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What we think about Reform – politicalbetting.com

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  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,410

    Last thing Conservatives want is for SKS to go anywhere.
    Oh I don't know. Labour getting through a bunch of leaders this Parliament would level the playing field.

    In that huge new intake, there must be someone who can follow in the steps of Liz Truss...
  • Just to cheer everyone up Nigel Farage tells Sky news it is certainly possible he could be the next PM
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Just to cheer everyone up Nigel Farage tells Sky news it is certainly possible he could be the next PM

    Betfair disagrees.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,828
    edited September 2024
    Just watched Nigel Farage's speech.

    Gotta say (and I know PB won't want to hear it) but with Kieth and Rachel trying to make the country more depressed and miserable by the day and the Tories not even in the game... It's increasingly looking like there's only one show in town - Farage/Reform.
  • Oh I don't know. Labour getting through a bunch of leaders this Parliament would level the playing field.

    In that huge new intake, there must be someone who can follow in the steps of Liz Truss...
    There is. He is currently First Lord of the Treasury.
  • ...and himself. What about the Farage Riots? Who posted Andrew Tate bullshit that set the wheels in motion for Holiday Inns being set on fire.
    I was thinking specifically about Anderson's diatribe about the 'Islamist' Sadiq Khan, who has 'given our capital city away'. He doubled down on this today. If that isn't bigotry/racism, I'm not quite sure what Farage has in mind.
  • Many, many years ago I stayed in a hotel near Aberdeen that was called, from memory, The Alton Skene Dhu. Or something like that.

    It was the most horrendously depressing place I have ever seen. The locals claimed that it was built as a prison, but Human Rights legislation prevented its use. This seemed implausible, since no-one could ever have imagined keeping prisoners in those conditions.
    LOL. The Skene Dhu is infamous. They used to put oil workers up in there on their way to and from the rigs when we were fogged in as it is right next door to the heliport. It was reknowned as the sort of place you pay for rooms by the hour and the floors are permanently sticky. The Travellodge in the centre of Aberdeen has a similar rep these days.
  • If the final two were Badenoch and Jenrick I’d likely vote for Badenoch, I absolutely will not be voting for Jenrick.

    The Dirty Desmond scandal should have disqualified him from being an MP let alone leader.
    Same.
  • GIN1138 said:

    Just watched Nigel Farage's speech.

    Gotta say (and I know PB won't want to hear it) but with Kieth and Rachel trying to make the country more miserable by the day and the Tories not even on at pitch at the moment... It's increasingly looking like there's only one show in town - Farage/Reform.

    Farage always has been an excellent orator and ran rings round the EU

    However, he is hugely divisive and his closeness to Trump is his achillles heel
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,818
    GIN1138 said:

    Just watched Nigel Farage's speech.

    Gotta say (and I know PB won't want to hear it) but with Kieth and Rachel trying to make the country more depressed and miserable by the day and the Tories not even in the game... It's increasingly looking like there's only one show in town - Farage/Reform.

    Of course. Because those 72 seats of the actual third party in parliament are a mere bagatelle.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,751

    95 not a bad innings mind
    I remember him being implausibly famous when I was small.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,818

    Farage always has been an excellent orator and ran rings round the EU

    However, he is hugely divisive and his closeness to Trump is his achillles heel
    His Achilles heel surely pre-dates Trump. It’s that the majority of the country can’t stand the twat.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,751

    Those shirts Ali was getting SKS were far too tight looked like he could Buster Blood Vessel at any minute.

    Suppose it would have been Bad Manners to complain

    That trend'll not catch on.
  • Same.
    I am not a member of the conservative party and at present am completely unmoved by the election for the new leader, but Jenrick is not the answer
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,904
    edited September 2024
    Sandpit said:

    It’s really simple. Does the politician have a role at the event or not?

    If he’s there to present a trophy to the winner, or is there entertaining a visiting dignitary, then no problem.

    If he’s just there of his own accord, or for political reasons, then it needs to be declared.
    I believe the racecourse at Town Moor is technically "owned" by the council as it is a common, although the facilities are operated by Arena.

    I imagine our esteemed (?) Prime Minister was speaking to local Doncaster politicians (possibly even about Nuclear matters as posted above).

    I have fewer problems with that than the Arsenal box, to be honest, even if it was a favour thrown by friendly politicians. The races have always had some degree of dignitary attendance as it is the one event in the year where Doncaster is looked at in a vaguely positive manner. Even Queenie turned up on occasion.

    Going to the races is very different from watching a football match.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,828
    edited September 2024

    Farage always has been an excellent orator and ran rings round the EU

    However, he is hugely divisive and his closeness to Trump is his achillles heel
    Trump's about to become history (after which I suspect Nigel will move on pretty fast) And at election '29 Farage's divisiveness will be set against SKS and the Labour government and whatever becomes of the Tories.

    I'm not saying REF will win the next election but if Labour keep on as they are and if the Tories don't pull themselves together, the path to PM Farage is there, IMO.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,818

    I was thinking specifically about Anderson's diatribe about the 'Islamist' Sadiq Khan, who has 'given our capital city away'. He doubled down on this today. If that isn't bigotry/racism, I'm not quite sure what Farage has in mind.
    There is, thankfully, a limited (still big, but dwindling daily) market for people who think Jim Davidson is the country’s greatest comedian.

    When Reform discover the secret of popularity among the young fash, like their counterparts on the continent…that’s when we really need to worry.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,482
    Sandpit said:

    The old Oxford prison is now an hotel. It’s much nicer!

    https://www.malmaison.com/locations/oxford/
    That comparison requires knowledge of both.

    How do you know?

    *innocent face*
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,818
    GIN1138 said:

    Trump's about to become history (after which I suspect Nigel will move on pretty fast) And at election '29 Farage's divisiveness will be set against SKS and the Labour government and whatever becomes of the Tories.

    I'm not saying REF will win the next election but if Labour keep on as they are and if the Tories don't pull themselves together, the path to PM Farage is there, IMO.
    Question for PB. In a forced choice:

    PM Farage, or PM Galloway?
  • DumbosaurusDumbosaurus Posts: 853
    edited September 2024
    Been looking for an excuse to lay Jenrick again.

    This will do nicely.

    >4k there at 1.6atm if anyone else wants to get involved.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,751
    TimS said:

    Question for PB. In a forced choice:

    PM Farage, or PM Galloway?
    Farage.

    I suspect this splits fairly neatly along whether you are a pb righty or a pb lefty. Prove mr wrong pb!
  • Sandpit said:

    Betfair disagrees.
    I went there thinking I would have a joke trading bet at 25 or longer - he is at 7 and joint favourite with Jenrick
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,482
    Minister proposes smoking ban:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8mtp2-PEH20
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,384

    UK PM Keir Starmer, Angela Rayner and Rachel Reeves will not accept any further donations for clothing after donor row

    The reasons to batter the Prime Minister have become evermore shrill.........

    Meanwhile the most pleasant country with the nicest people in the whole of the Middle East are REALLY being battered.

    This wonderful and extremely well educated little country has done everything it can to rebuild itself after a 21 year long civil war. It was thriving. It used to be known as the Cote d'Azur of the Middle East and it was well on it's way to getting back there.

    I can't begin to tell you what a tragedy this is. it's surely time to get past Mrs Starmer's wardrobe and get some perspective
  • GIN1138 said:

    Can we take a cyanide tablet? 😂

    No, probably Farage as there's the remotest possibility he might only be pretending to be an anti-British, Putin shill... where-as with with the Gorgeous One, you just know, like Jezza, he actually IS an anti-British, Putin shill with the added attraction of being anti-Semitic (which Farage isn't) as well.
    Seconded.

    I'm reminded of the PJ O'Rourke line about Trump-Clinton.

    Farage would be appalling, but in a recognisably normal way. The same could be said of Corbyn. Galloway would be far worse.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,125
    edited September 2024

    I am guessing the usual Starmer bashers have been all over this story?

    Wait, no?

    Robert Jenrick, who is the favourite to be the next Conservative party leader, received £75,000 from a firm which has no employees, has never made a profit and has £332,000 in debts after taking a loan from an untraceable British Virgin Islands company

    https://x.com/AdamBienkov/status/1837200185908142202

    Every last man jack of them.

    I am eagerly waiting Johnson's critique of Starmer corruption in tomorrow's Mail.
  • 40 years ago today, the original Elite game was released for the BBC B.

    I've enjoyed so much time with various versions of thar game...
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,420

    Meanwhile, I read that Farage has said that bigots and racists are not welcome in the Reform Party. If he's serious, he should start by expelling Lee Anderson.
    Seriously.

    He's not.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    I believe the racecourse at Town Moor is technically "owned" by the council as it is a common, although the facilities are operated by Arena.

    I imagine our esteemed (?) Prime Minister was speaking to local Doncaster politicians (possibly even about Nuclear matters as posted above).

    I have fewer problems with that than the Arsenal box, to be honest, even if it was a favour thrown by friendly politicians. The races have always had some degree of dignitary attendance as it is the one event in the year where Doncaster is looked at in a vaguely positive manner. Even Queenie turned up on occasion.

    Going to the races is very different from watching a football match.
    Yes absolutely. There’s almost always a good reason for a politician to turn up at a provincial racecourse.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,850
    TimS said:

    Question for PB. In a forced choice:

    PM Farage, or PM Galloway?
    I vote for an independent Scotland with a generous asylum policy for refugees making the dangerous river crossing over the Tweed.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,085
    edited September 2024
    TimS said:

    Question for PB. In a forced choice:

    PM Farage, or PM Galloway?
    There are always more than 2 candidates. Bus Pass Elvis Party for me.

  • John Rentoul
    @JohnRentoul
    ·
    11m
    Great line from @patrickkmaguire


    https://thetimes.com/comment/columnists/article/labour-needs-to-break-out-of-the-gray-zone-m5bxw3cvm


    Did he steal this from my comment earlier about Mandelson? Do we have lurkers from the Times?
  • TimS said:

    His Achilles heel surely pre-dates Trump. It’s that the majority of the country can’t stand the twat.
    In purely logical terms you can say that about pretty much any party leader or notable politician. It is ectremely rare that a majority ofpeople actually like any of our leadership candidates for any of the parties. Particularly the successful ones.

    This is not meant as a defence of Farage, simply pointing out that being actively disliked is an occupational hazard.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,116

    Meanwhile, I read that Farage has said that bigots and racists are not welcome in the Reform Party. If he's serious, he should start by expelling Lee Anderson.
    Seriously.

    I think we're all old enough to realise that the words of politicians are meaningless and do not necessarily attach to a fact.
  • Roger said:


    The reasons to batter the Prime Minister have become evermore shrill.........

    Meanwhile the most pleasant country with the nicest people in the whole of the Middle East are REALLY being battered.

    This wonderful and extremely well educated little country has done everything it can to rebuild itself after a 21 year long civil war. It was thriving. It used to be known as the Cote d'Azur of the Middle East and it was well on it's way to getting back there.

    I can't begin to tell you what a tragedy this is. it's surely time to get past Mrs Starmer's wardrobe and get some perspective
    The middle east is being torn apart by malign actors including Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran and of course Israel

    It is a tragedy of mankind and all parties engaged in this conflict should hang their heads in shame

    I fear it is going to be with us for a very long time as nobody is listening to anybody
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243
    Cookie said:

    Farage.

    I suspect this splits fairly neatly along whether you are a pb righty or a pb lefty. Prove mr wrong pb!
    Yeah, reluctantly I agree.

    Tempted by Galloway as he's too useless to actually enact anything nutty, whereas with Farage who knows. But I dislike Galloway more than Farage.

    Not sure whether you have me as a pb righty or a pb lefty though...
  • Every last man jack of them.

    I am eagerly waiting Johnson's critique of Starmer corruption in tomorrow's Mail.
    Why wait for Johnson when you can read Baroness Harman's view of it
  • 40 years ago today, the original Elite game was released for the BBC B.

    I've enjoyed so much time with various versions of thar game...

    I first saw it a year later when I was seven

    I first played it when I was nine, and I could never dock competently
  • I believe the racecourse at Town Moor is technically "owned" by the council as it is a common, although the facilities are operated by Arena.

    I imagine our esteemed (?) Prime Minister was speaking to local Doncaster politicians (possibly even about Nuclear matters as posted above).

    I have fewer problems with that than the Arsenal box, to be honest, even if it was a favour thrown by friendly politicians. The races have always had some degree of dignitary attendance as it is the one event in the year where Doncaster is looked at in a vaguely positive manner. Even Queenie turned up on occasion.

    Going to the races is very different from watching a football match.
    Not how common land works. It's all actually owned by someone, who is usually a person and very rarely a council, the catch being that it is essentially valueless because ownership comes with few to no rights. Typically the commoners between them have grazing rights for as many beasts as the land will support, but if there's a surplus the owner can stick a couple of sheep on after the commoners are satisfied.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,576
    TimS said:

    Question for PB. In a forced choice:

    PM Farage, or PM Galloway?
    Can I choose the bottle of brandy and revolver in the study?
  • Tim_in_RuislipTim_in_Ruislip Posts: 439
    edited September 2024

    The middle east is being torn apart by malign actors including Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran and of course Israel

    It is a tragedy of mankind and all parties engaged in this conflict should hang their heads in shame

    I fear it is going to be with us for a very long time as nobody is listening to anybody
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XaV-nGQ5yqw

    (Posted for the lyrics, but also for the simplest, most brilliant music video, ever)
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    edited September 2024
    The EU have revised their youth mobility scheme . The offer to the UK will be a two year visa and it won’t include anything on universities . This seems very fair and if Labour refuse this then I’m totally done with them .

  • If I wear my waterproof work jacket for my walk (it's the only waterproof coat I have with a hood), should I declare it for tax purposes to avoid being a hypocrite?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,125
    edited September 2024

    Why wait for Johnson when you can read Baroness Harman's view of it
    Because the irony would explode everyone's irony meters.

    I am not particularly contented by the Goonergate scandal, but those on here who were in the first instance crying foul over criticism of Johnson's considerably more egregious "corruption" are now demanding Starmer's nuts.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    MattW said:

    That comparison requires knowledge of both.

    How do you know?

    *innocent face*
    I’ll admit I’ve never been there.

    My parents went to it when it was an hotel, and said it was a fabulous quirky place to stay.

    I don’t know anyone who ever stayed there in its former use.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,536
    Right now I'd vote for PM Farage over Galloway

    And Jenrick

    And Starmer
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,536
    nico679 said:

    The EU have revised their youth mobility scheme . The offer to the UK will be a two year visa and it won’t include anything on universities . This seems very fair and if Labour refuse this then I’m totally done with them .

    Yes, they should accept that. Besides anything else, it might help them reduce ex-EU legal migration
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,828
    Leon said:

    Right now I'd vote for PM Farage over Galloway

    And Jenrick

    And Starmer

    @Leon comes out for Farage - The shock! :open_mouth:
  • Because the irony would explode everyone's irony meters.

    I am not particularly contented by the Goonergate scandal, but those on here who were in the first instance crying foul over criticism of Johnson's considerably more egregious "corruption" are now demanding Starmer's nuts.
    Have you just understood politics?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,410
    TimS said:

    Question for PB. In a forced choice:

    PM Farage, or PM Galloway?
    Time to draw the cock and balls....
  • Jill Biden appears to be chairing a cabinet meeting.

    https://x.com/msnbc/status/1837167295656824851
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,125
    Leon said:

    Right now I'd vote for PM Farage over Galloway

    And Jenrick

    And Starmer

    And in do bears s*** in the woods news...
  • Leon said:

    Right now I'd vote for PM Farage over Galloway

    And Jenrick

    And Starmer

    I'd rather vote for Leon than them 2...
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,536
    edited September 2024
    GIN1138 said:

    @Leon comes out for Farage - The shock! :open_mouth:
    Well, who wouldn't

    I voted for Starmer in the fond and forlorn belief that Labour would have a bunch of brilliant but hidden ideas for getting the country going. It is now abundantly clear they don't, plus they are as venal and inept as the Tories with added layers of hypocrisy, avarice and Wokeness. Starmer is a terrified overpromoted middle manager who has been found out

    The Tories can drop dead

    That leaves... Farage. Give him a go
  • Because the irony would explode everyone's irony meters.

    I am not particularly contented by the Goonergate scandal, but those on here who were in the first instance crying foul over criticism of Johnson's considerably more egregious "corruption" are now demanding Starmer's nuts.
    Really? All well before my time but I find it hard to believe anyone defended Johnson over wallpaper. It sounds as if you want to say Starmer is corrupt af but so was Johnson but you realise that doesn't sound so great so you dress it up as a point about hypocrisy.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,125

    Time to draw the cock and balls....
    What about PM Jenrick or PM Farage?

    Same cock and balls cartoon?
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,828

    Jill Biden appears to be chairing a cabinet meeting.

    https://x.com/msnbc/status/1837167295656824851

    The Dems need a 1922 Committee... They'd have had Joe out by Christmas... 2021 😂
  • Is there not one single PB Tory who wants the favourite to be leader?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,125

    Have you just understood politics?
    No, I still don't have a Scooby Doo.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    Leon said:

    Yes, they should accept that. Besides anything else, it might help them reduce ex-EU legal migration
    The main sticking point on the earlier proposal was the issue around universities . So a two year scheme without that you’d think wouldn’t be controversial. But you never know with the current Labour government ! It would of course help with the hospitality industry . Starmer keeps saying he wants a reset , so he either does something to show that or he should stfu . As you can tell I’m not happy with the Labour Party . It’s been a woeful start .
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,601

    40 years ago today, the original Elite game was released for the BBC B.

    I've enjoyed so much time with various versions of thar game...

    I remember spending many hours learning how to write 3D graphics based on playing it. Almost drove me into becoming a mathematician.

    Thankfully my secondary school maths teacher refused to tell me anything about 3D trig, as "you don't need to know it yet" and the local library was a little spartan on the maths front. So that was that.
  • Inspiring tirade against the degrowth agenda from the late Hans Rosling:

    https://x.com/ziontree/status/1837082859510677748
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,125
    mercator said:

    Really? All well before my time but I find it hard to believe anyone defended Johnson over wallpaper. It sounds as if you want to say Starmer is corrupt af but so was Johnson but you realise that doesn't sound so great so you dress it up as a point about hypocrisy.
    Starmer is a rank amateur compared to Johnson. I am not too concerned by Lulu Lytle, although it provided hours of hilarity. I am deeply offended by Johnson's attendance at the tarts and vicars party at Lebedev's Italian villa and his loose tongued comment about Nasaneen Radcliffe or arranging for Pen Farthing to bring dogs back to the UK instead of Afghan employees of the UK Government.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,536
    Sometimes travel is bewildering. This time yesterday - roughIy - I was walking around the remarkable gardens of the University of British Columbia, gazing across the wild blue PaciHfic sounds and the Strait of Georgia to Bowen and Vancouver Islands, thickly carpeted in great green larch and spruce forests, some of the most remote areas of the globe, until the last century. Some of the last places where pre industrial mankind held out - within living memory

    Now I am in Camden

    I wonder if we, as a species have really adapted to this change, which has happened in the last few decades in our 200,000 year history as Homo sapiens

    What's more, the speed of change is ACCELERATING
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,644
    nico679 said:

    The main sticking point on the earlier proposal was the issue around universities . So a two year scheme without that you’d think wouldn’t be controversial. But you never know with the current Labour government ! It would of course help with the hospitality industry . Starmer keeps saying he wants a reset , so he either does something to show that or he should stfu . As you can tell I’m not happy with the Labour Party . It’s been a woeful start .
    What was the "issue around universities"?

    Do you have a link to the new proposal?
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 3,377
    Leon said:

    Well, who wouldn't

    I voted for Starmer in the fond and forlorn belief that Labour would have a bunch of brilliant but hidden ideas for getting the country going. It is now abundantly clear they don't, plus they are as venal and inept as the Tories with added layers of hypocrisy, avarice and Wokeness. Starmer is a terrified overpromoted middle manager who has been found out

    The Tories can drop dead

    That leaves... Farage. Give him a go
    Just the small matter of collecting enough MPs.
  • SteveSSteveS Posts: 200

    40 years ago today, the original Elite game was released for the BBC B.

    I've enjoyed so much time with various versions of thar game...

    Right on Commander!

    I remember being allowed to borrow one of school’s three or four Model Bs over the long summer holidays. Bliss

    Made it to Elite in the end.

    I also played Galactic Trader on Vax\Vms which was brilliant.

    S


  • BlancheLivermoreBlancheLivermore Posts: 6,252
    edited September 2024
    Leon said:

    Sometimes travel is bewildering. This time yesterday - roughIy - I was walking around the remarkable gardens of the University of British Columbia, gazing across the wild blue PaciHfic sounds and the Strait of Georgia to Bowen and Vancouver Islands, thickly carpeted in great green larch and spruce forests, some of the most remote areas of the globe, until the last century. Some of the last places where pre industrial mankind held out - within living memory

    Now I am in Camden

    I wonder if we, as a species have really adapted to this change, which has happened in the last few decades in our 200,000 year history as Homo sapiens

    What's more, the speed of change is ACCELERATING

    Just as I'm about to slow down the average
  • Is there not one single PB Tory who wants the favourite to be leader?

    The Tories should be like hignfy after Deaytons downfall and have different weekly celeb guest party leaders for a year or two. Starmer's problem is he is dangling with nothing to do until the budget (59 sleeps!) and until the Tories elect a leader, no opponent to oppose. Why make it easy for him? A prosecutor with nobody to prosecute looks pretty silly
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,571
    Donald Trump suits the US government with a nonsensical lawsuit that exists as an excuse to fund raise, but, if he wins, becomes a convenient way to just pay himself a large sum of government money: https://youtu.be/4vfiCcgW2F4
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,644
    edited September 2024
    carnforth said:

    What was the "issue around universities"?

    Do you have a link to the new proposal?
    Ok found it:

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/aug/29/eu-fresh-proposal-youth-mobility-scheme-uk

    "However, they said the inclusion in the April proposal of a four-year scheme allowing students to study in each other’s countries while paying home fees was a non-starter – and a youth mobility scheme would have a better political chance if students were removed from the equation.

    One source in the UK said it was just not viable because there had always been an “imbalance in the flow of students”, with more EU citizens studying in the UK than British students in the EU. This created a disproportionate financial burden on British institutions, something they could not countenance in a youth mobility scheme."
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,536
    nico679 said:

    The main sticking point on the earlier proposal was the issue around universities . So a two year scheme without that you’d think wouldn’t be controversial. But you never know with the current Labour government ! It would of course help with the hospitality industry . Starmer keeps saying he wants a reset , so he either does something to show that or he should stfu . As you can tell I’m not happy with the Labour Party . It’s been a woeful start .
    Yes, I agree

    The issue with universities was real

    This just seems to be win-win. Let our kids interact, let anyone under 30 live and work in the EU and vice versa, for 2 years

    Just do it. I always disliked the closing-down-opportunities vision of Brexit, this seriously ameliorates it. Britain will likely benefit as kids want to come to London and learn English in a great world city. Inter alia it will invigorate the capital. JUST DO IT

  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,031

    40 years ago today, the original Elite game was released for the BBC B.

    I've enjoyed so much time with various versions of thar game...

    We had one (pirated) copy of the disk at school.

    Every time someone made a hyperspace jump we had to sneakernet it across the room
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,571
    TimS said:

    Question for PB. In a forced choice:

    PM Farage, or PM Galloway?
    I just can't even think about that choice! Ughhhhhhhhhh....

    Galloway, I suppose, because he's older and would be more likely to shuffle off this mortal coil.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,751
    Cookie said:

    That trend'll not catch on.
    *cough* slightly sad there was no reaction to this pun. I almost never venture a pun but was quite pleased with this one.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,536
    Cookie said:

    *cough* slightly sad there was no reaction to this pun. I almost never venture a pun but was quite pleased with this one.
    Bit subtle?

    Is it a pun on "treadle"?
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,904
    edited September 2024
    mercator said:

    Not how common land works. It's all actually owned by someone, who is usually a person and very rarely a council, the catch being that it is essentially valueless because ownership comes with few to no rights. Typically the commoners between them have grazing rights for as many beasts as the land will support, but if there's a surplus the owner can stick a couple of sheep on after the commoners are satisfied.
    Definitely council owned.

    It isn't really a common in the normal sense although it is called "Doncaster Common" on the map. The middle of the racecourse is a golf course, again run privately but effectively leased.

    https://maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/side-by-side/#zoom=16.3&lat=53.52095&lon=-1.09590&layers=6e&right=OSLeisure

    We are currently fighting to try and get them to maintain it properly as a lowland heath, but the golfers keep moaning about the rough and don't seem to be able to carry the ball 100 yards off the tees so it gets mown to grass rather than heather. Hackers.

  • GIN1138 said:

    The Dems need a 1922 Committee... They'd have had Joe out by Christmas... 2021 😂
    You do (or perhaps do NOT) realize that Joe Biden was chairing that cabinet meeting? Sitting as traditional at the CENTER of the cabinet table?

    As shit stirring goes, this is sub-par possum-poop.
  • ohnotnow said:

    I remember spending many hours learning how to write 3D graphics based on playing it. Almost drove me into becoming a mathematician.

    Thankfully my secondary school maths teacher refused to tell me anything about 3D trig, as "you don't need to know it yet" and the local library was a little spartan on the maths front. So that was that.
    Ditto here. I wrote a spinning cube in Basic.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,751
    Leon said:

    Bit subtle?

    Is it a pun on "treadle"?
    Buster Bloodvessel's real name is Douglas Trendle.
    I appreciate not everyone is totally up to speed with the finer details of Bad Manners but I thought maybe at least BJO might havr got it.
  • O/T

    Fuck-load of lightning strikes over southern England and eastern Wales today:

    https://www.lightningmaps.org/#google_vignette;m=oss;t=3;s=0;o=0;b=;ts=0;z=8;y=50.8765;x=-1.0109;d=2;dl=2;dc=0;ts24=1;
  • Leon said:

    Yes, I agree

    The issue with universities was real

    This just seems to be win-win. Let our kids interact, let anyone under 30 live and work in the EU and vice versa, for 2 years

    Just do it. I always disliked the closing-down-opportunities vision of Brexit, this seriously ameliorates it. Britain will likely benefit as kids want to come to London and learn English in a great world city. Inter alia it will invigorate the capital. JUST DO IT

    So Darren and Sharon get more competition for housing but its easier for Tarquin and Jocasta to become skiing instructors ?

    Do you realise that many of those 'EU kids' will actually be those more recent arrivals you got so upset about in Paris ?
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,751

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XaV-nGQ5yqw

    (Posted for the lyrics, but also for the simplest, most brilliant music video, ever)
    I thought that link was going to lead to this song:
    https://youtu.be/t5Vr_chMVQ4?si=1w7Aj5KI0omdWEfG
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,904
    edited September 2024

    Ditto here. I wrote a spinning cube in Basic.
    Ha, yes. I wrote something to display very basic trees (7 vertices) and polygons in 3D. I worked out how a view should be projected onto a flat screen but didn't know enough about integer trig so it was way way too slow. [Dragon for me, BBC was way too expensive]

    If I'd known how matrix multiplication worked at the time I might have been dangerous. Libraries just didn't cut it.
  • theProletheProle Posts: 1,298
    TimS said:

    Of course. Because those 72 seats of the actual third party in parliament are a mere bagatelle.
    Farage got significantly more votes than said 3rd party, they only have vastly more seats because of weird artifacts of the FPTP system.

    Next election will almost certainly see the Tories recover at least a bit, so this is probably the high water mark for the Lib Dems, whilst if they play their cards right Reform is likely to pick up a lot of Red Wall Labour votes next time round.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,717
    Leon said:

    Yes, I agree

    The issue with universities was real

    This just seems to be win-win. Let our kids interact, let anyone under 30 live and work in the EU and vice versa, for 2 years

    Just do it. I always disliked the closing-down-opportunities vision of Brexit, this seriously ameliorates it. Britain will likely benefit as kids want to come to London and learn English in a great world city. Inter alia it will invigorate the capital. JUST DO IT

    Or in other words return bar tenders and waiters to minimum wage jobs....keeps the prices down for those that can afford to eat out
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,818
    Round 2:

    Chancellor McDonnell, or Chancellor Kwarteng?
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,818
    theProle said:

    Farage got significantly more votes than said 3rd party, they only have vastly more seats because of weird artifacts of the FPTP system.

    Next election will almost certainly see the Tories recover at least a bit, so this is probably the high water mark for the Lib Dems, whilst if they play their cards right Reform is likely to pick up a lot of Red Wall Labour votes next time round.
    “Only show in town”? Really?
  • X

    O/T

    Fuck-load of lightning strikes over southern England and eastern Wales today:

    https://www.lightningmaps.org/#google_vignette;m=oss;t=3;s=0;o=0;b=;ts=0;z=8;y=50.8765;x=-1.0109;d=2;dl=2;dc=0;ts24=1;

    I was a mile from lightning today

    I always count
  • There's been an interesting series in the Guardian on how migrant workers from Eastern Europe are exploited:

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/sep/18/europe-west-migrants-east-undercover-jobs-workers

    As a Czech woman, it was not hard to find low-skilled jobs: on a German fruit and vegetable farm, as a hotel cleaner in Ireland and in France’s social care sector. I spent a couple of weeks looking for work in the UK, but Brexit has made it difficult for EU citizens without a permit to work legally.

    I hope we can all agree that this is a benefit of Brexit - reduced exploitation and higher wages for low paid British workers.

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/sep/19/ireland-hotel-cleaner-work-payslips-schedule
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/sep/20/undercover-care-worker-france-marseille-agency
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/sep/18/undercover-germany-farm-worker-shop-vegetables
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,751
    TimS said:

    Round 2:

    Chancellor McDonnell, or Chancellor Kwarteng?

    Kwarteng. Given McDonnell is an actual communist whose dedication to democracy is sub-Trumpian.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,116
    TimS said:

    Round 2:

    Chancellor McDonnell, or Chancellor Kwarteng?

    McDonnell
  • Leon said:

    Sometimes travel is bewildering. This time yesterday - roughIy - I was walking around the remarkable gardens of the University of British Columbia, gazing across the wild blue PaciHfic sounds and the Strait of Georgia to Bowen and Vancouver Islands, thickly carpeted in great green larch and spruce forests, some of the most remote areas of the globe, until the last century. Some of the last places where pre industrial mankind held out - within living memory

    Now I am in Camden

    I wonder if we, as a species have really adapted to this change, which has happened in the last few decades in our 200,000 year history as Homo sapiens

    What's more, the speed of change is ACCELERATING

    The Good Lord gave us the litre of Tanqueray 47% duty free precisely to enable us to adapt to the change. PBUH.
  • TimS said:

    Round 2:

    Chancellor McDonnell, or Chancellor Kwarteng?

    Kwateng working under Truss, or someone else?
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    edited September 2024
    What is interesting about this polling is that - despite the constant MSM messaging that Reform UK is a 'far right' party - only 39% of people think they are 'extremist'. It follows that 61% of people view them as something like a mainstream/moderate party. I don't think this is a problem for Reform. The propaganda against them is ineffective but gets them free publicity and outreach. The fact that a minority of people regard them as 'extremist' is actually a selling point for them, as they can claim to be the party of upending the status quo and achieving radical change.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,904
    TimS said:

    Round 2:

    Chancellor McDonnell, or Chancellor Kwarteng?

    Kwarteng. He made a mistake but can learn from it.

    McDonnell has failed to learn from quite a lot of historical evidence.
This discussion has been closed.