Trump drops the F bomb as Bibi disrespects him – politicalbetting.com
Trump is furious at Israel this morning for bombing Iran after his cease fire was announced, and says he’s “not happy with Israel” and they “don’t know what the fuck they’re doing.”
Can't see a colour revolution happening in his favour, he's too close to Netanyahu. I expect in Iran there's a fair amount of rallying to the flag happening right now to be perfectly honest.
I'd agree so.
I remarked the other day that the current President of Iran (since last July) is a reformer, who has for example told the revolutionary police to back off enforcing laws relating to women's head coverings.
That has been clear from interviews carried out inside the country by journos who specialise in Iran.
I'd say that the achievements of Netanyahu and Trump will have been to switch a conservative Islamist old regime vs reformist demographic to a nationalist vs people attacking us dynamic.
I don't see how that will help achieve peace or stability in the Middle East, but then I don't think either Trump or Netanyahu are interested in peace or stability.
China can now continue to purchase Oil from Iran. Hopefully, they will be purchasing plenty from the U.S., also. It was my Great Honor to make this happen!
Ummm: so China can continue to do exactly what they were doing.
Right.
Also; there's very little oil take away capacity on the West Coast, so China is almost certainly not going to be buying US oil.
It's interesting who has the access - it is the podcast of the pastor of an Independent church called "River Network Church" in Matlock.
He's a bit like the new leader of Notts CC - lots (maybe 20 years iirc) of experience as a Councillor but little or nothing of running things. There are quite a few management cliches, appealing to being disruptors and arguing that lack of knowledge or experience being an advantage. There is a great reliance on themselves being the ones with "Common Sense". That matches Lee Anderson's favourite slogan : "Ashfield, Capital of Common Sense". Plenty of appealing to identifying and cutting "waste".
Politically, there is engagement only with their own manifesto - Potholes, Flags and SEND. But a statement that they will follow legal requirements.
I'd say that the risk for Reform is that they engage only with a limited slice of the local people, defined by their base and their relatively narrow knowledge, and try and Govern on that basis. That could potentially be damaging.
Labour apparently making the PIP bill a vote of confidence in SKS, lol Tories now have to oppose and force rebels hands
Do we get a new PM if he loses ?
If 100+ Labour MPs get the whip removed and they vote no confidence in Starmer we should get a GE I suppose. But I expect some will peel off and the whip won't be removed from them all; or the gov't might incorporate the amendment, Kendall could resign...
It's a way off but the vote in itself is meaningless to confidence in the Gov't in the literal sense.
It's interesting who has the access - it is the podcast of the pastor of an Independent church called "River Network Church" in Matlock.
He's a bit like the new leader of Notts CC - lots (maybe 20 years iirc) of experience as a Councillor but little or nothing of running things. There are quite a few management cliches, appealing to being disruptors and arguing that lack of knowledge or experience being an advantage. There is a great reliance on themselves being the ones with "Common Sense". That matches Lee Anderson's favourite slogan : "Ashfield, Capital of Common Sense". Plenty of appealing to identifying and cutting "waste".
Politically, there is engagement only with their own manifesto - Potholes, Flags and SEND. But a statement that they will follow legal requirements.
I'd say that the risk for Reform is that they engage only with a limited slice of the local people, defined by their base and their relatively narrow knowledge, and try and Govern on that basis. That could potentially be damaging.
I hope it works. We will see.
Evangelists. Website spells the American Way. Me no like nor trust.
I was interested to read an article about "Sick Societies" online, which cross-referenced Duddies Branch, with Tasmania, and Aztec Mexico, (a society you've also written about), as being societies which were all engaged in completely self-destructive behaviour.
It's interesting who has the access - it is the podcast of the pastor of an Independent church called "River Network Church" in Matlock.
He's a bit like the new leader of Notts CC - lots (maybe 20 years iirc) of experience as a Councillor but little or nothing of running things. There are quite a few management cliches, appealing to being disruptors and arguing that lack of knowledge or experience being an advantage. There is a great reliance on themselves being the ones with "Common Sense". That matches Lee Anderson's favourite slogan : "Ashfield, Capital of Common Sense". Plenty of appealing to identifying and cutting "waste".
Politically, there is engagement only with their own manifesto - Potholes, Flags and SEND. But a statement that they will follow legal requirements.
I'd say that the risk for Reform is that they engage only with a limited slice of the local people, defined by their base and their relatively narrow knowledge, and try and Govern on that basis. That could potentially be damaging.
I hope it works. We will see.
Evangelists. Website spells the American Way. Me no like nor trust.
Have a listen to the interview - I'd be interested to hear comments.
I haven't posted an evaluation because I'd like to hear what others think.
I was interested to read an article about "Sick Societies" online, which cross-referenced Duddies Branch, with Tasmania, and Aztec Mexico, (a society you've also written about), as being societies which were all engaged in completely self-destructive behaviour.
That’s the book I’m reading. Dry in places but wildly compelling in others
I’ve long been interested in cultural/civilsational regression
There’s a lovely example in tiny Kilfenora cathedral on the Burren in County Clare
Outside the cathedral there are some 13th century gravestones with quite fine carving and stonework. Inside they have stuff from the 15th century and it’s like they got drunk children to do it. Way beyond “bad”. Laughably poor
The Burren is isolated. Somehow in those 2 centuries the local Irish forgot how to carve and anyone who could do it moved away
Trajan’s Column in Rome shows a similar decline in one single object
I was interested to read an article about "Sick Societies" online, which cross-referenced Duddies Branch, with Tasmania, and Aztec Mexico, (a society you've also written about), as being societies which were all engaged in completely self-destructive behaviour.
That’s the book I’m reading. Dry in places but wildly compelling in others
I’ve long been interested in cultural/civilsational regression
There’s a lovely example in tiny Kilfenora cathedral on the Burren in County Clare
Outside the cathedral there are some 13th century gravestones with quite fine carving and stonework. Inside they have stuff from the 15th century and it’s like they got drunk children to do it. Way beyond “bad”. Laughably poor
The Burren is isolated. Somehow in those 2 centuries the local Irish forgot how to carve and anyone who could do it moved away
Trajan’s Column in Rome shows a similar decline in one single object
There are societies which are politically self-destructive (much of 16th and 17th century Europe, the Eastern Empire in the 14th century), yet are still quite culturally outstanding. But, there's something that goes terribly wrong, with societies where people forget how to do even very basic things, or else their leaders engage in stupid behaviours (like mass human sacrifice), that make those elites hated, and undermine their ability to defend themselves.
I expect post Roman Britain was one of those sick societies. I imagine it being rather like the world of Mad Max.
I was interested to read an article about "Sick Societies" online, which cross-referenced Duddies Branch, with Tasmania, and Aztec Mexico, (a society you've also written about), as being societies which were all engaged in completely self-destructive behaviour.
That’s the book I’m reading. Dry in places but wildly compelling in others
I’ve long been interested in cultural/civilsational regression
There’s a lovely example in tiny Kilfenora cathedral on the Burren in County Clare
Outside the cathedral there are some 13th century gravestones with quite fine carving and stonework. Inside they have stuff from the 15th century and it’s like they got drunk children to do it. Way beyond “bad”. Laughably poor
The Burren is isolated. Somehow in those 2 centuries the local Irish forgot how to carve and anyone who could do it moved away
Trajan’s Column in Rome shows a similar decline in one single object
I seem to recall reading how a lot of the plains Indians/native Americans were agrarian and stuck to fixed dwellings until the large scale introduction of the horse via the Spanish made being nomadic and following herds and hunting and living off the land an attractive alternative for many.
So settlers and others viewed them as backward nomads however they had actually decided to take this “backward”step from an agrarian “more modern” lifestyle.
I was interested to read an article about "Sick Societies" online, which cross-referenced Duddies Branch, with Tasmania, and Aztec Mexico, (a society you've also written about), as being societies which were all engaged in completely self-destructive behaviour.
That’s the book I’m reading. Dry in places but wildly compelling in others
I’ve long been interested in cultural/civilsational regression
There’s a lovely example in tiny Kilfenora cathedral on the Burren in County Clare
Outside the cathedral there are some 13th century gravestones with quite fine carving and stonework. Inside they have stuff from the 15th century and it’s like they got drunk children to do it. Way beyond “bad”. Laughably poor
The Burren is isolated. Somehow in those 2 centuries the local Irish forgot how to carve and anyone who could do it moved away
Trajan’s Column in Rome shows a similar decline in one single object
There are societies which are politically self-destructive (much of 16th and 17th century Europe, the Eastern Empire in the 14th century), yet are still quite culturally outstanding. But, there's something that goes terribly wrong, with societies where people forget how to do even very basic things, or else their leaders engage in stupid behaviours (like mass human sacrifice), that make those elites hated, and undermine their ability to defend themselves.
I expect post Roman Britain was one of those sick societies. I imagine it being rather like the world of Mad Max.
I’ve also been reading about medieval England and the Vikings - to go with my trip to the Faroes
Even in the 8-9th century the Norse AND Anglo Saxons were treading around the Roman ruins in awe, wondering who could possibly have erected these incredible structures. Gods or giants possibly
Apparently it gave them all a sense of decline and inadequacy
I was interested to read an article about "Sick Societies" online, which cross-referenced Duddies Branch, with Tasmania, and Aztec Mexico, (a society you've also written about), as being societies which were all engaged in completely self-destructive behaviour.
That’s the book I’m reading. Dry in places but wildly compelling in others
I’ve long been interested in cultural/civilsational regression
There’s a lovely example in tiny Kilfenora cathedral on the Burren in County Clare
Outside the cathedral there are some 13th century gravestones with quite fine carving and stonework. Inside they have stuff from the 15th century and it’s like they got drunk children to do it. Way beyond “bad”. Laughably poor
The Burren is isolated. Somehow in those 2 centuries the local Irish forgot how to carve and anyone who could do it moved away
Trajan’s Column in Rome shows a similar decline in one single object
I seem to recall reading how a lot of the plains Indians/native Americans were agrarian and stuck to fixed dwellings until the large scale introduction of the horse via the Spanish made being nomadic and following herds and hunting and living off the land an attractive alternative for many.
So settlers and others viewed them as backward nomads however they had actually decided to take this “backward”step from an agrarian “more modern” lifestyle.
It's like the assumption that American Indians did not know how to fight in formation. They did, and rapidly altered their ways of warfare, once horses and firearms became widespread. They just used different tactics to Europeans, held their own for centuries, and were defeated only by weight of numbers.
NEW: Tory shadow cabinet wrapped today with no consensus on how they should vote in the government's welfare package next week.
Some wanted to support principle of cutting welfare, others wanted to oppose in hope Bill would fall.
Badenoch agreed to take it all away and decide.
Labour may not get it through if the Tories abstain and half the Labour backbench, the LDs and Greens and Independents vote against
It will be very difficult for Starmer to survive as PM if he has to rely on Tory votes to pass the bill because of a backbench rebellion.
That might suit Kemi, if Labour replaced Starmer with say ex Corbynite Rayner she could then try and win back some middle class voters who went Labour in 2024 but were Tory since Cameron. Plus hope Rayner wins back some working class voters who were Labour but have now gone Reform
I maybe (and unusually) sympathise with Trump, although I think Bibi does know what the f--- he is doing. (Bibi is wrong to do what he is doing, but he knows what he's doing.)
The reason not to sympathise with Trump is that he was deluded to think that he could just order other countries around. That's not how diplomacy works, even for the most powerful country in the world.
I was interested to read an article about "Sick Societies" online, which cross-referenced Duddies Branch, with Tasmania, and Aztec Mexico, (a society you've also written about), as being societies which were all engaged in completely self-destructive behaviour.
That’s the book I’m reading. Dry in places but wildly compelling in others
I’ve long been interested in cultural/civilsational regression
There’s a lovely example in tiny Kilfenora cathedral on the Burren in County Clare
Outside the cathedral there are some 13th century gravestones with quite fine carving and stonework. Inside they have stuff from the 15th century and it’s like they got drunk children to do it. Way beyond “bad”. Laughably poor
The Burren is isolated. Somehow in those 2 centuries the local Irish forgot how to carve and anyone who could do it moved away
Trajan’s Column in Rome shows a similar decline in one single object
I seem to recall reading how a lot of the plains Indians/native Americans were agrarian and stuck to fixed dwellings until the large scale introduction of the horse via the Spanish made being nomadic and following herds and hunting and living off the land an attractive alternative for many.
So settlers and others viewed them as backward nomads however they had actually decided to take this “backward”step from an agrarian “more modern” lifestyle.
History of the Americas - and in particular of what is now USA/Canada - before Columbus is bloody difficult to find and if anyone has any recommendations I would be most interested.
Can't see a colour revolution happening in his favour, he's too close to Netanyahu. I expect in Iran there's a fair amount of rallying to the flag happening right now to be perfectly honest.
I'd agree so.
I remarked the other day that the current President of Iran (since last July) is a reformer, who has for example told the revolutionary police to back off enforcing laws relating to women's head coverings.
That has been clear from interviews carried out inside the country by journos who specialise in Iran.
I'd say that the achievements of Netanyahu and Trump will have been to switch a conservative Islamist old regime vs reformist demographic to a nationalist vs people attacking us dynamic.
I don't see how that will help achieve peace or stability in the Middle East, but then I don't think either Trump or Netanyahu are interested in peace or stability.
Attacks on Iran have frequently had a "rally around the flag" effect and buoyed the regime. You need to offer carrots, so the reformists can show, "Look, we brought home some carrots."
Isn't it more appropriate that he serve time in jail and then is deported. If you just deport him, how do you guarantee justice is done? He could be freed immediately.
I was interested to read an article about "Sick Societies" online, which cross-referenced Duddies Branch, with Tasmania, and Aztec Mexico, (a society you've also written about), as being societies which were all engaged in completely self-destructive behaviour.
That’s the book I’m reading. Dry in places but wildly compelling in others
I’ve long been interested in cultural/civilsational regression
There’s a lovely example in tiny Kilfenora cathedral on the Burren in County Clare
Outside the cathedral there are some 13th century gravestones with quite fine carving and stonework. Inside they have stuff from the 15th century and it’s like they got drunk children to do it. Way beyond “bad”. Laughably poor
The Burren is isolated. Somehow in those 2 centuries the local Irish forgot how to carve and anyone who could do it moved away
Trajan’s Column in Rome shows a similar decline in one single object
I seem to recall reading how a lot of the plains Indians/native Americans were agrarian and stuck to fixed dwellings until the large scale introduction of the horse via the Spanish made being nomadic and following herds and hunting and living off the land an attractive alternative for many.
So settlers and others viewed them as backward nomads however they had actually decided to take this “backward”step from an agrarian “more modern” lifestyle.
History of the Americas - and in particular of what is now USA/Canada - before Columbus is bloody difficult to find and if anyone has any recommendations I would be most interested.
The plains Indians et al were preliterate societies. So there is almost no history. Anything you can find will be from the POV of the Spanish etc
I was interested to read an article about "Sick Societies" online, which cross-referenced Duddies Branch, with Tasmania, and Aztec Mexico, (a society you've also written about), as being societies which were all engaged in completely self-destructive behaviour.
That’s the book I’m reading. Dry in places but wildly compelling in others
I’ve long been interested in cultural/civilsational regression
There’s a lovely example in tiny Kilfenora cathedral on the Burren in County Clare
Outside the cathedral there are some 13th century gravestones with quite fine carving and stonework. Inside they have stuff from the 15th century and it’s like they got drunk children to do it. Way beyond “bad”. Laughably poor
The Burren is isolated. Somehow in those 2 centuries the local Irish forgot how to carve and anyone who could do it moved away
Trajan’s Column in Rome shows a similar decline in one single object
I seem to recall reading how a lot of the plains Indians/native Americans were agrarian and stuck to fixed dwellings until the large scale introduction of the horse via the Spanish made being nomadic and following herds and hunting and living off the land an attractive alternative for many.
So settlers and others viewed them as backward nomads however they had actually decided to take this “backward”step from an agrarian “more modern” lifestyle.
History of the Americas - and in particular of what is now USA/Canada - before Columbus is bloody difficult to find and if anyone has any recommendations I would be most interested.
The plains Indians et al were preliterate societies. So there is almost no history. Anything you can find will be from the POV of the Spanish etc
I was interested to read an article about "Sick Societies" online, which cross-referenced Duddies Branch, with Tasmania, and Aztec Mexico, (a society you've also written about), as being societies which were all engaged in completely self-destructive behaviour.
That’s the book I’m reading. Dry in places but wildly compelling in others
I’ve long been interested in cultural/civilsational regression
There’s a lovely example in tiny Kilfenora cathedral on the Burren in County Clare
Outside the cathedral there are some 13th century gravestones with quite fine carving and stonework. Inside they have stuff from the 15th century and it’s like they got drunk children to do it. Way beyond “bad”. Laughably poor
The Burren is isolated. Somehow in those 2 centuries the local Irish forgot how to carve and anyone who could do it moved away
Trajan’s Column in Rome shows a similar decline in one single object
I seem to recall reading how a lot of the plains Indians/native Americans were agrarian and stuck to fixed dwellings until the large scale introduction of the horse via the Spanish made being nomadic and following herds and hunting and living off the land an attractive alternative for many.
So settlers and others viewed them as backward nomads however they had actually decided to take this “backward”step from an agrarian “more modern” lifestyle.
History of the Americas - and in particular of what is now USA/Canada - before Columbus is bloody difficult to find and if anyone has any recommendations I would be most interested.
There is an interesting book - "A voyage long and strange" which relates tales between Columbus and Jamestown, which is not quite what you are after, but its very interesting none the less. Some stuff on the vikings etc.
I was interested to read an article about "Sick Societies" online, which cross-referenced Duddies Branch, with Tasmania, and Aztec Mexico, (a society you've also written about), as being societies which were all engaged in completely self-destructive behaviour.
That’s the book I’m reading. Dry in places but wildly compelling in others
I’ve long been interested in cultural/civilsational regression
There’s a lovely example in tiny Kilfenora cathedral on the Burren in County Clare
Outside the cathedral there are some 13th century gravestones with quite fine carving and stonework. Inside they have stuff from the 15th century and it’s like they got drunk children to do it. Way beyond “bad”. Laughably poor
The Burren is isolated. Somehow in those 2 centuries the local Irish forgot how to carve and anyone who could do it moved away
Trajan’s Column in Rome shows a similar decline in one single object
I seem to recall reading how a lot of the plains Indians/native Americans were agrarian and stuck to fixed dwellings until the large scale introduction of the horse via the Spanish made being nomadic and following herds and hunting and living off the land an attractive alternative for many.
So settlers and others viewed them as backward nomads however they had actually decided to take this “backward”step from an agrarian “more modern” lifestyle.
History of the Americas - and in particular of what is now USA/Canada - before Columbus is bloody difficult to find and if anyone has any recommendations I would be most interested.
So much new is being discovered, it's hard to find an up-to-date book. Charles Mann's "1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus" in 2005 was excellent, with a focus on just before Columbus! "The Dawn of Everything" by David Graeber and David Wengrow is not a history of the Americas, but a lot of it is about different bits of pre-Columbian America. It's a fascinating (and contested) book.
EDIT: I've also got but haven't read yet "Indigenous Continent: The Epic Contest for North America" by Pekka Hämäläinen... but it's had rave reviews.
Starmer conveniently on his travels again as his utterly useless government implodes
The Blair 'statesman' gambit. But Blair had some really truly able cabinet ministers. And a few canny operators too.
Can Starmer claim the same?
Where is Starmer now ?
It's probably the nature of the PM's job now but he barely seems to have spent a day in the UK recently !
NATO summit in Hague. Trump is on his way to personally tell them to all stuff themselves.
Why are such meetings not conducted on line? We have the technology and surely such meetings can be managed surely?
Some things are done better when you can take someone aside or chat over dinner. Online is never the same as in person.
Not such a good flounce for Trump if it just involves Baron turning his laptop off rather than storming out of a meeting and into a waiting helicopter.
FPT: For rcs1000: In the US, it is often economically rational to move. Example: From Gunther's Inside U.S.A. I learned that the state of North Dakota lost about 20 percent of its population in the 1930s, the state of Montana, about 15 percent. (Personal note: Which explains why my father and mother ended up in Washington state.)
And so on.
Or to commute long distances, which became far easier to do now that most families have cars.
Starmer conveniently on his travels again as his utterly useless government implodes
The Blair 'statesman' gambit. But Blair had some really truly able cabinet ministers. And a few canny operators too.
Can Starmer claim the same?
Where is Starmer now ?
It's probably the nature of the PM's job now but he barely seems to have spent a day in the UK recently !
NATO summit in Hague. Trump is on his way to personally tell them to all stuff themselves.
Why are such meetings not conducted on line? We have the technology and surely such meetings can be managed surely?
Some things are done better when you can take someone aside or chat over dinner. Online is never the same as in person.
True dat! Seems an expensive exercise though.
A GBU 57 "bunker buster" bomb costs $20 million. Compared to the cost of the weapons, a summit on how to use (or hopefully not use) those weapons probably comes out pretty cheap.
Mike Johnson: "The president secured a ceasefire between Israel and Iran, and despite the temporary disruption this morning, we believe that will hold. Peace in the Middle East has never been closer within our grasp."
NEW: Tory shadow cabinet wrapped today with no consensus on how they should vote in the government's welfare package next week.
Some wanted to support principle of cutting welfare, others wanted to oppose in hope Bill would fall.
Badenoch agreed to take it all away and decide.
Labour may not get it through if the Tories abstain and half the Labour backbench, the LDs and Greens and Independents vote against
It will be very difficult for Starmer to survive as PM if he has to rely on Tory votes to pass the bill because of a backbench rebellion.
That might suit Kemi, if Labour replaced Starmer with say ex Corbynite Rayner she could then try and win back some middle class voters who went Labour in 2024 but were Tory since Cameron. Plus hope Rayner wins back some working class voters who were Labour but have now gone Reform
I am not sure it works like that. I am sure non-Rayner Labour go LD and some Greens go Labour. Former Labour racists are not returning.
Comments
Another first ?
Whether the senile old man at Pennsylvania Avenue Care Home does, is another matter.
But FPT since I was dethreaded: I'd agree so.
I remarked the other day that the current President of Iran (since last July) is a reformer, who has for example told the revolutionary police to back off enforcing laws relating to women's head coverings.
That has been clear from interviews carried out inside the country by journos who specialise in Iran.
I'd say that the achievements of Netanyahu and Trump will have been to switch a conservative Islamist old regime vs reformist demographic to a nationalist vs people attacking us dynamic.
I don't see how that will help achieve peace or stability in the Middle East, but then I don't think either Trump or Netanyahu are interested in peace or stability.
It needs to stop raining in Leeds.
And another
Every day another story like this
https://x.com/katie_lam_mp/status/1937493761464111278?s=61
Right.
Also; there's very little oil take away capacity on the West Coast, so China is almost certainly not going to be buying US oil.
Tories now have to oppose and force rebels hands
Votes of confidence in whoever is dear leader at the time aren't a thing in our system.
They could threaten to remove the whip from the rebels but again that's not the same thing
It's still on a knife edge.
I blame Taz.
Going to have to potentially come back and really swing at it with the overs remaining.
They really shouldn't play tests in Yorkshire. Its just too risky.
Not the dear leader.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D0ZWH-VasAk
It's interesting who has the access - it is the podcast of the pastor of an Independent church called "River Network Church" in Matlock.
He's a bit like the new leader of Notts CC - lots (maybe 20 years iirc) of experience as a Councillor but little or nothing of running things. There are quite a few management cliches, appealing to being disruptors and arguing that lack of knowledge or experience being an advantage. There is a great reliance on themselves being the ones with "Common Sense". That matches Lee Anderson's favourite slogan : "Ashfield, Capital of Common Sense". Plenty of appealing to identifying and cutting "waste".
Politically, there is engagement only with their own manifesto - Potholes, Flags and SEND. But a statement that they will follow legal requirements.
I'd say that the risk for Reform is that they engage only with a limited slice of the local people, defined by their base and their relatively narrow knowledge, and try and Govern on that basis. That could potentially be damaging.
I hope it works. We will see.
It's a way off but the vote in itself is meaningless to confidence in the Gov't in the literal sense.
NEW: Tory shadow cabinet wrapped today with no consensus on how they should vote in the government's welfare package next week.
Some wanted to support principle of cutting welfare, others wanted to oppose in hope Bill would fall.
Badenoch agreed to take it all away and decide.
Website spells the American Way.
Me no like nor trust.
Lmao he soon shat the bed on that
It will be popular. And of course they deserve it
I was interested to read an article about "Sick Societies" online, which cross-referenced Duddies Branch, with Tasmania, and Aztec Mexico, (a society you've also written about), as being societies which were all engaged in completely self-destructive behaviour.
England 1.23-1.24
Draw 7.2-7.4
India 20-21
So punters think the weather will be OK enough for England to get over the line.
I haven't posted an evaluation because I'd like to hear what others think.
I’ve long been interested in cultural/civilsational regression
There’s a lovely example in tiny Kilfenora cathedral on the Burren in County Clare
Outside the cathedral there are some 13th century gravestones with quite fine carving and stonework. Inside they have stuff from the 15th century and it’s like they got drunk children to do it. Way beyond “bad”. Laughably poor
The Burren is isolated. Somehow in those 2 centuries the local Irish forgot how to carve and anyone who could do it moved away
Trajan’s Column in Rome shows a similar decline in one single object
Its over 130 already i believe with those in government (the 12 ministers mooted plus any PPSs) to be added if they quit as suggested
You can hardly blame the Israelis for being confused
Starmer going full Protect and Survive in his desperation
I expect post Roman Britain was one of those sick societies. I imagine it being rather like the world of Mad Max.
So settlers and others viewed them as backward nomads however they had actually decided to take this “backward”step from an agrarian “more modern” lifestyle.
Can Starmer claim the same?
It's probably the nature of the PM's job now but he barely seems to have spent a day in the UK recently !
Even in the 8-9th century the Norse AND Anglo Saxons were treading around the Roman ruins in awe, wondering who could possibly have erected these incredible structures. Gods or giants possibly
Apparently it gave them all a sense of decline and inadequacy
@JakeSherman
BREAKING -- TRUMP says Congress must not leave for recess until they pass the reconciliation bill.
Say goodbye to this weekend and potentially next week if you work on Capitol Hill.
https://x.com/JakeSherman/status/1937515265748590674
The reason not to sympathise with Trump is that he was deluded to think that he could just order other countries around. That's not how diplomacy works, even for the most powerful country in the world.
https://www.itv.com/news/meridian/2024-11-19/migrant-jailed-for-10-years-over-rape-of-15-year-old-girl
November 2024. That's so last year.
Not to downplay the seriousness of the underlying story but to tweet today makes one wonder quite what is going on.
https://amazon.co.uk/Voyage-Long-Strange-Rediscovering-World/dp/0805076034/ref=sr_1_1?crid=3Q03Y1Q71QV5R&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.D-bcfisov0inidSogmfnkg_SZEG1DUoY0hkvs_7BLxAsOg9DukqonfYHwVLrKmvbqA-MvlYWDwWOYWKST6myhXLdXy6BjB0eGQt0ixPvrMBggjhpRk6D2pgqYbFvHegE3S6DYoOuxfdWsnIWAOBYhX96R5Z2tFl4IyiHR1rBC4Zi3fgR-pgqusJvQdUlMrVu_inAhLIdSGdIn8q5uN6opV71j2233wAHOM_cU61sJG0.CC1F_GEQ6UuK8YB9fVR6ntiwaiDXr6keDONPv7Vdsmo&dib_tag=se&keywords=a+voyage+long+and+strange&qid=1750776260&sprefix=a+voyage+long+and+strange%2Caps%2C62&sr=8-1
EDIT: I've also got but haven't read yet "Indigenous Continent: The Epic Contest for North America" by Pekka Hämäläinen... but it's had rave reviews.
Its probably no now?
And so on.
Or to commute long distances, which became far easier to do now that most families have cars.
Mike Johnson: "The president secured a ceasefire between Israel and Iran, and despite the temporary disruption this morning, we believe that will hold. Peace in the Middle East has never been closer within our grasp."
https://bsky.app/profile/atrupar.com/post/3lsedysngft2q
Not sure what the done thing is with that.