Last in, first out? – politicalbetting.com
Last in, first out? – politicalbetting.com
The odds in this betting market from Ladbrokes seem right to me. My expectation remains that after the next May’s elections as England, Scotland, and Wales unite to extirpate the Tories then Kemi Badenoch will be ousted.
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Now, I don't think this is because religious people have some objection to helping others. I think it's that there is a natural suspicion of government spending, and this is government spending.
Who cares about the Hundred?
You would have expected that countries where housing is expensive relative to incomes would see bigger drops in fertility ratios. Indeed, you might expect that there'd be something of a natural balancing motion here: lower birthrates, lower houseprices, higher birthrates.
But that doesn't seem to be the case at all.
European countries where house prices have fallen, and now cost remarkably little relative to incomes (like Italy or Eastern Europe) haven't seen any improvement in their birthrates, despite also being more religious.
Hard to see how Farage goes imminently given his polling and control over the party organisation. Meanwhile, the mechanism to get Starmer out is tricky even with discontent over his performance. With Badenoch, she's a bad set of local elections away from the door, and that's pretty likely to happen.
As mentioned, it's odd that Ladbrokes don't list Davey, although the odds would be fairly long - there are moans on lack of impact, but he did secure the Lib Dems' best ever seat return in the General Election and a very solid set of local election results in May.
Hasn't happened since the Wellington caretaker government of 1834, but still theoretically exists.
Otherwise Farage is secure, as probably is Starmer unless Burnham returns to Parliament or Corbyn's new party starts making inroads into Labour votes as well as Green votes
decide to rake in the cash in Americaget bored and walk away.Plus fewer are religious and it is Muslims and evangelical Christians who have the highest birthrates
So high house prices, high rents, expensive school clothing and pay for your own tertiary education while inviting the tertiary educated from other countries. We've lost all reason - by choice - as we could have had family supportive policies.
a) the human population declines so much that production of computers and phones ends and we all go offline, or
b) AI robots take control of human societies and make the computers all by themselves, and possibly human beings using artificial womb technologies.
If it is a) then we will all have to go back to learning farming, hunting, and gathering again.
If not and he fails to win a majority or at least Reform most seats then he likely walks and goes off to the US lecture circuit.
Certainly if Reform have failed to even overtake the Tories on seats he is gone and likely leaves the populist right to Jenrick, who is 20 years his junior
They could always take the Treasury out of commission and reappoint a Lord High Treasurer. Although that might give the "Chancellor" ideas above her station!
The Vatican for instance is firmly pro big spending on children and anti abortion, Meloni is similar and even Farage opposes the 2 child benefit cap.
Trump also allowed childcare expenses to be deducted from income tax as part of his campaign
- https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/sn05226/
- https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmpubadm/330/33004.htm
- https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-12665342
It has also been discussed on PB comments but I can't find the link.The Second Lord, being subordinate to the First Lord, cannot revert to the Sovereign as that would make the Sovereign subordinate to the First Lord or the First Lord subordinate to the Second Lord...
That is really, really typical of Gloucestershire.
However, that doesn't change the fact that the States with the most restrictive abortion laws offer the least support to parents.
No ball games. No speed restrictions. I'm intimidated by them hanging out in groups.
And why oh why do they never play out?
On state child funding you are not completely right either, Florida and West Virginia offer universal pre kindergarten programmes for instance and Florida also bans abortion after 6 weeks and West Virginia has a near total abortion ban
I don't get it.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-462091/How-children-lost-right-roam-generations.html
It reflects my own experience - at 8, I had the whole of our estate* and the fields behind in which to roam, but we don't let our own kids roam that far or operate that independently. I'd like to have given them more independence, but the culture is just that it isn't done, and if you let your 8 year old get to and from school on their own you'd soon get some questions from the authorities.
That said, I'm happy to report that our kids still achieve independence, just slightly later: my 15 year old frequently goes into Manchester or other locations reachable by public transport, and has had a day out to York over the holidays with friends and without adult supervision, and is looking for other opportunities; and my 13 year old isn't far behind her.
*it was a housing estate. I'm not some duke.
I had no cell phone, and if I needed to reach my parents to tell them about problems with the travel, I had a 10 pence coin for a pay phone.
I would very much have like to have given my children the same responsibility and freedom, but my wife was very much opposed.
We tend to think the streets much more dangerous than they actually are.
Old master painting looted by Nazis spotted in Argentinian property listing
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/aug/26/old-master-painting-giuseppe-ghislandi-looted-by-nazis-argentina-property-listing
But then, my Grandad, who had lots of independence, used that independence to shoot stones through church windows with his catapult, and trespass on the railways (he later became a much-respected headteacher).
A whole back I read Brenda Blethyn's autobiography. when she was a child, she and a friend was accosted on the street by a man who wanted them to 'help him' by stroking his appendage. They ran off; but the idea that it is a modern problem is naive. You just never got to hear about it back then.
(runs for cover...)
Making it extremely problematic for left wingers and a shame for Gareth Southgate
As the best ever Andy Capp cartoon had the caption. Two kids who had obviously been much delayed by Andy in a drunken verbose mood, one kid to the other, "The older they get, the further they had to walk to school !"
But we regularly got the bus into town aged 10 (I occasionally walked the five or so miles home when I forgot the bus fare), used to wander off for the whole afternoon (the M62 construction site at weekends was a favoured playground) etc.
Different times.
There were hundreds of comments at the time and recently at the sentence that pinned the blame on the parents for allowing him to cycle to school. It's seen as negligence nowadays.
And that's leaving aside the point that he's the head of the company, who has previously complained about his own diarrhoetical output not getting enough attention. And who sacks people on a drug-induced whim.
Only insane low-IQ fools would take Twix usage statistics seriously - especially when it comes to its boss.
In his first three cabinet meetings alone, Trump took nearly 100 questions, on a extremely wide range of domestic and foreign policy topics.
Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has repeatedly pointed to this as evidence that this administration is the most "transparent" in US history.
Reporters in the room - which are drawn from the day's press pool - aren't in any way limited in terms of what they can ask.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/ckgd3dm41ppt
I have no stats or research to back it up, but my gut just says even if we need not be as open as back then - there wasn't a choice - if we've gotten to a point where people are too anxious as teenagers to travel about at all that has to be a step too far, right?
According to the report, the cab footage showed that the driver only looked to his right while pulling out and colleagues had tried to get him to stop.
Das Scorchio
Kids grow up at different rates. They are individuals. You can trust some to do some things at a certain age, but not others. But those kids might not be ready for other things. Some adults might not be...
And that's the problem with such laws. Some kids might be emotionally and physically ready to have sex at 16. Some people are not in such a state at 20, or older. But there has to be an age, and unlike driving, there is no test.
As a parent, you just have to look at your kid and ask "What are they ready for?"
Pretty sure it was the law when I was a kid.
But I meant with respect to the St George flag?
Stand by for drooling profiles of Zahra Sultana in The Spectator in about 2030.
Hampstead I'm sure less so.
children under 12 are rarely mature enough to be left alone for long periods of time
babies, toddlers and very young children should never be left alone"
https://www.gov.uk/law-on-leaving-your-child-home-alone
Which comes down to many factors, including the definition of "long periods of time".
I think that's about right for our son. Others may differ.
Given that most kids can go to and from school on their own at secondary, 12 seems odd to be the consensus for being at home. My son's primary allows final year students to go home on their own too.
Still, I was 9 when I went on a school trip to Bruges, and we were allowed out in the evening on our own in the city. The teachers just said, "stay in pairs, and be back by 9pm)".