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Losing your marbles – politicalbetting.com

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  • Elon Musk’s $56bn Tesla pay package rejected again by US judge
    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2024/dec/02/elon-musk-tesla-pay-package

    I'm sure Trump can have the judge in question replaced shortly.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 97,999

    New top civil servant Chris Wormald is ‘safe pair of hands’ but ‘devoid of charisma’

    It was time, Keir Starmer said, for a “complete re-wiring of the British state”. But in the very same announcement he unveiled Chris Wormald, the epitome of a safe, low-key career government official, as his new chief civil servant. Hardly the man for a hard reset. So which one is it?

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2024/dec/02/new-top-civil-servant-chris-wormald-is-safe-pair-of-hands-but-devoid-of-charisma

    Some mixed reviews to say the least....

    The official added: “I sat in hours of meetings with him and he was fundamentally an observer, and very rarely committed thoughts of any substance. His appointment personifies the failing upwards culture that makes so many of us want to leave the civil service.”

    You can understand why Starmer has picked him.

    An experienced bureaucrat makes sense as a choice for chief bureaucrat. Obviously when politicians talk about hard resets they don't mean it, but you can still achieve a lot if a) you really want to, and b) you harness the bureaucracy.

    Might not be as satisfying as smashing the system, but substantial changes can be achieved.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,967
    Cookie said:

    It's too much because you're ramping up something which is already exviting*, at a time of year which is already pleasant, and at a time when you are struggling to think of and indeed afford just the right presents for your loved ones. Even if you won't accept my argument about the natural serene beauty of early December,
    December is already fun. There's something on each day. Think how much more you'd enjoy a cheese/gin a day through the bleak and uneventful month of January.

    * Caitlin Moran once made the complaint about people who try to layer unnecessary extra layers of excitement in top of things which are already exciting - like, though obviously I have no knowledge of this, men who say things like "Yes I'm really GIVING it to you" whike they have sex. A more prosaic example I fiavour is a carrot cake with a little icing carrot on the top. It's already a carrot cake , it's already exciting. The confectionery carrot doesn't make it any more either of these things.
    Spot on. It’s a Kitsch Carrot.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881

    New top civil servant Chris Wormald is ‘safe pair of hands’ but ‘devoid of charisma’

    It was time, Keir Starmer said, for a “complete re-wiring of the British state”. But in the very same announcement he unveiled Chris Wormald, the epitome of a safe, low-key career government official, as his new chief civil servant. Hardly the man for a hard reset. So which one is it?

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2024/dec/02/new-top-civil-servant-chris-wormald-is-safe-pair-of-hands-but-devoid-of-charisma

    Some mixed reviews to say the least....

    The official added: “I sat in hours of meetings with him and he was fundamentally an observer, and very rarely committed thoughts of any substance. His appointment personifies the failing upwards culture that makes so many of us want to leave the civil service.”

    You can understand why Starmer has picked him.

    “A complete rewiring of the British state”. Why is Starmer so relentlessly CRINGE? Is it too much of a “big ask” for him to say something that doesn’t make testicles shrivel in embarrassment seven light years away?

    Also, the idea that the British state is going to be rewired by Sir Keir Starmer, the absolute embodiment of the British state in all its effete Woke mediocrity, is so absurd ir almost goes beyond cringe into something newly and interestingly worse than that, but it doesn’t quite make it, because Starmer is so fucking CRINGE
  • Cookie said:

    It's too much because you're ramping up something which is already exviting*, at a time of year which is already pleasant, and at a time when you are struggling to think of and indeed afford just the right presents for your loved ones. Even if you won't accept my argument about the natural serene beauty of early December,
    December is already fun. There's something on each day. Think how much more you'd enjoy a cheese/gin a day through the bleak and uneventful month of January.

    * Caitlin Moran once made the complaint about people who try to layer unnecessary extra layers of excitement in top of things which are already exciting - like, though obviously I have no knowledge of this, men who say things like "Yes I'm really GIVING it to you" whike they have sex. A more prosaic example I fiavour is a carrot cake with a little icing carrot on the top. It's already a carrot cake , it's already exciting. The confectionery carrot doesn't make it any more either of these things.
    I vehemently disagree. All the traditions that add up, piled on top of other traditions, in a great chaotic mishmash is part of what makes December so memorable and unique.

    When my daughter was 2 her grandparents in Canada got her/us a gift of Elf on the Shelf as a new Christmas tradition, which now a lot of people do. That for us now has rocketed up to being one of the main traditions in our house - with the kids waking up excited every morning to see what the Elves have done, then open their advent calendars - and ending the day with my wife cursing as to what the bloody Elves should be up to tonight.

    Forget counting down to Christmas, our kids for the last few weeks have been counting down to the return of the Elves.

    December was fun for us as kids without that, but adding things (done right) in makes it more magical not less.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 33,889
    "Devoid of charisma".

    Should be at home at number 10 then.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,429

    New top civil servant Chris Wormald is ‘safe pair of hands’ but ‘devoid of charisma’

    It was time, Keir Starmer said, for a “complete re-wiring of the British state”. But in the very same announcement he unveiled Chris Wormald, the epitome of a safe, low-key career government official, as his new chief civil servant. Hardly the man for a hard reset. So which one is it?

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2024/dec/02/new-top-civil-servant-chris-wormald-is-safe-pair-of-hands-but-devoid-of-charisma

    Some mixed reviews to say the least....

    The official added: “I sat in hours of meetings with him and he was fundamentally an observer, and very rarely committed thoughts of any substance. His appointment personifies the failing upwards culture that makes so many of us want to leave the civil service.”

    You can understand why Starmer has picked him.

    A safe pair of hands.

    A team player.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881
    I think I hate Starmer even more than Sadiq Khan, and I didn’t believe that level of political contempt was possible
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,617
    Leon said:

    And then you stare into the bleak hollow pitiless eyes of January, a villain determined to violently assault you, and behind him is February, wielding a cosh
    There's only about three and a half weeks of brutality. By the time you get to late January, the trajectory is so firmly in the direction of light that joy returns to the world. To my world, at least. I rather like Chinese New Year, which feels like exactly the right time for New Year.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,135
    edited December 2024
    Cookie said:

    There's only about three and a half weeks of brutality. By the time you get to late January, the trajectory is so firmly in the direction of light that joy returns to the world. To my world, at least. I rather like Chinese New Year, which feels like exactly the right time for New Year.
    Agreed about the light, which is why it makes sense to have festivals where they are.

    January is miserable, but we've bills to pay and are recovering from fun. Then when that ends, the light is coming back and we're heading into Spring, which is fun in its own right with Easter thrown in too.

    Then its summer, that's just good in its own right too.

    Then the weather starts to turn, its a shame that summer is over, but we've got a whole season of festivities that gets us through the worsening weather.

    Our season of festivities begins on 1 October with the beginning of the month of Halloween, ending with the main event on the 31st. Then the clocks change, but we don't have time to get upset about early nights as its fireworks. Pause for Remembrance. Then its go, go, go for Christmas.

    The whole of Autumn to winter is one long festival and I love it.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881
    Cookie said:

    There's only about three and a half weeks of brutality. By the time you get to late January, the trajectory is so firmly in the direction of light that joy returns to the world. To my world, at least. I rather like Chinese New Year, which feels like exactly the right time for New Year.
    We have firmly established that I get SAD much worse than you; I genuinely get miserable after just a fortnight of British winter weather, ie anything from late November to early March, quite a large chunk of the year. December is somehow tolerable because of Xmas, that said

    In a sense my whole life has been a search for the perfect climate, to solve my SAD, but of course it does not exist
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,967
    Cookie said:

    There's only about three and a half weeks of brutality. By the time you get to late January, the trajectory is so firmly in the direction of light that joy returns to the world. To my world, at least. I rather like Chinese New Year, which feels like exactly the right time for New Year.
    Yes. A Wood Snake year is coming. I’m hoping inner strength and new beginnings will be good for me.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,852
    edited December 2024

    You guys haven't lived until you've had a DAF Variomatic.

    Brother in law collected them in the Volvo guise. Think he still has a couple running.

    Hopefully not at full speed in reverse.
  • Just seen Liverpool have been drawn against Accrington Stanley in the FA Cup.

    Who are they?

    Exactly!
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 97,999

    I vehemently disagree. All the traditions that add up, piled on top of other traditions, in a great chaotic mishmash is part of what makes December so memorable and unique.

    .
    Isn't that how all our traditions develop in the first place?
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,118
    https://x.com/tvnewsnow/status/1863729977033740550

    PETER DOOCY: “Tonight, we’re getting new details about that Trump-Trudeau dinner from two people who were at the table. We are told that when @JustinTrudeau told President-elect Trump that new tarrifs would kill the Canadian economy, Trump joked to him that if Canada can’t survive without ripping off the U.S. to the tune of $100bn a year then maybe Canada should become the 51st state and Trudeau could become its governor!” @pdoocy tells @BretBaier
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,118
    Big Romanian poll has the ‘far-right’ candidate with a commanding lead for the run-off.

    https://x.com/europeelects/status/1863660659726078453

    Georgescu (*): 58%
    Lasconi (USR-RE): 42%

    Fieldwork: 1 December 2024
    Sample size: 24,629
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,118

    Yarn as in cotton? Or a different story each day? I don’t think I’ve had an advent calendar of any shape or form for decades. But I used to like the picture ones (which no longer exist apparently).
    Yarn as in wool. This may have been 100% wool, although it was sock weight, which is often a 75% wool, 25% acrylic mix, with the acrylic added for extra strength and better wear.
  • https://x.com/tvnewsnow/status/1863729977033740550

    PETER DOOCY: “Tonight, we’re getting new details about that Trump-Trudeau dinner from two people who were at the table. We are told that when @JustinTrudeau told President-elect Trump that new tarrifs would kill the Canadian economy, Trump joked to him that if Canada can’t survive without ripping off the U.S. to the tune of $100bn a year then maybe Canada should become the 51st state and Trudeau could become its governor!” @pdoocy tells @BretBaier

    Art of the deal.....
  • Big Romanian poll has the ‘far-right’ candidate with a commanding lead for the run-off.

    https://x.com/europeelects/status/1863660659726078453

    Georgescu (*): 58%
    Lasconi (USR-RE): 42%

    Fieldwork: 1 December 2024
    Sample size: 24,629

    He is Mr TikToky right?
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,118

    He is Mr TikToky right?
    Yes, that’s the one.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,118
    Trump is travelling to Paris for the reopening of Notre Dame:

    https://x.com/tnewtondunn/status/1863747955997458923
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,617
    Leon said:

    We have firmly established that I get SAD much worse than you; I genuinely get miserable after just a fortnight of British winter weather, ie anything from late November to early March, quite a large chunk of the year. December is somehow tolerable because of Xmas, that said

    In a sense my whole life has been a search for the perfect climate, to solve my SAD, but of course it does not exist
    Yes, we have. I don't mean to make light of it. And I know we're all different.
    It's a conversation I enjoy because it allows me to enthuse about the various things I like about the winter in this country. Well, the autumn in particular. The astronomical autumn. Maybe I'm just trying to jolly you along. Try to make you see it my way because my way brings more happiness. Maybe it's as doomed as you urging me to religion for the same reason. Sorry if insensitive.
    If it helps, I really dislike having to get up before dawn.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,617

    Agreed about the light, which is why it makes sense to have festivals where they are.

    January is miserable, but we've bills to pay and are recovering from fun. Then when that ends, the light is coming back and we're heading into Spring, which is fun in its own right with Easter thrown in too.

    Then its summer, that's just good in its own right too.

    Then the weather starts to turn, its a shame that summer is over, but we've got a whole season of festivities that gets us through the worsening weather.

    Our season of festivities begins on 1 October with the beginning of the month of Halloween, ending with the main event on the 31st. Then the clocks change, but we don't have time to get upset about early nights as its fireworks. Pause for Remembrance. Then its go, go, go for Christmas.

    The whole of Autumn to winter is one long festival and I love it.
    That's fair enough.
    Richard Tyndall has talked in the past about the Sacred Season. For me, that's early October to early December. That's when the land is at it's most beautiful, when the sense of mystery is at its greatest. That's also when many of my own traditions are.
    Christmas is good too, of course. Personally I'd just prefer to move everything back three and a half weeks. It's just a personal view and clearly it's never going to happen.
  • Trump is travelling to Paris for the reopening of Notre Dame:

    https://x.com/tnewtondunn/status/1863747955997458923

    Macron if is nothing else very good at tapping up international leaders.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,947
    edited December 2024
    And your AI update for today....

    World Labs is stuffed full of A++++ tier talent,
    https://www.worldlabs.ai/blog

    I really liked this demo,

    https://x.com/theworldlabs/status/1863617998050980239
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,118
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cx2wg513k8eo

    Nine men have been arrested following reports of tragedy chanting at Sunday's Premier League match between Liverpool and Manchester City.

    Merseyside Police said nine men, aged between 19 and 57 and variously from Greater Manchester, Cheshire and Lancashire, had been detained at Anfield Stadium.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,947
    edited December 2024

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cx2wg513k8eo

    Nine men have been arrested following reports of tragedy chanting at Sunday's Premier League match between Liverpool and Manchester City.

    Merseyside Police said nine men, aged between 19 and 57 and variously from Greater Manchester, Cheshire and Lancashire, had been detained at Anfield Stadium.

    Should this be a criminal offence? Its disgusting and those involved should get a ban from attending, but should it be criminal? Although the public order act being used, it is only in the past or so that the CPS have told the police they can charge people under it for "tragedy chanting".
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,755
    The initial responses to the actual new Jag are out, and ...my goodness, it's impressive. Whether it will sell is debatable and the antiwokists will push their own heads up their arses instead of saying something nice about it, but it's the most out-there debut since the Cybertruck, and it's a ton better looking.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QzGlTULmheI
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,947
    edited December 2024
    viewcode said:

    The initial responses to the actual new Jag are out, and ...my goodness, it's impressive. Whether it will sell is debatable and the antiwokists will push their own heads up their arses instead of saying something nice about it, but it's the most out-there debut since the Cybertruck, and it's a ton better looking.

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

    The comments under the video aren't good though...
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,755
    viewcode said:

    The initial responses to the actual new Jag are out, and ...my goodness, it's impressive. Whether it will sell is debatable and the antiwokists will push their own heads up their arses instead of saying something nice about it, but it's the most out-there debut since the Cybertruck, and it's a ton better looking.

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

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tqcbvir0CN8
  • viewcode said:

    The initial responses to the actual new Jag are out, and ...my goodness, it's impressive. Whether it will sell is debatable and the antiwokists will push their own heads up their arses instead of saying something nice about it, but it's the most out-there debut since the Cybertruck, and it's a ton better looking.

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

    Rory Sutherland said something along the lines of not commenting on Jaguar's teaser campaign until he knew what it was teasing.

    My first thoughts (and yes, it is a concept car) is it looks like it will never get over a speedbump and that the angled pink panel sticking up looked accidental.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,755

    The comments under the video aren't good though...
    When are they ever?
  • And your AI update for today....

    World Labs is stuffed full of A++++ tier talent,
    https://www.worldlabs.ai/blog

    I really liked this demo,

    https://x.com/theworldlabs/status/1863617998050980239

    I've always thought Nighthawks (which we used to use here at pb) looked like it was by Old Street tube (and we do not hear the name Silicon Roundabout any more).
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,858

    The comments under the video aren't good though...
    And I would not be surprised if none of those commenters had ever sat in a Jaguar, let alone be in the market to buy one.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,947
    edited December 2024

    And I would not be surprised if none of those commenters had ever sat in a Jaguar, let alone be in the market to buy one.
    I thought the rebrand was aimed at the young digital types rather than the golf club bores that actually buy them at the moment.

    I obviously wasn't been serious, the YouTube comment section is famed for its negative hot takes.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,947
    edited December 2024
    If you want a new Jaaaaggggggggg, you won't actually get it until the end of 2026 (assuming everything goes to plan).
  • Penddu2Penddu2 Posts: 729
    That Jag looks interesting - yes it is only a concept car - but by the time it is engineered for real roads i think it will look super sexy and be very popular - especially in US.

    I dont like the pink barbie colur but the blue and green versions look spectacular.

    But that outside cupboard looks like a pime candidate for value engineering.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,817

    Never heard of him until today, but seems he was in charge at DoH when covid hit and there are, shall we say, some questions...
    He was at the DfE before that and oversaw the early stages of academies and free schools.

    Cummings considered him for Cabinet Secretary before plumping for Case as someone even more grey and useless that he could bully still more effectively.

    His father was also a civil servant - he’s consistently denied any family involvement in his career, and given his father was as I understand quite a junior figure that may well be true, but it looks odd.

    So on all boxes he’s a strange pick.

    I can’t help wondering if it’s because he was state school educated.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,817
    viewcode said:

    When are they ever?
    Seldom.

    But if they are saying it looks like a VW Beetle that’s been squashed by a giant’s foot and given slightly bigger wheels, they’re not actually wrong.

    It looks absolutely revolting. Surely they could at least have kept that distinctive Jaguar bodywork with its lovely clean lines and put an electric motor in it?
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,975
    ohnotnow said:

    I attended Sunday school once.

    Them: "Where do your grandparents live?"

    Me: "Forres"

    Them: "No, I mean, what town?"

    "Forres"

    "Do you mean they live in a forest?"

    "No, I mean they live in Forres".

    "I think you mean they live in a forest".

    "No, they live in a town called Forres".

    :: patronising look ::

    "So, this forest, where is it?"

    .. continues until I become disillusioned with Christianity.
    No. You became disillusioned with those in charge. You should never be disillusioned by the religion itself.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,858

    No. You became disillusioned with those in charge. You should never be disillusioned by the religion itself.
    Why not?
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,181

    https://x.com/tvnewsnow/status/1863729977033740550

    PETER DOOCY: “Tonight, we’re getting new details about that Trump-Trudeau dinner from two people who were at the table. We are told that when @JustinTrudeau told President-elect Trump that new tarrifs would kill the Canadian economy, Trump joked to him that if Canada can’t survive without ripping off the U.S. to the tune of $100bn a year then maybe Canada should become the 51st state and Trudeau could become its governor!” @pdoocy tells @BretBaier

    Trump will have enjoyed that, and Trudeau will be his sort of person - he appreciates telegenic looks. Perhaps they'll end up getting on.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,181
    viewcode said:

    When are they ever?
    Yes. When things look good.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,975

    Why not?
    If you are determined not to be a follower then that's your choice.. I loved Latin but didn't like my teacher...
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,858
    edited December 2024

    If you are determined not to be a follower then that's your choice.. I loved Latin but didn't like my teacher...
    I see a vast difference between 'faith' and 'religion'. Faith is belief; religion is the human aspects of that faith.

    IMV you do not need to be part of a group to have faith. Religion almost always taints faith.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,400
    Cookie said:

    You have stitched yourself up goodand proper there, I'm afraid.
    My wife for years heavily hinted tbat she'd like a Yankee Candle advent calendar. Sadly being male I am impervious to hints. I assumed she was joking, because obviously advent calendara are for kiids or the easily led. By the year I realised she'd been sincere I'd put in so many years of not getting her one that she'd accepted it and I realised that thoufg I'd been inadvertently denying her what she wanted, if I now gave it to her I'd have to do so every year. Christmas presents are hard enough without also having to source advent presents.
    Thornbridge do a beer one that I can recommend, if your wife likes IPA.

    https://thornbridgebrewery.co.uk/products/a-very-thornbridge-christmas-advent-calendar

    They do refilling packs too.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,429
    s
    ydoethur said:

    Seldom.

    But if they are saying it looks like a VW Beetle that’s been squashed by a giant’s foot and given slightly bigger wheels, they’re not actually wrong.

    It looks absolutely revolting. Surely they could at least have kept that distinctive Jaguar bodywork with its lovely clean lines and put an electric motor in it?
    One of the advantages of an electric power train is that you don’t need a massive engine bay. The battery is flat slab that can under the floor. The motors are tiny compared with the equivalent power ICE and gearbox.

    So that huge, blocky front is nothing to do with function.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,499

    Do you actually believe he raped E Jean Carroll?
    Due process and a jury of his peers believed he did, so that is good enough for me. Provide me with the evidence to the contrary.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,400

    s

    One of the advantages of an electric power train is that you don’t need a massive engine bay. The battery is flat slab that can under the floor. The motors are tiny compared with the equivalent power ICE and gearbox.

    So that huge, blocky front is nothing to do with function.
    Looks like it would be tricky pulling out at junctions too. Neither do I like the flattened beetle browed look. The windows are too small.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,163
    .

    https://x.com/tvnewsnow/status/1863729977033740550

    PETER DOOCY: “Tonight, we’re getting new details about that Trump-Trudeau dinner from two people who were at the table. We are told that when @JustinTrudeau told President-elect Trump that new tarrifs would kill the Canadian economy, Trump joked to him that if Canada can’t survive without ripping off the U.S. to the tune of $100bn a year then maybe Canada should become the 51st state and Trudeau could become its governor!” @pdoocy tells @BretBaier

    You seem very keen on posting demonstrations of what an arse he is.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,400

    I see a vast difference between 'faith' and 'religion'. Faith is belief; religion is the human aspects of that faith.

    IMV you do not need to be part of a group to have faith. Religion almost always taints faith.
    The individual experience is certainly fundamental, but so is the collective one. In order to determine if the internal experience is genuine it needs something to compare with. Books and theology can only go so far, we need fellow believers too.

    Accessing the divine often involves coordination with others, particularly in ritualistic movements, singing, prayers etc. No man is an island detached from the main.
  • TazTaz Posts: 16,882
    Dodgy mental health slurs aside I find it bizarre that Liz Truss seems to occupy a strange place in the obsessions of centrist Dad types.

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/liz-truss-is-apparently-too-mad-even-for-a-rightwing-us-audience/ar-AA1v8Rgb?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=142ee8e199b14d6480db62fd379bec1d&ei=22
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,163

    Rory Sutherland said something along the lines of not commenting on Jaguar's teaser campaign until he knew what it was teasing.

    My first thoughts (and yes, it is a concept car) is it looks like it will never get over a speedbump and that the angled pink panel sticking up looked accidental.
    What's the point of a ridiculously long bonnet in an EV ?
    Driver visibility looks awful, and interior space unnecessarily limited. It's like a rolling pastiche.
  • NEW THREAD

  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,429
    Foxy said:

    Looks like it would be tricky pulling out at junctions too. Neither do I like the flattened beetle browed look. The windows are too small.
    It’s Retro Futurism - it’s the DeKhotinsky Sixteen Special (Roadster) from The Vortex Blaster.

    In the Gemsbeck Continuum, in 1980 something, William Gibson pointed out that this was a vision of the future that had “All the sinister fruitiness of Hitler Youth propaganda”. 100% white, blond people….
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,163
    This is a remarkable set of statistics.
    If Trump were able too resist actually doing anything of significance for a couple of years, he'd be seen as accomplishing a huge amount by the midterms.

    This rise in US manufacturing construction spend via @JosephPolitano is absolutely mindblowing

    So many CHIPS & IRA-fueled factories are about to start opening in January you're not gonna believe it..

    https://x.com/aarmlovi/status/1863678945956106564

    The GOP will, of course, take credit for all of this stuff that they voted against, and Biden managed to get through Congress.

    It will be interesting to see if/how they fuck it up.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,052
    ydoethur said:

    He was at the DfE before that and oversaw the early stages of academies and free schools.

    Cummings considered him for Cabinet Secretary before plumping for Case as someone even more grey and useless that he could bully still more effectively.

    His father was also a civil servant - he’s consistently denied any family involvement in his career, and given his father was as I understand quite a junior figure that may well be true, but it looks odd.

    So on all boxes he’s a strange pick.

    I can’t help wondering if it’s because he was state school educated.
    Why is it odd that his father was also a civil servant? Lots of people follow in a parent’s profession.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,858
    Foxy said:

    The individual experience is certainly fundamental, but so is the collective one. In order to determine if the internal experience is genuine it needs something to compare with. Books and theology can only go so far, we need fellow believers too.

    Accessing the divine often involves coordination with others, particularly in ritualistic movements, singing, prayers etc. No man is an island detached from the main.
    The problem is when the collective experience perverts the internal experience.
  • As an Irish person and a philhellene I think the Marbles should go home to Athens but do think we should acknowledge that the British didn't steal them as much as save them. Quite happy to slag off the looting Brits but in this case they deserve credit for saving them.
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