election year.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,673
    Florida doctor kills patient by mistakenly removing his liver, rather than his spleen.
    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/article/2024/sep/04/alabama-man-death-wrong-organ-surgery
  • I also value loyalty, but, to paraphrase something I read on a different website earlier today:

    What does “loyalty” mean in a country where the people you failed are angry, and you despise what the party has become?
    That's when you need to call on loyalty the most.

    Look, I yielded to no-one in my criticism before the election but I backed my side because I thought Sunak was the better PM, my MP was a good egg, and I believe in Conservative values.

    If I didn't I would have voted for someone else, or abstained, but I wouldn't have said I'm a lifelong Tory because I wouldn't have been.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,156
    edited September 2024

    Greenwich.

    What the fuck is wrong with being Eurocentric?

    Britain helped the modern world and set international maritime standards and law, so why shouldn't the meridian be here. It's one reason our financial markets are so well placed.

    Other countries might like to see themselves as the centre. Tough. They're not. But they might have better weather or some interesting geography or antiquities instead.

    Thems the breaks.

    I don't think there is [anything wrong with being Eurocentric*], but a previous poster was suggesting that Eurocentrism was a fiction, but it's right there in the Greenwich meridian and the definition of East and West.

    * I'd much rather have a Eurocentric world, based on democracy and the rule of law, than a world where other values held sway. It would help if Europe were to hold true to the best of its history though.
  • rcs1000 said:

    You typed that.
    It's a small fishing village in the Faroe Islands.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295

    Flgjaghgrhhhagjkadgvk;vjk
    Writing: "It's literally not possible for someone to write an illiterate comment, just saying."

    Not writing: "Flgjaghgrhhhagjkadgvk;vjk"
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,273
    edited September 2024
    DavidL said:

    I will never get over Jenrick's decision to paint over Disney characters at an Asylum detention centre. I just cannot relate to someone who would want to do that. Frightened, bewildered children and he wants to remove any sense of joy for something more dystopian. It is beyond vile. It is sick. Such an unbelievable lack of empathy makes him barely fit to be a member of the human race, let alone the leader of a political party.
    Agreed, and I've never believed his excuse for that either.

    I was implacably opposed to Grayling after he took books away from prisoners too.

    Being tough and firm on political issues doesn't mean being a c**t as a virtue.
  • Productivity has only ever improved by improving the process - generally through mechanisation.

    So, when it comes to kerbside refuse collection - how can we make it possible for the employee to collect the more refuse for the same or *less* effort and time? Better trucks? Better bins that can be automatically emptied into the trucks?
    Sounds like a load of garbage :lol:
  • DavidL said:

    I will never get over Jenrick's decision to paint over Disney characters at an Asylum detention centre. I just cannot relate to someone who would want to do that. Frightened, bewildered children and he wants to remove any sense of joy for something more dystopian. It is beyond vile. It is sick. Such an unbelievable lack of empathy makes him barely fit to be a member of the human race, let alone the leader of a political party.
    I liked the description I saw of Jenrick as "not the school bully, but the school bully's minion". I don't know how much he believes this stuff, as opposed to believing he has to act this way to get on, but it would be consistent with the overacting. One of the sad things about this process has been seeing Tugendhat showing a bit of leg to the right... and for what?
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,793

    I do. I see loyalty as a virtue.

    It's a shame it's not more common IMHO
    Well, up to a point. I'm loyal to my family. (Though they've never given me any reason not to be.) I'm loyal to my friends. (Ditto.) I'd say that's virtuous, in a keeping-your-implied-promises way.
    I understand those who are loyal to a sports team - though at its best that's just another flavour of loyalty to one's friends. And if it's not that, it's slightly risible.

    Some people are loyal to brands. But that's daft. Brands aren't human. They can't return or reward your loyalty and don't want to; they just want your money.

    Loyalty to a political party strikes me as more like loyalty to a brand. I don't really understand it, and don't see the virtue. Indeed, political parties shouldn't be rewarding their voters' loyalty; they should be governing for the whole country, not just their voters.

    If you are a member of a party, and have friends in the organisation, I suppose it becomes more like the better sort of loyalty to a sports team. But electing the government ought to be a bit more serious than that and I don't see coming to a judgement that someone else deserves yoir vote more as 'disloyal'.

  • It's literally not possible for someone to write an illiterate comment, just saying.
    "You see I'm a bilingual. A bilingual illiterate. I can't read in two languages."
  • He thinks she represents the purest form of Thatcher's spirit and she was only blocked by the blob.

    He possibly fancies her as well.
    I don't venerate Truss at all. I have said fairly consistently that politically she was gauche. But her time in office does raise a lot of debates about political, economical and legal structures, and on almost all of those debates, I side with Truss. Tories like @MaxPB and @CasinoRoyale just hear noise when Truss talks, but if they listened, they'd realise that the sort of Government that they themselves want to see is going to run slap bang into the same barriers, the same condemnation, probably the same ridicule that Truss received, because the very adoption of those policies makes you a radical and an outsider. Buying in to Labour attack lines about her is completely the wrong approach.
  • That's when you need to call on loyalty the most.

    Look, I yielded to no-one in my criticism before the election but I backed my side because I thought Sunak was the better PM, my MP was a good egg, and I believe in Conservative values.

    If I didn't I would have voted for someone else, or abstained, but I wouldn't have said I'm a lifelong Tory because I wouldn't have been.
    Yes, okay.

    I think you can extend that to party membership too. I think one reason that party memberships have become more extreme in general in Britain is because people have decided that the right response to the temporary leadership doing something they disagree with is to leave the party in protest, but that leaves the party only with its most committed core, and it has them lost the diversity that would keep it more connected to the communities it should be part of, so that it can change with them.
  • Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 5,562

    Flgjaghgrhhhagjkadgvk;vjk
    That's that volcano in Iceland isn't it?
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295

    Agreed, and I've never believed his excuse for that either.

    I was implacably opposed to Grayling after he took books away from prisoners too.

    Being tough and firm on political issues doesn't mean being a c**t as a virtue.
    So, not Patel, not Jenrick. Who's your pick?
  • Nigelb said:

    Florida doctor kills patient by mistakenly removing his liver, rather than his spleen.
    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/article/2024/sep/04/alabama-man-death-wrong-organ-surgery

    It is always Florida. No wonder they call it Horrida. (Sorry Seashanty, I know you don't like it when I call it Horrida.)
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,793

    Where would you put the zero longitude line?
    Maybe anywhere which uses the Latin alphabet is in the west. That seems to largely work. Though perhaps recent events have dragged Ukraine into the west, and sub-Saharan Africa is sui generis.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,166

    I liked the description I saw of Jenrick as "not the school bully, but the school bully's minion". I don't know how much he believes this stuff, as opposed to believing he has to act this way to get on, but it would be consistent with the overacting. One of the sad things about this process has been seeing Tugendhat showing a bit of leg to the right... and for what?
    There is a simple difference between being firm and clear and just being obnoxious and vindictive. That vindictive flaw was one of May's major failings. Being gratuitously unpleasant just to try and score some political point with the scum of the earth is a line no decent politician should cross. Jenrick did. It troubles me that this is not seen as a red line by his fellow MPs.
  • Cookie said:

    Maybe anywhere which uses the Latin alphabet is in the west.
    Vietnam?
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,135
    DavidL said:

    There is a simple difference between being firm and clear and just being obnoxious and vindictive. That vindictive flaw was one of May's major failings. Being gratuitously unpleasant just to try and score some political point with the scum of the earth is a line no decent politician should cross. Jenrick did. It troubles me that this is not seen as a red line by his fellow MPs.
    If you subscribe to my view that Sunak's unpopularity was largely down to people thinking he was an arsehole, Jenrick is more of the same.

    It's a shame really because I don't think Sunak really was an arsehole, just that for some reason he seemed to think that behaviour or perception was politically necessary. Same with May I think. Not sure about Jenrick.
  • The Irish Naval Service has commissioned two new ships today. One of the key advantages of the new ships is that they need fewer crew to put to sea than the other ships in the Irish fleet.

    Which is just as well, because it won't be long until Chelsea employ more footballers than the Irish Naval Service have sailors.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,353

    The Irish Naval Service has commissioned two new ships today. One of the key advantages of the new ships is that they need fewer crew to put to sea than the other ships in the Irish fleet.

    Which is just as well, because it won't be long until Chelsea employ more footballers than the Irish Naval Service have sailors.

    But don't worry, through all the cutbacks and reductions, there will continue to be the same number of Admirals and Commodores.
  • #Priti4Loser

    A sad day.

    I definitely won't be voting Conservative.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,255

    It is always Florida. No wonder they call it Horrida. (Sorry Seashanty, I know you don't like it when I call it Horrida.)
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florida_Man

    (I thought @SeaShantyIrish2 was resident in Washington State. Is he not?)
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,793

    Vietnam?
    Vietnam uses the Latin alphabet? Why?

    Maybe 'anywhere which, circa 1900, used the Latin Alphabet'.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,005

    Absolute nonsense.

    There was a serious plan to have our debt falling by 2028-29 with market credibility and it was well on its way to being met.
    The plan was, and still is, for debt to be falling as a % of GDP by the fifth year moving forwards, ie in 2024 it is 28/29; next year it will be 29/30. The year itself is never reached. It suits both parties to be silent on this conjuring trick. One day it will come home to roost, as conjuring tricks always do. Like QE (another name for printing money) is in the end an engine of soaring asset prices and inflation.
  • DavidL said:

    There is a simple difference between being firm and clear and just being obnoxious and vindictive. That vindictive flaw was one of May's major failings. Being gratuitously unpleasant just to try and score some political point with the scum of the earth is a line no decent politician should cross. Jenrick did. It troubles me that this is not seen as a red line by his fellow MPs.
    One of the things that went badly wrong at some point was the decomissioning of red line detectors. And it's not just about one party, or even about politics. But a more generalised "we can improve X by doing Y, and if anyone points out that Y is simply wrong we will say 'don't you care about X?' to them".

    As for Jenrickism as a way of wooing Reformers back, the big risk is that Jenrickism will always be seen as diet Reform. Just one calorie, not evil enough...
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,667
    .

    Vietnam?
    Họ thực sự thêm rất nhiều điều khó hiểu vào bảng chữ cái Latinh.

    They do add a lot of extra twiddles to the Latin alphabet.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,673
    Dear god, where has John Redwood been for the last four decades ?
    Or is he just senile now ?

    Selling a Council home to the people who live in it does not add to the shortage of homes. If the Council uses the money from the sale to build another it adds to the supply of homes.
    https://x.com/johnredwood/status/1831203784514535602
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560

    I disagree. Sunak was cutting tax towards the end, as far as he could in fiscal rules.

    He had to deal with the aftermath of Covid, Boris and the Trussterfuck in the constraints of economic reality.
    He also "cancelled" HS2(*) and copied NZ's smoking ban concept, to name two terrible ideas that immediately spring to mind.

    (*) Inverted commas because in 20 years when the need is unarguable even to the muppets in the Treasury it will get revived, but by then at twice the cost.
  • Nigelb said:

    Dear god, where has John Redwood been for the last four decades ?
    Or is he just senile now ?

    Selling a Council home to the people who live in it does not add to the shortage of homes. If the Council uses the money from the sale to build another it adds to the supply of homes.
    https://x.com/johnredwood/status/1831203784514535602

    He’s correct on both points.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,135
    Driver said:

    He also "cancelled" HS2(*) and copied NZ's smoking ban concept, to name two terrible ideas that immediately spring to mind.

    (*) Inverted commas because in 20 years when the need is unarguable even to the muppets in the Treasury it will get revived, but by then at twice the cost.
    A revision of the fiscal rules and HS2 to Manchester would be a gigantic rabbit-out-of-hat at the budget.

    Pure wishcasting from me.
  • rcs1000 said:

    But don't worry, through all the cutbacks and reductions, there will continue to be the same number of Admirals and Commodores.
    It looks like the current highest rank is Commodore, but if the Corporation Tax receipts keep flowing I wouldn't bet against an Admiral before too long.
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560
    MaxPB said:

    And which western government has suggested reforming the ECHR? Anyone who talks about it gets shouted down as "evil" or "fascist". The document is 65 years old, it was written in a different era of travel, it needs to be modernised and the four major European nations need to come to an agreement and force through changes to make it easier to deport illegal immigrants and foreign criminals. Without it parties like AfD, Reform, NR, Vox, FdI will continue to make big gains across the continent and then the ECHR will just get thrown out.
    It's not even the ECHR per se but the Strasbourg court's pernicious "living instrument doctrine" which allows them to make up entirely new rights that the judges think people should have.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205

    Sounds like a load of garbage :lol:
    No need to trash the idea
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560

    It wasn't fiction. They were on course to deliver it.

    The reason it slipped previously- see the budget of 2018 or 2019, for example - was because of the black swan event of Covid.

    Then, we had the CoL crisis and inflationary spike with interest rates that destroyed the old plan, and a need for higher defence spending.

    I don't expect everyone to be happy about all that but they are good reasons why the government had a very difficult wicket.
    By "Covid", of course, you mean "lockdown". Another very un-Tory policy of the last Parliament.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277

    One of the things that went badly wrong at some point was the decomissioning of red line detectors. And it's not just about one party, or even about politics. But a more generalised "we can improve X by doing Y, and if anyone points out that Y is simply wrong we will say 'don't you care about X?' to them".

    As for Jenrickism as a way of wooing Reformers back, the big risk is that Jenrickism will always be seen as diet Reform. Just one calorie, not evil enough...
    The Tory leadership contest is a race to the bottom . Tugendhats unedifying and desperate attempts to appeal to Tory members has been particularly tragic . Stride is probably the least vomit inducing followed by Cleverly.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205

    .

    Họ thực sự thêm rất nhiều điều khó hiểu vào bảng chữ cái Latinh.

    They do add a lot of extra twiddles to the Latin alphabet.
    It was introduced by Portuguese missionaries in the 17th Century.

  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,673

    He’s correct on both points.
    You are aware of the history of council house sales, and what happened to the proceeds ?

    Redwood was a Tory MP from 1987. It’s a bit bloody late for him to be coming to this stunning conclusion.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,667
    Foxy said:

    It was introduced by Portuguese missionaries in the 17th Century.

    Portuguese missionaries in the 17th century are also responsible for introducing tempura to Japan.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,673
    Harris proposes lower capital gains tax increase than Biden

    https://thehill.com/business/4862125-harris-proposes-lower-capital-gains-tax/
    … Harris said during a campaign speech in New Hampshire said she wants to increase the capital gains tax to 28 percent for those with $1 million or more in income, up from its current effective level of 23.6 percent.
    Harris’s proposal is well shy of the 44.6 percent rate proposed in a budget update from the Biden administration in July. It is also lower than the proposed increase to 39.6 percent included in the president’s most recent budget.
    “If you earn a million dollars a year or more, the tax rate on your long-term capital gains will be 28 percent under my plan, because we know when the government encourages investment, it leads to broad based economic growth,” Harris said in New Hampshire...

  • Nigelb said:

    You are aware of the history of council house sales, and what happened to the proceeds ?

    Redwood was a Tory MP from 1987. It’s a bit bloody late for him to be coming to this stunning conclusion.
    Yes but it remains true that council house sales didn’t cause a housing shortage.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205
    Cookie said:

    Maybe anywhere which uses the Latin alphabet is in the west. That seems to largely work. Though perhaps recent events have dragged Ukraine into the west, and sub-Saharan Africa is sui generis.
    In arguing that the West is an direction rather than a place I think I have kicked off the most pointless argument ever on PB. Is there a prize?
  • Foxy said:

    In arguing that the West is an direction rather than a place I think I have kicked off the most pointless argument ever on PB. Is there a prize?
    A prize?!?! More like an indelible blot upon your immortal (or is it immoral?) soul!

    Orwellian debate (up to and including debate on Himself) is PB privlege AND purgatgory.
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560

    I do. I see loyalty as a virtue.

    It's a shame it's not more common IMHO
    I couldn't disagree more strongly. If you always vote for a party in any circumstances it's pretty clear you aren't thinking about your vote and are just tribally marking your X.

    The country has a roughly equal share of these people on each side, which is good because they cancel each other out, but the numbers are high enough to be bad because it makes it almost impossible for either main party to be replaced.
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,394

    Jenrick is the best positioned to be able to deliver poll leads by suppressing the Reform vote and then pivoting to the centre for the next election. The others all risk oblivion for the party.
    They ALL risk oblivion.

    Even Kemi Badenoch who appears slightly less weird will toil to get a hearing. Robert Generic is exactly who I want as Tory leader, but then, I never want to see another Tory government ever.
  • viewcode said:

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

    (I thought @SeaShantyIrish2 was resident in Washington State. Is he not?)
    As a proud American he (quite rightly) takes issue on behalf of the sunshine state, as I would if someone was gratuitously offensive about Rutland or The Vale of Glamorgan.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205
    https://www.populationpyramid.net/united-kingdom/1990/ is the place to look at the changing demograpcs by age of our countryby years. The chart can hop by single tears or jumps of 5. Watch the shape change over time and it is clear that the growth is in the over 65s, despite assumptions on migration continuing at large scale.

    If the oldies want their WFP back and the Triple lock, then they need to import workers. That's the choice, and the debate needed on immigration.

    Reform and the Tory's Zero migration policy means major cuts in state provision to the elderly.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,009
    2 new national US polls

    Yougov Harris 47% Trump 45% Stein 1%
    https://d3nkl3psvxxpe9.cloudfront.net/documents/econTabReport_HIwtch9.pdf

    Big Data Harris 50% Trump 50%
    https://www.youtube.com/live/vN15UFzVuPU
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,793
    Foxy said:

    https://www.populationpyramid.net/united-kingdom/1990/ is the place to look at the changing demograpcs by age of our countryby years. The chart can hop by single tears or jumps of 5. Watch the shape change over time and it is clear that the growth is in the over 65s, despite assumptions on migration continuing at large scale.

    If the oldies want their WFP back and the Triple lock, then they need to import workers. That's the choice, and the debate needed on immigration.

    Reform and the Tory's Zero migration policy means major cuts in state provision to the elderly.

    Why do the oldies get to choose?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,009
    Interesting interview with Blair on BBC2 by Amol Rajan earlier
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m0022nbr/amol-rajan-interviews-tony-blair
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,793
    Foxy said:

    In arguing that the West is an direction rather than a place I think I have kicked off the most pointless argument ever on PB. Is there a prize?
    There have been far, far more pointless discussions than this one. I think it's quite illuminating!
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205
    Nigelb said:

    Dear god, where has John Redwood been for the last four decades ?
    Or is he just senile now ?

    Selling a Council home to the people who live in it does not add to the shortage of homes. If the Council uses the money from the sale to build another it adds to the supply of homes.
    https://x.com/johnredwood/status/1831203784514535602

    Except Maggie banned councils from spending receipts on building replacement council housing because of her fiscal policies.

    The long term effect of selling council houses was to transfer council houses to private BTLblandlords, after a short period of owner occupiers. Hence the declining rates of home ownership, and falling Tory vote share in the working age population.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,440
    Nigelb said:

    Harris proposes lower capital gains tax increase than Biden

    https://thehill.com/business/4862125-harris-proposes-lower-capital-gains-tax/
    … Harris said during a campaign speech in New Hampshire said she wants to increase the capital gains tax to 28 percent for those with $1 million or more in income, up from its current effective level of 23.6 percent.
    Harris’s proposal is well shy of the 44.6 percent rate proposed in a budget update from the Biden administration in July. It is also lower than the proposed increase to 39.6 percent included in the president’s most recent budget.
    “If you earn a million dollars a year or more, the tax rate on your long-term capital gains will be 28 percent under my plan, because we know when the government encourages investment, it leads to broad based economic growth,” Harris said in New Hampshire...

    Not looking too good for Trump....

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/article/2024/sep/04/trump-kamala-election
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    HYUFD said:

    Most likely they still vote with the Liberals on most bills until the election anyway
    They may be trying to force an election this year rather than next. They're doing reasonably well in the polls atm.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205
    Cookie said:

    Why do the oldies get to choose?
    We all get to choose, but the active electorate is heavily weighted to the elderly.

    If we working age voters get Zero net migration then we are making our own retirement enviable.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205
    Cookie said:

    There have been far, far more pointless discussions than this one. I think it's quite illuminating!
    There was the one on when autumn starts...
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Foxy said:

    There was the one on when autumn starts...
    Guess Boris’ Weight was the classic of the genre
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,315
    edited September 2024
    Nigelb said:

    Florida doctor kills patient by mistakenly removing his liver, rather than his spleen.
    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/article/2024/sep/04/alabama-man-death-wrong-organ-surgery

    Mistake? Have they checked his Fava bean purchases?
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,622
    Cookie said:

    There have been far, far more pointless discussions than this one. I think it's quite illuminating!
    C
    A
    S
    H
  • Foxy said:

    Except Maggie banned councils from spending receipts on building replacement council housing because of her fiscal policies.

    The long term effect of selling council houses was to transfer council houses to private BTLblandlords, after a short period of owner occupiers. Hence the declining rates of home ownership, and falling Tory vote share in the working age population.
    Why was this decline most pronounced under New Labour?

    image
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,009
    Andy_JS said:

    They may be trying to force an election this year rather than next. They're doing reasonably well in the polls atm.
    Not really, latest poll has the NDP on 19%, just 1% up on the 18% they got in 2021
    https://angusreid.org/federal-politics-concern-over-immigration-quadruples-over-last-48-months/
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,009

    Why was this decline most pronounced under New Labour?

    image
    Really collapsed under Brown's government and early years Cameron's government above all
  • Guess Boris’ Weight was the classic of the genre
    Indeed! And worthy of revival?

    SO just how much does Boris Johnson weigh in at these days?

    My guess is, seventeen stone and a cinder block, plus a couple of bricks, and a clenched fist full of gravel.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,673
    edited September 2024

    Yes but it remains true that council house sales didn’t cause a housing shortage.
    It wrecked the capital structure of local authorities, and represented one of the biggest transfers of power from local to central government in the last four decades.

    I was an enthusiastic supporter of the council house sale policy until I realised that the proceeds would go to the Treasury.

    And it certainly contributed to today's housing shortage. The annual figures for private sector house completions haven't changed all that much over the last four decades - but we used to build rather a lot of council homes in addition.
    Housing associations have replaced only a tiny fraction of that.

    One of Thatchers worst policies - continued by Blair.

  • That looks like a wishcast. How is Tugendhat going to get any momentum from here and why do you think Patel's supports will be split evenly rather than going for Jenrick?
    And why so few of Badenoch's supporters going to Jenrick?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,673

    Why was this decline most pronounced under New Labour?

    image
    Because they carried on with the policy.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,673

    Mistake? Have they checked his Fava bean purchases?
    It was on the wrong side, and four times the size, so he thought it was a really diseased spleen.
  • Yes but it remains true that council house sales didn’t cause a housing shortage.
    Perhaps. But council house sales caused a shortage of council houses.
  • Nunu3Nunu3 Posts: 265


    Guardian news

    @guardiannews

    ·

    12h

    ‘I am evil I did this’: Lucy Letby’s so-called confessions were written on advice of counsellors

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/article/2024/sep/03/i-am-evil-i-did-this-lucy-letbys-so-called-confessions-were-written-on-advice-of-counsellors
  • Writing: "It's literally not possible for someone to write an illiterate comment, just saying."


    Not writing: "Flgjaghgrhhhagjkadgvk;vjk"
    @Benpointer "It's literally not possible for someone to write an illiterate comment, just saying."

    @StillWaters AN ILLITERATE COMMENT

    See I wrote it. In capitals as well. Do I get a prize?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,353
    Driver said:

    By "Covid", of course, you mean "lockdown". Another very un-Tory policy of the last Parliament.
    The UK government implemented ridiculously over the top restrictions, that made me very glad to be in Southern California.

    WITH THAT SAID: places with no restrictions in the US (like Arizona) didn't perform markedly better economically than places with lots of restrictions (like New York), because people locked themselves up whether the politicians mandated it or not.

    I'd also point out that the best (economically) performing place - by far - in Europe was Denmark, which had a pretty sophisticated set of measures.
  • Nigelb said:

    Because they carried on with the policy.
    Nothing to do with their immigration policy then?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,673
    Next I look forward to Redwood explaining tfat privatising a monopoly utility, setting it up with a toothless regulator, and allowing it to be taken over by a foreign hedge fund which specialises in extracting capital from utilities ... might not be a great idea.

    Pretty quick in the uptake, is old John.
  • Perhaps. But council house sales caused a shortage of council houses.
    Yes, this is a better argument. Having the state pour money into the private rental market through housing benefit is disastrous.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    Prediction: Jenrick would gain roughly as many seats as Hague.

    It seems obvious to me from limited research that the only viable roll of the dice from this crowd for the Tories is Badenoch. She might implode. But she might grow over the next 4-5 years into not just an election winner but actually a successful PM.

    TT is a good egg but his schtick didn’t work last time and won’t win this time, nor would it move the dial with the lost voters. Perhaps Cleverly would show some aptitude that somehow escaped him in cabinet. But let’s assume not. And I agree with others that Jenrick doesn’t pass the photogenic / televisual test, public life is as glib as that I’m afraid. Don’t even know who the other guy is, not worth even worrying about.

    Ps
    Someone said earlier that SKS might not have long in the job and there was understandable scepticism given his majority and the UK system. It’s not impossible but I think depends on events in America in a category most here don’t want to consider. But are far from non zero probability if Schumer retains his positions and other chips fall into place.
  • @Benpointer "It's literally not possible for someone to write an illiterate comment, just saying."

    @StillWaters AN ILLITERATE COMMENT

    See I wrote it. In capitals as well. Do I get a prize?
    You typed it. You don’t get the prize unless you actually write it and take a photo to prove it.
  • Nigelb said:

    Because they carried on with the policy.
    And because cause and effect can be separated by time. In this case, the short-run effect was to increase the number of owner-occupiers. But gradually over time, those owners became landlords instead, so the houses became home to tenants instead.

    ("The human condition is to overvalue the present and undervalue the future. Discuss." See also the reluctance to put money into capital expenditure now, even if it will save loads in years to come. A fair few of our current problems are chickens coming home to roost.)
  • stodge said:

    All a bit glib and predictable from the Conservative end of the fence - call it "austerity" or just having another pop at the "public sector".

    Let's have some specifics - which "state payroll" jobs are you going to lose, Police, Fire, Armed Forces, School Teachers? As an aside, everyone on the "state payroll" pays taxes as well and spends money and contributes to the economy even if they are paid from public funds.
    Well, since a certain event in June 2016, when civil service FTEs were at a low, we have employed 100,000 extra civil servants to do what 30,000 do for the whole of Europe.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Indeed! And worthy of revival?

    SO just how much does Boris Johnson weigh in at these days?

    My guess is, seventeen stone and a cinder block, plus a couple of bricks, and a clenched fist full of gravel.
    It’s all muscle
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814

    Yes, this is a better argument. Having the state pour money into the private rental market through housing benefit is disastrous.
    Right to buy would be fine if the state still built houses. Look back to 1950 and the only periods we build sufficient stock was through the state / lha model, private sector just isn’t doing it by itself. I’d rather see the taxpayer take the equity risk at the start of projects to get things off the ground, bank the equity gain when things get signed off and derisked, and move to the next one.

    No doubt this somehow makes me “authoritarian right”.
  • As a proud American he (quite rightly) takes issue on behalf of the sunshine state, as I would if someone was gratuitously offensive about Rutland or The Vale of Glamorgan.
    My defense of the great Sunshine State of Florida:

    Seminole WInd - John Anderson
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aZxJsTN1848
  • rcs1000 said:

    The UK government implemented ridiculously over the top restrictions, that made me very glad to be in Southern California.

    WITH THAT SAID: places with no restrictions in the US (like Arizona) didn't perform markedly better economically than places with lots of restrictions (like New York), because people locked themselves up whether the politicians mandated it or not.

    I'd also point out that the best (economically) performing place - by far - in Europe was Denmark, which had a pretty sophisticated set of measures.
    The grim paradox of the Johnson/Sunak government's approach was that, by wanting to keep things open, they kept creating situations where it became necessary to close everything right away.

    Parallels with urban driving. The British approach was to try to go at maximum speed, only to repeatedly have to slam on the brakes. Much less stressful (and no slower) to go slower but without the stop-starts.
  • It’s all muscle
    Believe you're once again victim of auto(in)correct - you doubless mean "mussel".
This discussion has been closed.