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How tomorrow’s vote is shaping up – politicalbetting.com

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  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,113

    Never got into WW1 airplanes, always only really been interested in WW2 designs.

    However, for battleships, I've always been interested in both WW1 and WW2.
    I find the 'battle' between airships and aircraft in the 1920s to be fascinating. With hindsight, we all knew there was only going to be one winner, but many governments invested vast amounts of treasure in building massive Zeppelins that had very limited usefulness.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,342
    edited November 2024
    slade said:

    Why has China produced so many good poets but also so much death and destruction? Are they related?
    Being an intellectual is absolutely no bar to being a purveyor of death on a gigantic scale.

    Babur was a gifted poet and miniaturist, whose poems now form the basis for many central Asian songs. And, he left towers of skulls in his wake.

    Stalin was an autodictat with a huge personal library, which he annotated heavily.

    Louis Gabriel Suchet was an eminent scholar who routinely massacred Spanish civilians, during the Peninsular War.

    Caesar was philosopher, historian, and lawyer, who conducted genocide.

    The 16th and 17th centuries saw a great growth in literacy, and the production of great works of art, architecture, literature, alongside witch-hunts, heresy hunts, and barbarous warfare in Europe (for good measure, matched by the wars of Arungzeb and the Manchu conquest of China, which likewise cost the lives of millions).

    What China had was a huge population and (at the time), a huge birthrate. It meant you could use young men as cannon fodder in war, and slaughter your enemies on a huge scale, secure in the knowledge that the population would bounce back within a generation.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited November 2024

    Never got into WW1 airplanes, always only really been interested in WW2 designs.

    However, for battleships, I've always been interested in both WW1 and WW2.
    The battleships were of course often the same ones in both wars, albeit more or less modernised, in a way that didn't apply to aircraft!
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,825
    slade said:

    Why has China produced so many good poets but also so much death and destruction? Are they related?
    Great art and terror go together. The greatest symphony of the 20th century was written during the seige of Leningrad. It took WWI to turn Edward Thomas into a genius. The list is endless.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    I'm also getting a bit pissed off with the opportunism of the LDs and on the verge of cancelling my membership. Labour under SKS is looking increasingly appealing.
    I must say I was very surprised with the pro-car agitation of their Scottish leader in recent months in opposition to SG policies.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,835
    Carnyx said:

    I must say I was very surprised with the pro-car agitation of their Scottish leader in recent months in opposition to SG policies.
    I’ve got a solution to IHT on farms. Will offer policies for cash….
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,897
    slade said:

    Why has China produced so many good poets but also so much death and destruction? Are they related?
    Yes - they have LOTS of people, so doing a lot of anything is easier.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,825

    Wifi connection on Avanti trains is shocking. Forever dro

    I use Avanti a bit too.

    In this week's Economist, in the World Ahead 2025 section (recommended), it has a article on wildcard possibilities for next year. One of them is the installation of 4G Mobile Netwerk on the moon.

    Question: will this happen before or after decent wifi on Avanti?
  • Cookie said:

    Sheffield Uni. Brilliant socially, brilliant for nightlife. Wonderful city. Academically undemanding, which to my surprise turned out to be surprisingly frustating.
    I was encouraged to go for Oxbridge, but it seemed needlessly hard work in small towns far away. 'Just go to uni, it doesn't matter which one'. Turned out it does.
    However, had I gone to Oxbridge I'd have probably found it differently unenjoyable. Intellectually demanding but socially unstimulating.
    A couple of years out to decide what I wanted to do, then something vocational-ish at, say, Edinburgh. That would have been the way.
    Still, Sheffield led, indirectly, to the life I have now, which is pretty good. So can't complain.
    My lad's been having a fantastic time at Oxford. Judging by how much free time he seems to have, getting into the place appears to be by far the biggest hurdle; once you're there the hard part is done. And it's not as though he's neglecting his studies; he's been getting excellent grades and has already accepted an offer of a ridiculously well-paid job in the city after he graduates next year.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,897
    DavidL said:

    Hmm...It is an offence to be drunk or indeed high on drugs in charge of a car, even if they can't prove any intention to drive it. A person apparently sleeping in a car is going to alert law enforcement about that possible offence. A medical emergency is another possibility. As is someone kerb crawling. I am not sure I see a lot wrong with what the officers are doing.
    That's not really the point of the article, which is rather bleaker than just the detail of his interactions with the police.
    But to address it:
    ...The police are the ones who told me to go the Walmart parking lot. I park where they instructed. They know I’m here and see me in the same spot every day and night. Chief Gingerella knows who I am, that I have no criminal record, am a professional and productively engaged, am not a threat and keep to myself. When I’m asleep, I’m not visible, and my car is parked among other cars. They know which car is mine and come, and come, and come, systematically robbing me of peace and a sense of well-being...
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,835
    algarkirk said:

    I use Avanti a bit too.

    In this week's Economist, in the World Ahead 2025 section (recommended), it has a article on wildcard possibilities for next year. One of them is the installation of 4G Mobile Netwerk on the moon.

    Question: will this happen before or after decent wifi on Avanti?
    IIRC SpaceX is bidding/proposing a very advanced upgrade to the Deep Space Network. Which is the system that NASA uses for talking to remote probes. Very bandwidth constrained at the moment.

    This has options for the Moon and Mars. Including a set of Starlink satellites for Mars, connected by laser link to Earth.
  • I find the 'battle' between airships and aircraft in the 1920s to be fascinating. With hindsight, we all knew there was only going to be one winner, but many governments invested vast amounts of treasure in building massive Zeppelins that had very limited usefulness.
    Politicians can be easily led.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,897
    Andrew RT Davies asked to step down as leader of the Welsh Conservatives by MSs
    https://nation.cymru/news/andrew-rt-davies-asked-to-step-down-as-leader-of-the-welsh-conservatives-by-mss/
  • My lad's been having a fantastic time at Oxford. Judging by how much free time he seems to have, getting into the place appears to be by far the biggest hurdle; once you're there the hard part is done. And it's not as though he's neglecting his studies; he's been getting excellent grades and has already accepted an offer of a ridiculously well-paid job in the city after he graduates next year.
    Spare Wednesday afternoons at Imperial (1994-1997), instead of getting drunk at the Union like most of my classmates, I just went off to explore the Tube network! By the end of season 1994/5, I had been everywhere by Tube and Rail within Zone 4 :)
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,401

    My lad's been having a fantastic time at Oxford. Judging by how much free time he seems to have, getting into the place appears to be by far the biggest hurdle; once you're there the hard part is done. And it's not as though he's neglecting his studies; he's been getting excellent grades and has already accepted an offer of a ridiculously well-paid job in the city after he graduates next year.
    I don't think my second grandson had a 'fantastic' time at Manchester. In fact his father, who went to Coventry in the 80's, was rather disappointed at his son's reports of his social life.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,697
    Carnyx said:

    Similar for me though I'm in the same field as I was. Indeed in retirement I'm writing up a paper based on an anomaly I spotted as a student but didn't think through until more recently.
    This week's occurence of a pb poster being considerably older than I had previously thought.
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,951
    algarkirk said:

    Great art and terror go together. The greatest symphony of the 20th century was written during the seige of Leningrad. It took WWI to turn Edward Thomas into a genius. The list is endless.
    Shostakovich's Leningrad symphony is certainly a thing but not generally considered one of his best. Rather bombastic. The next two, certainly, are superior.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,897
    MRB, perhaps.

    Nuclear attack unlikely despite Putin's warnings, US intelligence says
    https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/nuclear-attack-unlikely-despite-putins-warnings-us-intelligence-says-2024-11-27/
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    SKS Fans Please Explain

    Westminster Voting Intention:

    CON: 27% (+3)
    LAB: 25% (-10)
    RFM: 22% (+7)
    LDM: 12% (-1)
    GRN: 9% (+2)
    SNP: 3% (=)

    Via
    @FindoutnowUK
    , 27 Nov.
    Changes w/ GE2024.
  • Spare Wednesday afternoons at Imperial (1994-1997), instead of getting drunk at the Union like most of my classmates, I just went off to explore the Tube network! By the end of season 1994/5, I had been everywhere by Tube and Rail within Zone 4 :)
    Ha we must be the same age! As well as sharing an interest in all things train related.
  • SKS Fans Please Explain

    Westminster Voting Intention:

    CON: 27% (+3)
    LAB: 25% (-10)
    RFM: 22% (+7)
    LDM: 12% (-1)
    GRN: 9% (+2)
    SNP: 3% (=)

    Via
    @FindoutnowUK
    , 27 Nov.
    Changes w/ GE2024.

    Voters don't like reality. They want the fantasy of low taxes and functional public services. Next.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,195
    edited November 2024
    Nigelb said:

    Andrew RT Davies asked to step down as leader of the Welsh Conservatives by MSs
    https://nation.cymru/news/andrew-rt-davies-asked-to-step-down-as-leader-of-the-welsh-conservatives-by-mss/

    He was strongly in support of 20mph limits if I recall, as was most of the Senedd Conservative contingent.

    (Did someone just comment on Lib Dems and opportunism?)

    (Somewhere on Lib Dem Voice there's a long reply to a comment I made suggesting that Lib Dem aspiring MPs should all be consistent about housebuilding, giving me a thorough going over as to why this is NOT possible.)
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,825

    Shostakovich's Leningrad symphony is certainly a thing but not generally considered one of his best. Rather bombastic. The next two, certainly, are superior.
    Noted! My view is a minority one. For me it is a very special work; nothing quite like it. For myself, I would not say 'bombastic' is the word. It is just right - first movement - in its unique historic context.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,113

    IIRC SpaceX is bidding/proposing a very advanced upgrade to the Deep Space Network. Which is the system that NASA uses for talking to remote probes. Very bandwidth constrained at the moment.

    This has options for the Moon and Mars. Including a set of Starlink satellites for Mars, connected by laser link to Earth.
    I've bene saying they should be doing that for yonks. DSN's bandwidth is far too low, even for existing Martian probes and landers.
  • I don't think my second grandson had a 'fantastic' time at Manchester. In fact his father, who went to Coventry in the 80's, was rather disappointed at his son's reports of his social life.
    Yes, it's not always great. The first time I went to uni, I was actually quite miserable, spending most of my time out of my head and negelecting my studies so much that I got thown out after my second year. Then I worked for a bit before sorting myself out and going back to uni and doing it properly, this time coming out with a first and my future wife. That's why I'm so pleased that my lad is enjoying it so much; I know it's not a given.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,219
    Nigelb said:

    MRB, perhaps.

    Nuclear attack unlikely despite Putin's warnings, US intelligence says
    https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/nuclear-attack-unlikely-despite-putins-warnings-us-intelligence-says-2024-11-27/

    I read that initially as MRD - Mandy Rice-Davies (applies) - although I guess that would be MRDA!

    As long as it's not the group that produced intelligence on Iraq's WMDs then we're all good. Although I guess even that group had a tendency to overstate risk, so maybe all good then, too.
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,951
    Leon said:

    I agree with all that, I just don't think the uni system CAN continue as is, because for many people it will be a huge waste of money. All that debt and quite likely no "graduate-level job" at the end of it? The Uni system is already wildly bloated, it was gonna shrink anyway, now it will implode, slowly then quickly

    So, how will young people have those socially-expanding late teen years? Some kind of volunteering/working abroad seems like a good option
    Bear in mind the local/regional economic significance of universities. How would, say, Hull or Sunderland, or Bradford, do if they lost their unis?
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,973
    edited November 2024
    Carnyx said:

    I must say I was very surprised with the pro-car agitation of their Scottish leader in recent months in opposition to SG policies.
    They've worked out that Conservative voters are lower hanging fruit than students and green voters, particularly in the rich central belt suburbs.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,897
    Selebian said:

    I read that initially as MRD - Mandy Rice-Davies (applies) - although I guess that would be MRDA!

    As long as it's not the group that produced intelligence on Iraq's WMDs then we're all good. Although I guess even that group had a tendency to overstate risk, so maybe all good then, too.
    It was MRD; I just typo-ed...
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,195
    Carnyx said:
    Shocking attrition rate - worse than the Russian Army in Ukraine:

    The project has been a labour of love for the group of aviation enthusiasts and has been running so long, only two of the original 20 men who started Sophie are still alive.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    Voters don't like reality. They want the fantasy of low taxes and functional public services. Next.
    Next is a far right Government unless functional Public Services without increased taxes is achieved.

    Of course higher taxes are allowed if its on the Super rich although I know thats ruled out by SKS as thats where all his donors sit.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,872

    My lad's been having a fantastic time at Oxford. Judging by how much free time he seems to have, getting into the place appears to be by far the biggest hurdle; once you're there the hard part is done. And it's not as though he's neglecting his studies; he's been getting excellent grades and has already accepted an offer of a ridiculously well-paid job in the city after he graduates next year.
    Lots of free time? PPE, then...
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,897
    MattW said:

    Shocking attrition rate - worse than the Russian Army in Ukraine:

    The project has been a labour of love for the group of aviation enthusiasts and has been running so long, only two of the original 20 men who started Sophie are still alive.
    That's an April 1917 attrition rate.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,481
    edited November 2024
    Very strong anti-immigration rhetoric from Starmer:

    https://x.com/maxtempers/status/1862162911902240822
  • Lots of free time? PPE, then...
    No, E&M, which apparently stands for easy and manageable.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,534
    'Distraught liberals hold ‘group scream’ on beach following Trump victory
    Dozens of people gathered near Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to scream from the shore of Lake Michigan'
    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/us/politics/2024/11/28/watch-distraught-liberals-hold-group-scream-on-beach/
  • Very strong anti-immigration rhetoric from Starmer:

    https://x.com/maxtempers/status/1862162911902240822

    How is that anti-immigration? It is anti failed Tory immigration policies, sure, but even the Tories are against those now.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,872

    No, E&M, which apparently stands for easy and manageable.
    In my day there was an extra E, though since nobody makes anything these days, I suppose that's redundant.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,697

    Bear in mind the local/regional economic significance of universities. How would, say, Hull or Sunderland, or Bradford, do if they lost their unis?
    True. But this is a zero sum game. In the last 30 years university towns have done well at the expense of non-university towns. There's no reason why Hull should flourish but Doncaster should not.
  • Next is a far right Government unless functional Public Services without increased taxes is achieved.

    Of course higher taxes are allowed if its on the Super rich although I know thats ruled out by SKS as thats where all his donors sit.
    Inheritance tax is on the very rich, less than 4% of deaths, but the public are still very clearly against it. They are not in favour of taxing the rich particularly. They just want to pay low taxes and magically get good services.
  • In my day there was an extra E, though since nobody makes anything these days, I suppose that's redundant.
    What was the other E? Engineering?
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 8,973

    How is that anti-immigration? It is anti failed Tory immigration policies, sure, but even the Tories are against those now.
    The net migration figures are simply astonishing and completely undermine my support for the Conservatives.

  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Just catching up on Ukraine/ Russian war

    I know a number of PBers have been predicting Russia's imminent financial collapse for over 1000 days now due to Western sanctions.

    I saw a Ukraine win from the outset as impossible as Putin couldn't survive if that happened and he was therefore always certain to get something he could sell as a victory

    Has Ukraine won yet?

    What will winning look like?

    What outcome are we expecting?

    Where will Zelensky live after early 2025?

    Has SKS got anymore plans to provoke WW3
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,481

    How is that anti-immigration? It is anti failed Tory immigration policies, sure, but even the Tories are against those now.
    What's the opposite of open borders?

    "Policies were reformed deliberately to liberalise immigration. Brexit was used for that purpose: to turn Britain into a one nation experiment in open borders. 'Global Britain' - Remember that slogan? That is what they meant. A policy with no support and which they then pretended wasn't happening."
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    SKS Fans why does SKS hate English Pensioners!!

    BBC Scotland News

    @BBCScotlandNews
    ·
    2h
    New winter fuel payment for all Scottish pensioners
  • geoffw said:

    The net migration figures are simply astonishing and completely undermine my support for the Conservatives.

    They shouldn't be if you were paying attention to the detail rather than the rhetoric.

    Their plan was to boost balance of payments by attracting 500k overseas students per year.
    Then Ukraine and Hong Kong issues came along and there was widespread support on the right for generous and welcoming offers for those fleeing there.

    That is the clear majority of the numbers. Most of the rest is NHS and care which would be even worse without the migrant workers.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,534

    I'm also getting a bit pissed off with the opportunism of the LDs and on the verge of cancelling my membership. Labour under SKS is looking increasingly appealing.
    LDs, opportunistic, who would ever have heard of such a thing?
  • NEW THREAD

  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,195
    Hmm.

    Britain and Iraq have agreed an unprecedented joint plan to tackle people smuggling gangs responsible for thousands of migrants crossing the Channel in small boats.

    On a three-day visit to the country, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper also signed a new agreement to ensure failed Iraqi asylum seekers are returned home more "swiftly".

    She met ministers from the federal government in Baghdad and regional leaders in Kurdistan in the north where many smuggling gangs are based.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cy4nj8g8xn0o
  • What's the opposite of open borders?

    "Policies were reformed deliberately to liberalise immigration. Brexit was used for that purpose: to turn Britain into a one nation experiment in open borders. 'Global Britain' - Remember that slogan? That is what they meant. A policy with no support and which they then pretended wasn't happening."
    Boringly, competently, managed borders?
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,481

    They shouldn't be if you were paying attention to the detail rather than the rhetoric.

    Their plan was to boost balance of payments by attracting 500k overseas students per year.
    Then Ukraine and Hong Kong issues came along and there was widespread support on the right for generous and welcoming offers for those fleeing there.

    That is the clear majority of the numbers. Most of the rest is NHS and care which would be even worse without the migrant workers.
    Make your mind up. Was it a failed policy or a successful policy?
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,872
    edited November 2024

    What was the other E? Engineering?
    Yes, although mostly just the first year of it if I recall.

    They still got the 9am practicals though, the bane of Science students everywhere.
  • Make your mind up. Was it a failed policy or a successful policy?
    It is mixed. The main failures are infrastructure, especially housing, and the gap between communication and reality.

    Getting students in is a good policy, probably expanded too quickly and should have been tied to universities building (or arranging the building of) additional local homes. But it is definitely something we should be doing to get some £££ in.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,481

    It is mixed. The main failures are infrastructure, especially housing, and the gap between communication and reality.

    Getting students in is a good policy, probably expanded too quickly and should have been tied to universities building (or arranging the building of) additional local homes. But it is definitely something we should be doing to get some £££ in.
    You must be livid with Starmer then. Even if you don't think he's making an anti-immigration pitch himself, he's certainly preparing the ground for someone who will.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,135
    Cookie said:

    Sheffield Uni. Brilliant socially, brilliant for nightlife. Wonderful city. Academically undemanding, which to my surprise turned out to be surprisingly frustating.
    I was encouraged to go for Oxbridge, but it seemed needlessly hard work in small towns far away. 'Just go to uni, it doesn't matter which one'. Turned out it does.
    However, had I gone to Oxbridge I'd have probably found it differently unenjoyable. Intellectually demanding but socially unstimulating.
    A couple of years out to decide what I wanted to do, then something vocational-ish at, say, Edinburgh. That would have been the way.
    Still, Sheffield led, indirectly, to the life I have now, which is pretty good. So can't complain.
    I went to Cambridge. Water under the bridge now, but I think my daughter had a better time at Bath, even with the pandemic.

    I didn't fit in with the private school kids, the staff were more interested in the postgraduates, the academic atmosphere was pretty brutal. I remember one student asked a question during one of the undergraduate Maths lectures in first year, in front of a couple of hundred people who had all been the smartest person in their school, and the ridicule made sure I never dared to ask a question. Definitely wasn't for me. Though I did get a daughter out of it, so worth the three years of torment.

    Pretty sure you didn't miss anything.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,481
    edited November 2024

    I went to Cambridge. Water under the bridge now, but I think my daughter had a better time at Bath, even with the pandemic.

    I didn't fit in with the private school kids, the staff were more interested in the postgraduates, the academic atmosphere was pretty brutal. I remember one student asked a question during one of the undergraduate Maths lectures in first year, in front of a couple of hundred people who had all been the smartest person in their school, and the ridicule made sure I never dared to ask a question. Definitely wasn't for me. Though I did get a daughter out of it, so worth the three years of torment.

    Pretty sure you didn't miss anything.
    We might have been in the same lectures. I remember one person asking a question and the lecturer silently glared at him before saying, "No," and joking that it was a demonstration of the 'proof by intimidation' method.
  • You must be livid with Starmer then. Even if you don't think he's making an anti-immigration pitch himself, he's certainly preparing the ground for someone who will.
    I'm disappointed with Labour on housing, infrastructure and ambition, sure. But will give them credit for taking some tough choices and being willing to admit when things are difficult rather than endless promises of sunny uplands, quick fixes and scapegoating the weak.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,825

    Inheritance tax is on the very rich, less than 4% of deaths, but the public are still very clearly against it. They are not in favour of taxing the rich particularly. They just want to pay low taxes and magically get good services.
    IHT is of course a wealth tax, unlike most of our taxes, and is sorted in the wrongest ways possible. It has two gigantic flaws. One, it hits once a generation, and when it hits, it does so bigly. Two, it is avoidable by most potential taxees most of the time with the help of lawyers and accountants and planning; but occasionally the tragedy of bad luck - eg dad dying very young, will be compounded by a massive tax he didn't have time to plan the avoidance of.

    It raises little and gets the plucked goose hissing loudly.

    A million times better would be wealth taxes, applied gently and more frequently, at a much lower rate, and more or less impossible to avoid with few if any exemptions.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,602
    Nigelb said:

    Since personal autonomy is at the heart of the bill, to describe what is being proposed as the state "putting citizens to death" is more than a slight mischaracterisation.
    It’s also not what I said…



  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,602
    Nigelb said:

    Since personal autonomy is at the heart of the bill, to describe what is being proposed as the state "putting citizens to death" is more than a slight mischaracterisation.
    It’s also not what I said…



  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,384

    I'm also getting a bit pissed off with the opportunism of the LDs and on the verge of cancelling my membership. Labour under SKS is looking increasingly appealing.
    I think both the LDs and the Conservatives have got into an "oppose for the sake of it" mindset which is understandable given how powerless the Opposition is in Parliament against a Labour Party with more than 400 MPs. Tomorrow's vote notwithstanding, unless they can prize open a split in Labour ranks, the opposition are impotent until the next election.

    The fact is, petitions notwithstanding, we are nowhere near an election so the issue of "what would you do?" doesn't have the weight it would six months before an election. Indeed, noone complaining has offered a coherent alternative to what Reeves has done other than to tax someone else - a form of economic NIMBYism.

    There's a point when thet should and will have to - this isn't it.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,392
    Selebian said:

    Yes, something that isn't endearing the LDs to me at present, along with their blanket opposition to the farming IHT changes. As discussed on here, there are clear issues with the Labour farming IHT changes, but the LDs don't seem to have proposed a better approach (also discussed on here) that would still close the 'buy farmland' IHT loophole.
    Yep as a LD I am not against the WFP nor Farming IHT changes in principle (so not in line with my party), although I don't know the details of the borderline cases i.e. people being put in to poverty who can't claim WFH or farmers being forced to sell up because the IHT prevents the farm being passed down through a farming family.

    So I am open minded about opposing both, but in principle I am in favour of both.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,431
    Cookie said:

    In all honesty I was rather taken aback by this. I'd assumed to get to this position he'd have taken a pharmacy degree, but, no, geography. So if you're telling me this is likely bollocks I'm not massively surprised.

    On your other point: I don't want to be rude about your career, which is clearly one you need a lot of technical knowledge for - but I would have thought if a doctor could be one after 5 years of studenting, a pharmacist would need - what - half that? And that is still more than most professions: accountants, lawyers, town planners: the three years of whatever undergraduate degree they do before training in their particular profession is almost entirely superfluous. I would argue that, for example, the lawyer who does a three year history degree before doing a two year law conversion course could just as well have skipped the history degree. The expectation of some sort of generic degree is an expensive hangover from another era. Sadly it's not one I expect to see rectified before my daughters get to 18.
    I think you have been mis-informed about his training.

    On your point about doctors vs pharmacists. The training to be a pharmacist is fours years of MPharm plus one year or pre-reg training (on the job) after which you must pass the professional exam (only get three goes at this). So five year.
    Doctors I think are longer to reach the finished training stage. Typically it will be 4 to 6 years followed by FY1 and FY2 years, so more like6 to 8 years.
This discussion has been closed.