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Reform isn’t very popular – politicalbetting.com

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  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,303
    Sandpit said:

    Reminds me of Pete Buttigieg or Gavin Newsom in the US. Supremely confident in his own abilities, talks a great game, but fails to actually deliver anything of note that doesn’t make things worse.
    I think that's being very unfair on Pete Buttigieg.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,486
    41% of young US voters believe the killing of UnitedHealthcare’s CEO is acceptable.

    Something is awfully wrong

    https://x.com/Osint613/status/1869150018017615895
  • Good morning, everyone.

    Border collies would obviously be great PMs. They're highly intelligent, energetic, and effective.
  • The last three winners of SPOTY before last night:
    Mary Earps, Beth Mead, Emma Radacanu,

    I'd say none of them have achieved much afterwards, and aside from Radacanu, have pretty much disappeared out of public consciousness outside their field.
    SPOTY back in the day was a night you stayed in to watch a few hours of the very best of Global Sport, Global Sportsmen and women and the very best of our homegrown talent. It was the pinnacle.

    I have to say last night was awful. A limited crowd, amateur presentation, toe-curling at times back slapping and frankly i have been to better organised minority and amateur local presentation events than that.

    A worthy winner of the main award and the overseas award.

    The fact is that the BBC don't do sport any more, outside of the major Global Events that they still have historic deals to acquire.

    The sight of an overweight 17 year old barely coherent in a suit 3 sizes to big for him who plays a pub game just sums up it decline.

    Worse still is the question of why world class sportwomen wh 364 days a year exude grace and confidence have to double down on this occasion each year to prove who can show the most tit without nipple is just beyond demeaning....Cover up girls rely on your outstanding god given talent and not an attempt to get on page 3.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,453
    NZ evening news led on Vanuatu where the true scale of the disaster is only now beginning to emerge.

    New Zealand, Australia and Fiji are leading the immediate rescue and relief efforts. The road network around Port Vila has been badly damaged as has the port infrastructure.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,083
    edited December 2024

    Just incredible.
    That’s the Labour Party’s authoritarianism for you. It couldn’t happen in any other western democracy.

    Also note that the “proposal” only needs to come from one local authority, and doesn’t need any degree of consensus or agreement.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,085
    Perusing the rags this morning I saw a story about some celeb collecting her 11th parking fine of the year off the front of her G-Wagen. It’s one of those stories you see quite regularly, footballers, footballers’ talented partners just whacking their cars in disabled bays and not giving a shit about parking fines as they are such tiny amounts in the big scheme of things.

    Same happens in London with the chaps who spend the summer there with their supercars.

    Would it be fairer/more effective if parking fines had extra jeopardy - they turn into licence points as they add up each year? Or should they reflect earnings like speeding fines in Finland and Switzerland - so when Kyle Walker parks in a disabled bay (for example) his ticket gets a surcharge of £10k.

  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,083
    Foxy said:

    We dodged a bullet there in 2015.

    By jumping into the road and being run over by a series of traffic
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,367
    Ravi Ashwin has retired from international cricket.

    Who will be next from India? At least one of Rohit or Kohli would be my guess. The question is will it be during or after the ongoing tour?
  • This is what it looked like 10 years ago. Can't believe it has changed much. Whoever built that drystone wall must have been insane.


    Mad with hunger perhaps.

    https://munromoonwalker.com/blog/beinn-deargs-great-wall-is-sad-reminder-of-our-past
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,303
    On a side topic:

    Why do governments and companies make dealing with the death of a loved one so darned difficult and, sometimes, painful? Even if the deceased has planned everything, some organisations seem to go out of their way to make the process harrowing and difficult at a time when people are grieving.

    This is not just a UK phenomenon.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,107
    Cookie said:

    Manchester City Council controls all of Manchester City Centre. I'm guessing the point you are making is that Salford City Centre isn't controlled by Manchester City Council. Which is true, but doesn't seem to be holding either party back.

    Ditto Newcastle/Gateshead.
    If you have been to Gateshead recently you will know how untrue that is
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,367

    On a side topic:

    Why do governments and companies make dealing with the death of a loved one so darned difficult and, sometimes, painful? Even if the deceased has planned everything, some organisations seem to go out of their way to make the process harrowing and difficult at a time when people are grieving.

    This is not just a UK phenomenon.

    I would say in my case it particularly happens when there are amateur executors and they think because they’re under stress and have so much to do they can get away with stuff.

    But it’s probably also because they just don’t care very much even as they mouth platitudes about condolence.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,486

    SPOTY back in the day was a night you stayed in to watch a few hours of the very best of Global Sport, Global Sportsmen and women and the very best of our homegrown talent. It was the pinnacle.

    I have to say last night was awful. A limited crowd, amateur presentation, toe-curling at times back slapping and frankly i have been to better organised minority and amateur local presentation events than that.

    A worthy winner of the main award and the overseas award.

    The fact is that the BBC don't do sport any more, outside of the major Global Events that they still have historic deals to acquire.

    The sight of an overweight 17 year old barely coherent in a suit 3 sizes to big for him who plays a pub game just sums up it decline.

    Worse still is the question of why world class sportwomen wh 364 days a year exude grace and confidence have to double down on this occasion each year to prove who can show the most tit without nipple is just beyond demeaning....Cover up girls rely on your outstanding god given talent and not an attempt to get on page 3.
    Pretty shitty personal comment to make about Luke Littler. A cracking lad,who had a stellar year and has taken the fame and fortune in his stride.

    He also has managed to keep his form going proving last years Worlds were not a flash in the pan.

    He deserves his awards and he deserves his recognition.

    Who can be surprised at a labour person like you looking down on a working class sport. I’m stunned. Stunned.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,303
    ydoethur said:

    I would say in my case it particularly happens when there are amateur executors and they think because they’re under stress and have so much to do they can get away with stuff.

    But it’s probably also because they just don’t care very much even as they mouth platitudes about condolence.
    An acquaintance lost his mother this year, and informed a company about it. They sent his mother a letter saying: "Sorry you are leaving us. Hope to see you back soon."

    Absolutely crass platitudes.
  • Mad with hunger perhaps.

    https://munromoonwalker.com/blog/beinn-deargs-great-wall-is-sad-reminder-of-our-past
    You can always tell an offcomer in the Yorkshire Dales, they call our walls "drystone walls". Generally they are relatively modern and were used in locations for parliamentary enclosure where hedges would no longer grow, because of the historic climate change which never happened according to "experts", experts who probably call this structure a drystone wall.

    Whilst this is not a difficult location to build a wall, no shortage of material close to hand it is not a good location because of the climb of the land. Anything above 25 degrees then much of the wall is built upon itself and so it is only a matter of time before the whole lot ends up in a heap at the bottom of the hill. A wire fence would be much more appropriate at this location but not as scenic.

    It often comes as a shock to those who look at scenes like this and think "how nice" that walls were built for a reason but that fences serve that function better nowadays. The compromise would be wall top wire at a locaiton like this.

    But why would you rebuild a wall in a location like this, maybe three yards a day if you are really good, much better than me, for what ? To have it stolen by a neo-Marxist from North London who thinks it is a drystone wall there to make the landscape look prettier.
  • Taz said:

    Pretty shitty personal comment to make about Luke Littler. A cracking lad,who had a stellar year and has taken the fame and fortune in his stride.

    He also has managed to keep his form going proving last years Worlds were not a flash in the pan.

    He deserves his awards and he deserves his recognition.

    Who can be surprised at a labour person like you looking down on a working class sport. I’m stunned. Stunned.
    Darts imho is not a sport, snooker is not a sport....they are "games" and should have a separate category. As should any sport decided by judges scoring which is open to fixing.

    What has sporting opinion got to do with Politics, are you suggesting seriously that Labour supporters must support Liverpool and man U as they wear read and Tory supporters must support Everton or citeh as they wear blue?...

    I thought the who show was naff, and a pale pale shadow of what it once was.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,486

    Darts imho is not a sport, snooker is not a sport....they are "games" and should have a separate category. As should any sport decided by judges scoring which is open to fixing.

    What has sporting opinion got to do with Politics, are you suggesting seriously that Labour supporters must support Liverpool and man U as they wear read and Tory supporters must support Everton or citeh as they wear blue?...

    I thought the who show was naff, and a pale pale shadow of what it once was.
    Your opinion on darts and snooker is neither here nor there. They are a part of it and have been for decades.

    Your second paragraph is a nonsensical misrepresentation. Given you’re not stupid you know the point I was making.

    We watched a couple of episodes of the 1% club on catch up last night.
  • Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 5,561
    stodge said:

    NZ evening news led on Vanuatu where the true scale of the disaster is only now beginning to emerge.

    New Zealand, Australia and Fiji are leading the immediate rescue and relief efforts. The road network around Port Vila has been badly damaged as has the port infrastructure.

    Meanwhile the situation in Mayotte still seems to be deeply unclear a few days on.

  • TazTaz Posts: 17,486
    Inflation up yet again. Now up 0.3% over the last month so sits at 2.6%

    What price a rate cut now ?

    Keep them where they are.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,303

    You can always tell an offcomer in the Yorkshire Dales, they call our walls "drystone walls". Generally they are relatively modern and were used in locations for parliamentary enclosure where hedges would no longer grow, because of the historic climate change which never happened according to "experts", experts who probably call this structure a drystone wall.

    Whilst this is not a difficult location to build a wall, no shortage of material close to hand it is not a good location because of the climb of the land. Anything above 25 degrees then much of the wall is built upon itself and so it is only a matter of time before the whole lot ends up in a heap at the bottom of the hill. A wire fence would be much more appropriate at this location but not as scenic.

    It often comes as a shock to those who look at scenes like this and think "how nice" that walls were built for a reason but that fences serve that function better nowadays. The compromise would be wall top wire at a locaiton like this.

    But why would you rebuild a wall in a location like this, maybe three yards a day if you are really good, much better than me, for what ? To have it stolen by a neo-Marxist from North London who thinks it is a drystone wall there to make the landscape look prettier.
    Many moons ago, I spent a wet night camping in a beallach between two hills. I put my tent in what felt like the only dry spot in the area. When I awoke in the morning, I found some rusted wires under the groundsheet; the remains of a fence that marked the boundary between two counties. I'd camped with my tent on the exact boundary.

    (Well, more likely they'd placed the fence across the only dry bit of land, rather than on the exact boundary...)
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,118
    Taz said:

    Inflation up yet again. Now up 0.3% over the last month so sits at 2.6%

    What price a rate cut now ?

    Keep them where they are.

    They probably should but the economy is stalling on the back of the uncertainty created by Reeves before the budget and the misery after it. Also Sterling is getting painfully high on the back of higher interest rates (relative to our peers, especially in Europe). Its an unhappy situation all round I'm afraid.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Taz said:

    Inflation up yet again. Now up 0.3% over the last month so sits at 2.6%

    What price a rate cut now ?

    Keep them where they are.

    US Fed are almost certain to cut 25bps this evening, BoE were also expected to cut but they won’t with inflation rising.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,303

    You can always tell an offcomer in the Yorkshire Dales, they call our walls "drystone walls". Generally they are relatively modern and were used in locations for parliamentary enclosure where hedges would no longer grow, because of the historic climate change which never happened according to "experts", experts who probably call this structure a drystone wall.

    Whilst this is not a difficult location to build a wall, no shortage of material close to hand it is not a good location because of the climb of the land. Anything above 25 degrees then much of the wall is built upon itself and so it is only a matter of time before the whole lot ends up in a heap at the bottom of the hill. A wire fence would be much more appropriate at this location but not as scenic.

    It often comes as a shock to those who look at scenes like this and think "how nice" that walls were built for a reason but that fences serve that function better nowadays. The compromise would be wall top wire at a locaiton like this.

    But why would you rebuild a wall in a location like this, maybe three yards a day if you are really good, much better than me, for what ? To have it stolen by a neo-Marxist from North London who thinks it is a drystone wall there to make the landscape look prettier.
    My 'experience' is with Peak District farms (more notably, limestone White Peak). My understanding is that stone walls started as land was cleared to improve agriculture; they would move stones to a dump at the side, after which it was handy material to make walls. Many are fairly ancient (they can even scientifically date some).
  • PB is going click bait with this headline
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 3,102
    Rachel Reeves playing a blinder.

    Seriously - something needs to seriously change re. The system we have in this country. Woeful politicians and a doom loop of crap.
  • Taz said:

    Inflation up yet again. Now up 0.3% over the last month so sits at 2.6%

    What price a rate cut now ?

    Keep them where they are.

    Actually prices only rose by 0.1% last month. The increase in inflation is because prices *fell* in Nov last year, so when they scrolled off the annual figures, annualised inflation was always likely to rise. Prices rose in Dec 2023, fell in Jan and then rose consistently from Feb to June. So all things being equal we may see a fall in annualised inflation next month, a further rise in Feb, and then falling back during the first half of the year.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,559
    Good morning everyone.

    Just been running an update of my Bluesky community.

    Anecdata: Of the people I follow on Twitter, a further 3-4% now have developed identifiable Bluesky accounts over the last 3 weeks or so. That is approx a further ~150 or so out of 4300.

    There will be a few false positives in there, and it's a continued steady drift.

    Overall Bluesky accounts went up at a million a day in the week I was chattering about it previously, and have continued up at a little under a million per week since then - now reaching 25 million.
  • My 'experience' is with Peak District farms (more notably, limestone White Peak). My understanding is that stone walls started as land was cleared to improve agriculture; they would move stones to a dump at the side, after which it was handy material to make walls. Many are fairly ancient (they can even scientifically date some).
    They are quite different from these. I have one Romano British wall on my farm. They are obvioulsy round cobbled stones, this is dressed quarried stone from the 19th C. There are very few walls of any age in the Yorkshire Dales. They hardly used stone to build houses before the 17th C. Around here quarries were opened in the 1690s mainly for stone thatch, as they called it.
  • Sandpit said:

    US Fed are almost certain to cut 25bps this evening, BoE were also expected to cut but they won’t with inflation rising.
    The market has been pricing no cut from the BOE tomorrow for some time, and the rise in inflation today is in line with the consensus forecast - news if anything is to the downside with core CPI a shade below expectations.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,559
    Pleased to publish @TSE 's next header :smile:

    YouGov ‪@yougov.co.uk‬
    Are Yorkshire puddings an acceptable part of a Christmas dinner?
    Acceptable: 83%
    Unacceptable: 9%

    https://bsky.app/profile/yougov.co.uk/post/3ldjdoalyhs25

    (I'm not sure what has happened to Yougov)

  • MattW said:

    Are they? I think the crucial point is how the people living there see themselves.

    You don't do these things by drawing lines on a map like Cecil Rhodes dividing up Southern Africa. We learnt that is 1972.

    It's only a blink of the eye since you were asserting that Ripley is part of Nottingham :smile: . That methodology is the wrong end of the stick.
    So you're saying we shouldn't rename Rutland, Rhodesia?

    Shame.
  • carnforth said:

    Can we start by reforming council tax so it only represents local funding? The average punter thinks it's all potholes and bins when half of it is funding for schools which is mixed in with national funding formulas.
    You've missed out Adult (and Child) Social Care. Demographics (and lack of pension provision) means this will be an increasing amount.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,486

    PB is going click bait with this headline

    It's just TSE's way of ensuring you actually read the header.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,486
    This is even more bullshit than their six year pursuit of Hunter Biden.

    GOP report recommends Liz Cheney be criminally investigated over Jan. 6 work
    https://thehill.com/homenews/house/5045125-republicans-report-jan-6-committee/
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,486
    A noteworthy comparison.

    https://x.com/OpenSourceZone/status/1869221949504995393
    Strongest Position For Each Party Last 100 Years

    Democrats 1936:

    House:
    🔵 Democrats 342
    🔴 Republicans 88

    Senate:
    🔵 Democrat 78
    🔴 Republicans 17

    Governor
    🔵 Democrat 40
    🔴 Republican 7

    Republicans 2014

    House
    🔴 Republican 247
    🔵 Democrat 188

    Senate
    🔴 Republican 54
    🔵 Democrat 46

    Governor
    🔴 Republican 33
    🔵 Democrat 17
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,634
    edited December 2024
    boulay said:

    Perusing the rags this morning I saw a story about some celeb collecting her 11th parking fine of the year off the front of her G-Wagen. It’s one of those stories you see quite regularly, footballers, footballers’ talented partners just whacking their cars in disabled bays and not giving a shit about parking fines as they are such tiny amounts in the big scheme of things.

    Same happens in London with the chaps who spend the summer there with their supercars.

    Would it be fairer/more effective if parking fines had extra jeopardy - they turn into licence points as they add up each year? Or should they reflect earnings like speeding fines in Finland and Switzerland - so when Kyle Walker parks in a disabled bay (for example) his ticket gets a surcharge of £10k.

    Love the idea of a surcharge on Kyle Walker but not just for parking.

    Seriously, you have a good idea there in principle but is it practical in a country like this? Isuspect it would lead to clever avoidance devices like offshore ownership,or dummy owners. Maybe parking offences should carry penalty points? Perhaps a little more imagination in the application of penalties and disincentives is called for.

    Incidentally, whenever I hear complaints about infringements in respect of disabled parking privileges I am reminded of a story told me by a parking warden about a man who won a huge sum in damages following a nasty traffic accident. He used it to buy a McLaren, which he would park on double yellow lines and in disabled bays using his perfectly legitimate disabled badge. Turned a few heads until the locals got used to it.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,050
    Nigelb said:

    Local government restructuring is never particularly popular.
    Which is why doing it in year 1 is good politics by Starmer (is that a first ?).
    Heath waited for two years.

    It might even prove to be a good idea.

    They will make an arse of it for sure
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,050
    algarkirk said:

    The oversight of home schoolers is absolutely needed, but there is another much larger group to deal with. There is a substantial group of children registered with schools who only rarely turn up. This group is at well over average risk. Finally, I suggest there will be a group of hidden children, unknown to authority of any sort, mostly I expect from families that have no right to remain here. The risk level in all these groups must be high.

    Of these groups, on average the home schoolers will be at lowest risk, despite the unbearable abominations we have heard today.
    would mean the public services actually doing their jobs though
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,050

    Then start betting on Mr Streeting.
    Holy crap, replace a 5lb bag of shite with a 10lb bagger
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,833

    PB is going click bait with this headline

    There's nothing wrong with a bit of "clickbait" if the substance is interesting and in this case, it is.

    Good morning PB.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,486
    Sandpit said:

    US Fed are almost certain to cut 25bps this evening, BoE were also expected to cut but they won’t with inflation rising.
    That seemed to be the view from the pundits on the news this morning.

    As a saver this is fine for me, but it is not good for the economy overall.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,486

    Actually prices only rose by 0.1% last month. The increase in inflation is because prices *fell* in Nov last year, so when they scrolled off the annual figures, annualised inflation was always likely to rise. Prices rose in Dec 2023, fell in Jan and then rose consistently from Feb to June. So all things being equal we may see a fall in annualised inflation next month, a further rise in Feb, and then falling back during the first half of the year.
    Thanks for the clarification, I went off the headline figure on the news.

    I hope your scenario comes to pass. I am not confident it will.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,050
    Pagan2 said:

    you dont need that you have holyrood as your local council
    what a wag, Oh how we laughed at his wit
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,153

    Love the idea of a surcharge on Kyle Walker but not just for parking.

    Seriously, you have a good idea there in principle but is it practical in a country like this? Isuspect it would lead to clever avoidance devices like offshore ownership,or dummy owners. Maybe parking offences should carry penalty points? Perhaps a little more imagination in the application of penalties and disincentives is called for.

    Incidentally, whenever I hear complaints about infringements in respect of disabled parking privileges I am reminded of a story told me by a parking warden about a man who won a huge sum in damages following a nasty traffic accident. He used it to buy a McLaren, which he would park on double yellow lines and in disabled bays using his perfectly legitimate disabled badge. Turned a few heads until the locals got used to it.
    I would tow cars more often for parking offences. One of the advantages being that it moves the car from where it shouldn't be, and so it's also a practical solution to the problem as well as a deterrent.

    Registered owner of the car has to complete a quiz, in person, on parking regulations. Maybe also 500 lines, "I have to share this world with others and so cannot park wherever I like."
  • NEW THREAD

  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,133
    MattW said:

    Pleased to publish @TSE 's next header :smile:

    YouGov ‪@yougov.co.uk‬
    Are Yorkshire puddings an acceptable part of a Christmas dinner?
    Acceptable: 83%
    Unacceptable: 9%

    https://bsky.app/profile/yougov.co.uk/post/3ldjdoalyhs25

    (I'm not sure what has happened to Yougov)

    Completely unacceptable.

    Pineapple Pizza requires no accompaniment apart from Die Hard on the box, while Radiohead plays quietly in the background.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,585

    On a side topic:

    Why do governments and companies make dealing with the death of a loved one so darned difficult and, sometimes, painful? Even if the deceased has planned everything, some organisations seem to go out of their way to make the process harrowing and difficult at a time when people are grieving.

    This is not just a UK phenomenon.

    Totally agree. Dad has been trying to unpick Mums accounts for various things. They had BT for broadband, along with Sky TV and TNT sports for the rugby. Dad doesn’t want the internet (he’s 85) and just wanted the phone to carry on. Explained all this in September. Then again this week. Yesterday they cut off everything. Lots of angry calls from my sister (power of attorney) plus my dad on the line and the solution is a new account, with a new number (not the existing one, held for 46 years). It can be reverted in a couple of weeks apparently.
    Utter wankers.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,833
    MattW said:

    Pleased to publish @TSE 's next header :smile:

    YouGov ‪@yougov.co.uk‬
    Are Yorkshire puddings an acceptable part of a Christmas dinner?
    Acceptable: 83%
    Unacceptable: 9%

    https://bsky.app/profile/yougov.co.uk/post/3ldjdoalyhs25

    (I'm not sure what has happened to Yougov)

    I went out with a friend and had a Christmas dinner last night. I was mildly surprised to see a Yorkshire Pudding was included with the meal.

    When did Yorkshire pud's start becoming a "thing" within the traditional Christmas dinner?
  • Taz said:

    Pretty shitty personal comment to make about Luke Littler. A cracking lad,who had a stellar year and has taken the fame and fortune in his stride.

    He also has managed to keep his form going proving last years Worlds were not a flash in the pan.

    He deserves his awards and he deserves his recognition.

    Who can be surprised at a labour person like you looking down on a working class sport. I’m stunned. Stunned.
    Luke Littler is 2/1 favourite to win the world title. The tournament is under way and the final 3rd January.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,075
    edited December 2024
    GIN1138 said:

    I went out with a friend and had a Christmas dinner last night. I was mildly surprised to see a Yorkshire Pudding was included with the meal.

    When did Yorkshire pud's start becoming a "thing" within the traditional Christmas dinner?
    Everyone else's family does Christmas wrong. They eat the wrong things, put presents under the tree instead of in stockings, or vice versa, put up decorations and take them down again on the wrong days, and have the wrong thing on top of the tree. And don't get me started on Santa vs Father Christmas.

    And as you've discovered, this extends to Yorkshire puddings.

    To cheer you up, here is a seasonal Jimmy Carr joke about the role of fathers at Christmas.
    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/SKttWHtvYEQ
    ETA nsfw language

  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,486

    Love the idea of a surcharge on Kyle Walker but not just for parking.

    Seriously, you have a good idea there in principle but is it practical in a country like this? Isuspect it would lead to clever avoidance devices like offshore ownership,or dummy owners. Maybe parking offences should carry penalty points? Perhaps a little more imagination in the application of penalties and disincentives is called for.

    Incidentally, whenever I hear complaints about infringements in respect of disabled parking privileges I am reminded of a story told me by a parking warden about a man who won a huge sum in damages following a nasty traffic accident. He used it to buy a McLaren, which he would park on double yellow lines and in disabled bays using his perfectly legitimate disabled badge. Turned a few heads until the locals got used to it.
    Bring back the wheel clamp for them.
    The sheer inconvenience would be fair payback, and provide some deterrence.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited December 2024

    Totally agree. Dad has been trying to unpick Mums accounts for various things. They had BT for broadband, along with Sky TV and TNT sports for the rugby. Dad doesn’t want the internet (he’s 85) and just wanted the phone to carry on. Explained all this in September. Then again this week. Yesterday they cut off everything. Lots of angry calls from my sister (power of attorney) plus my dad on the line and the solution is a new account, with a new number (not the existing one, held for 46 years). It can be reverted in a couple of weeks apparently.
    Utter wankers.
    My parents died about 10 years apart, the second one fairly recently. I was interested to observe that some of the institutions which had been completely useless the first time round worked like greased lightning on the second occasion - but that some of the excellent operators first time round had lapsed badly.
  • SandraMcSandraMc Posts: 727
    My mother died in February. Yahoo were total ####s. They kept saying that they had to get permission from the account holder to cancel the account.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    edited December 2024
    MattW said:

    Are they? I think the crucial point is how the people living there see themselves.

    You don't do these things by drawing lines on a map like Cecil Rhodes dividing up Southern Africa. We learnt that is 1972.

    It's only a blink of the eye since you were asserting that Ripley is part of Nottingham :smile: . That methodology is the wrong end of the stick.
    Ripley is part of the Nottingham Urban Area according to the ONS. I wrote literally three times that it might have a reasonable case for exclusion. Now, that’s four times…
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,486

    Luke Littler is 2/1 favourite to win the world title. The tournament is under way and the final 3rd January.
    Yup, it is the early rounds. Lots of love for Rashad Sweeting last night in the online darts community,

    Luke Littler is still only a child, he has come so far and has had fame thrust upon him and handled it so well. Rochdale Pioneer said as much too.

    I hope it does not go to his head. So far he has been an admirable ambassadord for darts,
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,486
    SandraMc said:

    My mother died in February. Yahoo were total ####s. They kept saying that they had to get permission from the account holder to cancel the account.

    My Dad died a couple of years ago. By and large all the organisations I dealt with were fine. The only ones who were pretty useless were BMW pensions as he used to work for MG Rover when it was a part of BMW.

    The govt hub was excellent.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,486
    GIN1138 said:

    I went out with a friend and had a Christmas dinner last night. I was mildly surprised to see a Yorkshire Pudding was included with the meal.

    When did Yorkshire pud's start becoming a "thing" within the traditional Christmas dinner?
    We had Turkey with all the trimmings at Broad Chare in Newcastle on Monday.

    Sadly no Yorkshire pudding was on offer but they had a lovely bread sauce on the plate.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    If you have been to Gateshead recently you will know how untrue that is
    This pictures shows two city centres according to @Cookie...

    https://www.getintonewcastle.co.uk/things-to-do/get-to-know-businesses-along-the-quayside

    As does this one...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinity_Bridge,_Greater_Manchester#/media/File:N2_Trinity_Bridge_manchester.jpg

    Funny old world!
  • Still think the winter fuel allowance was the right decision but politically not.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,782

    This pictures shows two city centres according to @Cookie...

    https://www.getintonewcastle.co.uk/things-to-do/get-to-know-businesses-along-the-quayside

    As does this one...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinity_Bridge,_Greater_Manchester#/media/File:N2_Trinity_Bridge_manchester.jpg

    Funny old world!
    The second picture does, certainly. The first picture shows a city centre and a town centre. I don't see why this causes a problem.

    Actually, to be pedantic, the quayside is only really the edge of Newcastle City Centre, and Gateshead Town Centre is some way away. I wouldn't really call Baltic Quay Gateshead Town Centre. But still. The implication of your position is that municipal boundaries can only be in fields. It's not obvious to me why this should be the case.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Cookie said:

    The second picture does, certainly. The first picture shows a city centre and a town centre. I don't see why this causes a problem.

    Actually, to be pedantic, the quayside is only really the edge of Newcastle City Centre, and Gateshead Town Centre is some way away. I wouldn't really call Baltic Quay Gateshead Town Centre. But still. The implication of your position is that municipal boundaries can only be in fields. It's not obvious to me why this should be the case.
    Lol. No. They are wholly functioning parts of the same city. Simple geography. That someone called them something different hundreds of years ago doesn’t change that. Are the Houses of Parliament and St Paul’s in different cities?
This discussion has been closed.