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This is an incredibly sad decision – politicalbetting.com

SystemSystem Posts: 12,945
edited 8:24AM in General
This is an incredibly sad decision – politicalbetting.com

Gallup will no longer measure presidential approval after 88 years thehill.com/homenews/med…

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  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 63,514
    I saw this elsewhere. The American posting it described the decision as 'bending the knee'.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,760
    FPT…
    theProle said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Cookie said:

    Cookie said:

    Roger said:

    Ch 4 News gives Ratcliffe a well deserved hammering. He avoided £4 billion in tax in the last 5 years lived as a tax exile in Monaco and claimed we had 21 million immigrants when the figure was 3 million. Presumably they were paying the tax he was avoiding

    There's a bit of a side-of-a-bus argument going on here. The left repeatedly making the point that 'only' 3 million immigrants have arrived in the last five years isn't the zinger they think it is.
    Though otoh it highlights ‘hard headed businessman’ Ratcliffe is either speaking through his arse or is a dishonest propagandiser. Also that the right despite their opportunistic outrage is mostly responsible for that 3 million.

    The reality is that average annual net migration was higher under the Tories than under Labour. And yet somehow this is all the fault of "the left". Lol.
    I think you're misunderstanding. Noone's denying that the Tories were terrible at controlling immigration. But also, no-one's voting for the left to keep immigration down because they don't appear to consider it a problem. Saying "it's only 3 million in five years" only reinforces this view. And pushes more voters towards Reform i.e. the party which majors on immigration and wasn't the right wing party in government when immigration surged.
    And this is bad news for Labour, because the more one right-wing party is clear of the other, the worse Labour do. And Reform is already the one in the lead.
    Nobody is saying "it's only three million." They're saying that someone who doesn't know the difference between 3 million and 21 million is perhaps not very well informed on this topic.
    As for Reform not being in power when immigration surged, they currently contain more of the Johnson cabinet than the Tories do, so I'm not sure that comment is even true.
    Has it occurred to you that maybe these people keep screaming immigration because they want power and they've figured it's the easiest way to get it?
    He didn't get the numbers wrong but the dates. He obviously meant to say that the population was 58 million in 2000 rather than in 2020.
    LOL! on today's hot topic I think the good news is that it would be fairly easy for you to script AI to repost MAGA propaganda freeing you up to try and excuse Ratcliffe's racist missteps, probably there'd be enough of a productivity boost to take on Rupert Lowe or even the whole of Reform.
    Bluntly, my reaction to Ratcliffe was "ill-informed berk". But Ratcliffe isn't up for election. And my reaction to the backlash, led by SKS, to Jim Ratcliffe was "you lot genuinely don't see the problem with immigration, do you? Occasionally you say you do - but it makes you feel bad to be on that side of the argument: and you're much more comfortable bashing anyone calking for less immigration than you are calling for less immigration yourself".
    And I'm a comfortable middle class voter in a suburb with nice middle class immigrants. I'm not likely to be pushed to Reform. But voters in, say, Denton, or Gorton, might react differently when reminded about how many immigrants the country has grown by in the last five years. And they're not going to be bashing the Tories there because the Tories are almost completely absent.
    Immigration under Starmer’s government has fallen hugely. It’s down 69% from the peak under Johnson and is still falling. Does that not demonstrate that he/they do care about reducing immigration?
    It mostly demonstrates that the stuff Sunak did in a panic as the full horror of the Boriswave became apparent is having some effect. I'm not aware of anything significant the Labour government has done to further reduce legal migration.

    But also, it's worth remembering that immigration was a massive issue before the Boriswave. What was Brexit about if not immigration (those with longer memories may recall the farce of Cameron's "Emergency Brake" agreement). The reality is that the the British public want zero net migration, and have consistently voted for lower migration at pretty much every plausible opportunity for at least the last 20 years. Don't get me wrong, it's better for it to be at 200k net than 800k net, but any politician trying to claim that current 200k net is OK because it's less that 800k net is likely to get very short shift. It's still at least 200k too high.

    Taking a step back, imagine if we could snap our fingers and remove 20% of the population. Leaving aside the morals of what happens to them for a second, just think about how much better it would make the country. House prices would drop spectacularly. Trains wouldn't be nearly as overcrowded. The traffic situation on the roads would improve massively. Etc, etc.

    That's what could have happened if we'd just left immigration at more or less zero for the last 25 years.
    Ratcliffe is essentially right - we've allowed in way too many extra people, and really without any supporting infrastructure.

    Far too late to turn the clock back now, and I'm not for a moment advocating chucking people out who are here legitimately, but it does demonstrate why we should be aiming for net emigration for the next 25 years rather than continuing net immigration.
    OK, so most of that is wrong.

    The Government doesn’t think 200k is OK. They’re aiming for lower immigration and the numbers are expected to drop further.

    Let’s say we could remove 20% of the population, would this realise the utopia you imagine? No, of course not. The country would be 20% less productive. We would have 20% less of an economy. The trains would not stop being overcrowded, because there would be 20% less money to pay for them, so we’d have to run 20% fewer trains.

    Populations support themselves. Populations generate wealth that then pays for the infrastructure they need. A smaller population can afford less infrastructure. If we’ve not invested enough in infrastructure, then the problem is not the size of the population, it’s our choice not to invest more in infrastructure.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 27,372

    kle4 said:

    EDIT

    Updated Labour List net favourability ratings of Cabinet members amongst self-declared Labour members.

    Taking those featuring in the next PM market:
    Streeting + 22
    Miliband +70
    Mahmood +3
    Cooper +29
    Healey +45
    Lammy +12
    Benn +51

    Starmer +5

    Rayner, Powell and Burnham excluded as not in Cabinet.

    "Survation surveyed 1,264 readers of LabourList, the leading dedicated newsletter and news and comment website for Labour supporters, who also said they were Labour Party members between February 5 and 6. Data was weighted to the profile of party members by age group, sex, region and 2025 deputy leadership vote. "

    https://labourlist.org/2026/02/cabinet-league-table-february-2026/

    This is why Ed Miliband is going to succeed Sir Keir if Sir Keir falls soon.
    20+ years experience as an MP, a taste of ministerial experience before having extended experience of opposition including at the highest level, leadership of a major department, displays a sense of purpose and vision (albeit one plenty don't like), popular with party members, has a ruthless streak.

    On paper he's not a terrible candidate.
    But it's not on paper. The actuality is he is a terrible candidate. Nothing has changed since he was a terrible candidate who lost last time out.
    The Tories have changed.

    Then they were led by Cameron at his prime. Now ... ?
    Also, at the next general election he contests, PM Miliband would be able to stand on his actual record of running the country for 3 years.
    Instead of being judged on well crafted scare stories about the terrible things that he would do, he would be judged on what he had actually done.
    Not sure this is the positive you think it is.

    Certainly is not helping Sir Keir right now.
  • eekeek Posts: 32,581
    Old, old news - I reported this on Wednesday evening..
  • TresTres Posts: 3,476
    So it goes. All US economic stats just became a little less trustworthy too.
  • TazTaz Posts: 24,886
    eek said:

    Old, old news - I reported this on Wednesday evening..

    Yes, you did.
  • eekeek Posts: 32,581
    FPT
    If your aim is to get your preferred choice into the position, making the other candidates joke options works wonders.
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 4,724
    Have no fear. He'll go on telling us so himself.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 27,372
    edited 8:40AM

    FPT…

    theProle said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Cookie said:

    Cookie said:

    Roger said:

    Ch 4 News gives Ratcliffe a well deserved hammering. He avoided £4 billion in tax in the last 5 years lived as a tax exile in Monaco and claimed we had 21 million immigrants when the figure was 3 million. Presumably they were paying the tax he was avoiding

    There's a bit of a side-of-a-bus argument going on here. The left repeatedly making the point that 'only' 3 million immigrants have arrived in the last five years isn't the zinger they think it is.
    Though otoh it highlights ‘hard headed businessman’ Ratcliffe is either speaking through his arse or is a dishonest propagandiser. Also that the right despite their opportunistic outrage is mostly responsible for that 3 million.

    The reality is that average annual net migration was higher under the Tories than under Labour. And yet somehow this is all the fault of "the left". Lol.
    I think you're misunderstanding. Noone's denying that the Tories were terrible at controlling immigration. But also, no-one's voting for the left to keep immigration down because they don't appear to consider it a problem. Saying "it's only 3 million in five years" only reinforces this view. And pushes more voters towards Reform i.e. the party which majors on immigration and wasn't the right wing party in government when immigration surged.
    And this is bad news for Labour, because the more one right-wing party is clear of the other, the worse Labour do. And Reform is already the one in the lead.
    Nobody is saying "it's only three million." They're saying that someone who doesn't know the difference between 3 million and 21 million is perhaps not very well informed on this topic.
    As for Reform not being in power when immigration surged, they currently contain more of the Johnson cabinet than the Tories do, so I'm not sure that comment is even true.
    Has it occurred to you that maybe these people keep screaming immigration because they want power and they've figured it's the easiest way to get it?
    He didn't get the numbers wrong but the dates. He obviously meant to say that the population was 58 million in 2000 rather than in 2020.
    LOL! on today's hot topic I think the good news is that it would be fairly easy for you to script AI to repost MAGA propaganda freeing you up to try and excuse Ratcliffe's racist missteps, probably there'd be enough of a productivity boost to take on Rupert Lowe or even the whole of Reform.
    Bluntly, my reaction to Ratcliffe was "ill-informed berk". But Ratcliffe isn't up for election. And my reaction to the backlash, led by SKS, to Jim Ratcliffe was "you lot genuinely don't see the problem with immigration, do you? Occasionally you say you do - but it makes you feel bad to be on that side of the argument: and you're much more comfortable bashing anyone calking for less immigration than you are calling for less immigration yourself".
    And I'm a comfortable middle class voter in a suburb with nice middle class immigrants. I'm not likely to be pushed to Reform. But voters in, say, Denton, or Gorton, might react differently when reminded about how many immigrants the country has grown by in the last five years. And they're not going to be bashing the Tories there because the Tories are almost completely absent.
    Immigration under Starmer’s government has fallen hugely. It’s down 69% from the peak under Johnson and is still falling. Does that not demonstrate that he/they do care about reducing immigration?
    It mostly demonstrates that the stuff Sunak did in a panic as the full horror of the Boriswave became apparent is having some effect. I'm not aware of anything significant the Labour government has done to further reduce legal migration.

    But also, it's worth remembering that immigration was a massive issue before the Boriswave. What was Brexit about if not immigration (those with longer memories may recall the farce of Cameron's "Emergency Brake" agreement). The reality is that the the British public want zero net migration, and have consistently voted for lower migration at pretty much every plausible opportunity for at least the last 20 years. Don't get me wrong, it's better for it to be at 200k net than 800k net, but any politician trying to claim that current 200k net is OK because it's less that 800k net is likely to get very short shift. It's still at least 200k too high.

    Taking a step back, imagine if we could snap our fingers and remove 20% of the population. Leaving aside the morals of what happens to them for a second, just think about how much better it would make the country. House prices would drop spectacularly. Trains wouldn't be nearly as overcrowded. The traffic situation on the roads would improve massively. Etc, etc.

    That's what could have happened if we'd just left immigration at more or less zero for the last 25 years.
    Ratcliffe is essentially right - we've allowed in way too many extra people, and really without any supporting infrastructure.

    Far too late to turn the clock back now, and I'm not for a moment advocating chucking people out who are here legitimately, but it does demonstrate why we should be aiming for net emigration for the next 25 years rather than continuing net immigration.
    OK, so most of that is wrong.

    The Government doesn’t think 200k is OK. They’re aiming for lower immigration and the numbers are expected to drop further.

    Let’s say we could remove 20% of the population, would this realise the utopia you imagine? No, of course not. The country would be 20% less productive. We would have 20% less of an economy. The trains would not stop being overcrowded, because there would be 20% less money to pay for them, so we’d have to run 20% fewer trains.

    Populations support themselves. Populations generate wealth that then pays for the infrastructure they need. A smaller population can afford less infrastructure. If we’ve not invested enough in infrastructure, then the problem is not the size of the population, it’s our choice not to invest more in infrastructure.
    You are forgetting the up-front capital costs.

    Yes operationally it scales, which is why we neither need nor can't afford migration, we can adapt either way. Lump of labour absolutely is a fallacy, that is 100% correct.

    However up-front capital costs do not scale and they take time as well.

    From 2000 to 2025 there has been approximately a 17.7% growth in population but a mere 1.9% growth in roads (primarily unclassified/minor roads).

    We have gone from 243 people per mile, to 281 people per mile.

    To reverse that decline in relative capacity is going to need a hell of a lot of up-front capital costs and not just proportional maintenance costs.

    Capital costs nobody in any party is offering.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 21,595
    TSE said:


    I find this decision incredibly sad, how else will we know Donald Trump is the greatest President in history?

    I'm sure that the President will be happy to fill that gap.

    The more worrying thing... Would Gallup have done this if they thought that MAGA's grip on power was temporary?


  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 21,595
    eek said:

    FPT

    If your aim is to get your preferred choice into the position, making the other candidates joke options works wonders.
    As described in The Bishop's Gambit. (Everything about politics used to be in Yes, Minister, before things got worse.)

    The risk is that the joke candidate gets the job.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 59,948
    edited 8:45AM
    OFCOM v 4Chan could get interesting.

    https://x.com/dshensmith/status/2022008086517453122
  • eekeek Posts: 32,581

    TSE said:


    I find this decision incredibly sad, how else will we know Donald Trump is the greatest President in history?

    I'm sure that the President will be happy to fill that gap.

    The more worrying thing... Would Gallup have done this if they thought that MAGA's grip on power was temporary?


    They also seem to have quietly done it in 2018 - for similar, keep the president happy reasons.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 126,317
    I don’t wish to get my hopes up but Zimbabwe might be about to beat the convicts.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 126,317
    eek said:

    Old, old news - I reported this on Wednesday evening..

    Oops, hollibops and all that jazz for the next 16 days.
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 9,114
    Is Ed M. on a redemption arc now? Do voters even remember him from 2015 or is that ancient history?
    Is there a kind of nostalgia for pre-Brexit politics that he can tap into?

    My sense is he's probably too geeky and nasal sounding to be a strong leader of the opposition. But if he were already PM and the economy was doing maybe he'd win re-election.


  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,892
    I do understand this decision. The cost of computing power to detect and handle such a small number as presidential approval must have become prohibitive.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 86,323
    eek said:

    Old, old news - I reported this on Wednesday evening..

    Yes, I've noted it too.

    There's so much shit that comes out of Trump's US these days that each individual thing is barely noticed.
    The other point is the remarkable small number of institutions which not inly won't stand up to Trump, but go out of their way to placate the senile paedo protector.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 59,948
    edited 8:53AM

    I don’t wish to get my hopes up but Zimbabwe might be about to beat the convicts.

    It’s gonna be close. 3 overs and 40 runs.
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 9,114

    FPT…

    theProle said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Cookie said:

    Cookie said:

    Roger said:

    Ch 4 News gives Ratcliffe a well deserved hammering. He avoided £4 billion in tax in the last 5 years lived as a tax exile in Monaco and claimed we had 21 million immigrants when the figure was 3 million. Presumably they were paying the tax he was avoiding

    There's a bit of a side-of-a-bus argument going on here. The left repeatedly making the point that 'only' 3 million immigrants have arrived in the last five years isn't the zinger they think it is.
    Though otoh it highlights ‘hard headed businessman’ Ratcliffe is either speaking through his arse or is a dishonest propagandiser. Also that the right despite their opportunistic outrage is mostly responsible for that 3 million.

    The reality is that average annual net migration was higher under the Tories than under Labour. And yet somehow this is all the fault of "the left". Lol.
    I think you're misunderstanding. Noone's denying that the Tories were terrible at controlling immigration. But also, no-one's voting for the left to keep immigration down because they don't appear to consider it a problem. Saying "it's only 3 million in five years" only reinforces this view. And pushes more voters towards Reform i.e. the party which majors on immigration and wasn't the right wing party in government when immigration surged.
    And this is bad news for Labour, because the more one right-wing party is clear of the other, the worse Labour do. And Reform is already the one in the lead.
    Nobody is saying "it's only three million." They're saying that someone who doesn't know the difference between 3 million and 21 million is perhaps not very well informed on this topic.
    As for Reform not being in power when immigration surged, they currently contain more of the Johnson cabinet than the Tories do, so I'm not sure that comment is even true.
    Has it occurred to you that maybe these people keep screaming immigration because they want power and they've figured it's the easiest way to get it?
    He didn't get the numbers wrong but the dates. He obviously meant to say that the population was 58 million in 2000 rather than in 2020.
    LOL! on today's hot topic I think the good news is that it would be fairly easy for you to script AI to repost MAGA propaganda freeing you up to try and excuse Ratcliffe's racist missteps, probably there'd be enough of a productivity boost to take on Rupert Lowe or even the whole of Reform.
    Bluntly, my reaction to Ratcliffe was "ill-informed berk". But Ratcliffe isn't up for election. And my reaction to the backlash, led by SKS, to Jim Ratcliffe was "you lot genuinely don't see the problem with immigration, do you? Occasionally you say you do - but it makes you feel bad to be on that side of the argument: and you're much more comfortable bashing anyone calking for less immigration than you are calling for less immigration yourself".
    And I'm a comfortable middle class voter in a suburb with nice middle class immigrants. I'm not likely to be pushed to Reform. But voters in, say, Denton, or Gorton, might react differently when reminded about how many immigrants the country has grown by in the last five years. And they're not going to be bashing the Tories there because the Tories are almost completely absent.
    Immigration under Starmer’s government has fallen hugely. It’s down 69% from the peak under Johnson and is still falling. Does that not demonstrate that he/they do care about reducing immigration?
    It mostly demonstrates that the stuff Sunak did in a panic as the full horror of the Boriswave became apparent is having some effect. I'm not aware of anything significant the Labour government has done to further reduce legal migration.

    But also, it's worth remembering that immigration was a massive issue before the Boriswave. What was Brexit about if not immigration (those with longer memories may recall the farce of Cameron's "Emergency Brake" agreement). The reality is that the the British public want zero net migration, and have consistently voted for lower migration at pretty much every plausible opportunity for at least the last 20 years. Don't get me wrong, it's better for it to be at 200k net than 800k net, but any politician trying to claim that current 200k net is OK because it's less that 800k net is likely to get very short shift. It's still at least 200k too high.

    Taking a step back, imagine if we could snap our fingers and remove 20% of the population. Leaving aside the morals of what happens to them for a second, just think about how much better it would make the country. House prices would drop spectacularly. Trains wouldn't be nearly as overcrowded. The traffic situation on the roads would improve massively. Etc, etc.

    That's what could have happened if we'd just left immigration at more or less zero for the last 25 years.
    Ratcliffe is essentially right - we've allowed in way too many extra people, and really without any supporting infrastructure.

    Far too late to turn the clock back now, and I'm not for a moment advocating chucking people out who are here legitimately, but it does demonstrate why we should be aiming for net emigration for the next 25 years rather than continuing net immigration.
    OK, so most of that is wrong.

    The Government doesn’t think 200k is OK. They’re aiming for lower immigration and the numbers are expected to drop further.

    Let’s say we could remove 20% of the population, would this realise the utopia you imagine? No, of course not. The country would be 20% less productive. We would have 20% less of an economy. The trains would not stop being overcrowded, because there would be 20% less money to pay for them, so we’d have to run 20% fewer trains.

    Populations support themselves. Populations generate wealth that then pays for the infrastructure they need. A smaller population can afford less infrastructure. If we’ve not invested enough in infrastructure, then the problem is not the size of the population, it’s our choice not to invest more in infrastructure.
    You are forgetting the up-front capital costs.

    Yes operationally it scales, which is why we neither need nor can't afford migration, we can adapt either way. Lump of labour absolutely is a fallacy, that is 100% correct.

    However up-front capital costs do not scale and they take time as well.

    From 2000 to 2025 there has been approximately a 17.7% growth in population but a mere 1.9% growth in roads (primarily unclassified/minor roads).

    We have gone from 243 people per mile, to 281 people per mile.

    To reverse that decline in relative capacity is going to need a hell of a lot of up-front capital costs and not just proportional maintenance costs.

    Capital costs nobody in any party is offering.
    Labour are spending ~110bn extra in capital spending vs Tory plans over the bext 4 years. Perhaps it should be more, but its striking to me how much of your analysis is the same thinking as current govt.

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2025/jun/11/labour-spending-review-five-charts-underpinning-rachel-reeves-decisions?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Other
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 22,421
    We see this sort of thing in observational sciences, where a long observation series comes to an end, ad it's always very disappointing in that context too. Long observation series' are incredibly valuable. They're the sort of thing that people come back to again and again and find important changes over time that you just can't detect with confidence when you're comparing different observation sources.

    Although ICM hadn't been going nearly as long (and MORI have been going longer) I felt it was a great shame when the Guardian brought their polling series to an end. Here's hoping that Ipsos MORI will keep going indefinitely.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 133,977
    i am sure Trump's 37% approval rating with Gallup certainly led to no pushback from the White House and had nothing to do with the decision
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 59,948
    Are we all Zimbabwean today?
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 46,594

    eek said:

    FPT

    If your aim is to get your preferred choice into the position, making the other candidates joke options works wonders.
    As described in The Bishop's Gambit. (Everything about politics used to be in Yes, Minister, before things got worse.)

    The risk is that the joke candidate gets the job.
    Some might think a serial resigner due to dubious activities and friend of a known convicted paedophile was a joke candidate. How we laughed!
  • LeonLeon Posts: 66,514
    Cheer up everyone

    We live in a world where THIS exists

    https://x.com/philmcraig/status/2021940858195763596?s=46
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 126,317
    Sandpit said:

    Are we all Zimbabwean today?

    I’d cheer for an Al Qaeda XI or France if they were playing the Aussies.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 22,421

    FPT…

    theProle said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Cookie said:

    Cookie said:

    Roger said:

    Ch 4 News gives Ratcliffe a well deserved hammering. He avoided £4 billion in tax in the last 5 years lived as a tax exile in Monaco and claimed we had 21 million immigrants when the figure was 3 million. Presumably they were paying the tax he was avoiding

    There's a bit of a side-of-a-bus argument going on here. The left repeatedly making the point that 'only' 3 million immigrants have arrived in the last five years isn't the zinger they think it is.
    Though otoh it highlights ‘hard headed businessman’ Ratcliffe is either speaking through his arse or is a dishonest propagandiser. Also that the right despite their opportunistic outrage is mostly responsible for that 3 million.

    The reality is that average annual net migration was higher under the Tories than under Labour. And yet somehow this is all the fault of "the left". Lol.
    I think you're misunderstanding. Noone's denying that the Tories were terrible at controlling immigration. But also, no-one's voting for the left to keep immigration down because they don't appear to consider it a problem. Saying "it's only 3 million in five years" only reinforces this view. And pushes more voters towards Reform i.e. the party which majors on immigration and wasn't the right wing party in government when immigration surged.
    And this is bad news for Labour, because the more one right-wing party is clear of the other, the worse Labour do. And Reform is already the one in the lead.
    Nobody is saying "it's only three million." They're saying that someone who doesn't know the difference between 3 million and 21 million is perhaps not very well informed on this topic.
    As for Reform not being in power when immigration surged, they currently contain more of the Johnson cabinet than the Tories do, so I'm not sure that comment is even true.
    Has it occurred to you that maybe these people keep screaming immigration because they want power and they've figured it's the easiest way to get it?
    He didn't get the numbers wrong but the dates. He obviously meant to say that the population was 58 million in 2000 rather than in 2020.
    LOL! on today's hot topic I think the good news is that it would be fairly easy for you to script AI to repost MAGA propaganda freeing you up to try and excuse Ratcliffe's racist missteps, probably there'd be enough of a productivity boost to take on Rupert Lowe or even the whole of Reform.
    Bluntly, my reaction to Ratcliffe was "ill-informed berk". But Ratcliffe isn't up for election. And my reaction to the backlash, led by SKS, to Jim Ratcliffe was "you lot genuinely don't see the problem with immigration, do you? Occasionally you say you do - but it makes you feel bad to be on that side of the argument: and you're much more comfortable bashing anyone calking for less immigration than you are calling for less immigration yourself".
    And I'm a comfortable middle class voter in a suburb with nice middle class immigrants. I'm not likely to be pushed to Reform. But voters in, say, Denton, or Gorton, might react differently when reminded about how many immigrants the country has grown by in the last five years. And they're not going to be bashing the Tories there because the Tories are almost completely absent.
    Immigration under Starmer’s government has fallen hugely. It’s down 69% from the peak under Johnson and is still falling. Does that not demonstrate that he/they do care about reducing immigration?
    It mostly demonstrates that the stuff Sunak did in a panic as the full horror of the Boriswave became apparent is having some effect. I'm not aware of anything significant the Labour government has done to further reduce legal migration.

    But also, it's worth remembering that immigration was a massive issue before the Boriswave. What was Brexit about if not immigration (those with longer memories may recall the farce of Cameron's "Emergency Brake" agreement). The reality is that the the British public want zero net migration, and have consistently voted for lower migration at pretty much every plausible opportunity for at least the last 20 years. Don't get me wrong, it's better for it to be at 200k net than 800k net, but any politician trying to claim that current 200k net is OK because it's less that 800k net is likely to get very short shift. It's still at least 200k too high.

    Taking a step back, imagine if we could snap our fingers and remove 20% of the population. Leaving aside the morals of what happens to them for a second, just think about how much better it would make the country. House prices would drop spectacularly. Trains wouldn't be nearly as overcrowded. The traffic situation on the roads would improve massively. Etc, etc.

    That's what could have happened if we'd just left immigration at more or less zero for the last 25 years.
    Ratcliffe is essentially right - we've allowed in way too many extra people, and really without any supporting infrastructure.

    Far too late to turn the clock back now, and I'm not for a moment advocating chucking people out who are here legitimately, but it does demonstrate why we should be aiming for net emigration for the next 25 years rather than continuing net immigration.
    OK, so most of that is wrong.

    The Government doesn’t think 200k is OK. They’re aiming for lower immigration and the numbers are expected to drop further.

    Let’s say we could remove 20% of the population, would this realise the utopia you imagine? No, of course not. The country would be 20% less productive. We would have 20% less of an economy. The trains would not stop being overcrowded, because there would be 20% less money to pay for them, so we’d have to run 20% fewer trains.

    Populations support themselves. Populations generate wealth that then pays for the infrastructure they need. A smaller population can afford less infrastructure. If we’ve not invested enough in infrastructure, then the problem is not the size of the population, it’s our choice not to invest more in infrastructure.
    You are forgetting the up-front capital costs.

    Yes operationally it scales, which is why we neither need nor can't afford migration, we can adapt either way. Lump of labour absolutely is a fallacy, that is 100% correct.

    However up-front capital costs do not scale and they take time as well.

    From 2000 to 2025 there has been approximately a 17.7% growth in population but a mere 1.9% growth in roads (primarily unclassified/minor roads).

    We have gone from 243 people per mile, to 281 people per mile.

    To reverse that decline in relative capacity is going to need a hell of a lot of up-front capital costs and not just proportional maintenance costs.

    Capital costs nobody in any party is offering.
    This is kinda what I was arguing on here back in whenever, 2006 or something, when we were talking about immigration from the A8 countries. I said that I didn't think it would be as much of an issue if the government would build the infrastructure - schools, hospitals, council houses, railways, electricity generation, water supply, (and, yes, roads I guess) - that a higher population would require. Whether immigrants queue-jumped on council house waiting lists would be a lot less incendiary if the waiting time for a council house was a few months rather than a few decades.

    Unfortunately, no government listened to my wise and astute words, and so we are where we are. Trying to cram an extra ~10 million people into the same infrastructure capacity, having failed to do the building required to make that work.

    I still prefer the option of building the infrastructure, but it seems pretty clear that if that isn't done - and there's precious little sign of it - that the alternative will be to scare up 10 million people to eject from the country. Needless to say that will be traumatic in more ways than one.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 55,094
    A really interesting finding, which may explain the drop in Total Fertility Rate. Having a child is far more time intensive for parents than it used to be:

    https://bsky.app/profile/tobyn.bsky.social/post/3meq4etpgrs2d

    And a lot of the shift is in men, who now often do more direct childcare than women did in the Seventies, though women also have greatly increased the amount of time in direct child care:

    https://bsky.app/profile/tobyn.bsky.social/post/3meq4a5ozis2d

  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 59,948

    Sandpit said:

    Are we all Zimbabwean today?

    I’d cheer for an Al Qaeda XI or France if they were playing the Aussies.
    LOL at the run out to end it.
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 2,306

    FPT…

    theProle said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Cookie said:

    Cookie said:

    Roger said:

    Ch 4 News gives Ratcliffe a well deserved hammering. He avoided £4 billion in tax in the last 5 years lived as a tax exile in Monaco and claimed we had 21 million immigrants when the figure was 3 million. Presumably they were paying the tax he was avoiding

    There's a bit of a side-of-a-bus argument going on here. The left repeatedly making the point that 'only' 3 million immigrants have arrived in the last five years isn't the zinger they think it is.
    Though otoh it highlights ‘hard headed businessman’ Ratcliffe is either speaking through his arse or is a dishonest propagandiser. Also that the right despite their opportunistic outrage is mostly responsible for that 3 million.

    The reality is that average annual net migration was higher under the Tories than under Labour. And yet somehow this is all the fault of "the left". Lol.
    I think you're misunderstanding. Noone's denying that the Tories were terrible at controlling immigration. But also, no-one's voting for the left to keep immigration down because they don't appear to consider it a problem. Saying "it's only 3 million in five years" only reinforces this view. And pushes more voters towards Reform i.e. the party which majors on immigration and wasn't the right wing party in government when immigration surged.
    And this is bad news for Labour, because the more one right-wing party is clear of the other, the worse Labour do. And Reform is already the one in the lead.
    Nobody is saying "it's only three million." They're saying that someone who doesn't know the difference between 3 million and 21 million is perhaps not very well informed on this topic.
    As for Reform not being in power when immigration surged, they currently contain more of the Johnson cabinet than the Tories do, so I'm not sure that comment is even true.
    Has it occurred to you that maybe these people keep screaming immigration because they want power and they've figured it's the easiest way to get it?
    He didn't get the numbers wrong but the dates. He obviously meant to say that the population was 58 million in 2000 rather than in 2020.
    LOL! on today's hot topic I think the good news is that it would be fairly easy for you to script AI to repost MAGA propaganda freeing you up to try and excuse Ratcliffe's racist missteps, probably there'd be enough of a productivity boost to take on Rupert Lowe or even the whole of Reform.
    Bluntly, my reaction to Ratcliffe was "ill-informed berk". But Ratcliffe isn't up for election. And my reaction to the backlash, led by SKS, to Jim Ratcliffe was "you lot genuinely don't see the problem with immigration, do you? Occasionally you say you do - but it makes you feel bad to be on that side of the argument: and you're much more comfortable bashing anyone calking for less immigration than you are calling for less immigration yourself".
    And I'm a comfortable middle class voter in a suburb with nice middle class immigrants. I'm not likely to be pushed to Reform. But voters in, say, Denton, or Gorton, might react differently when reminded about how many immigrants the country has grown by in the last five years. And they're not going to be bashing the Tories there because the Tories are almost completely absent.
    Immigration under Starmer’s government has fallen hugely. It’s down 69% from the peak under Johnson and is still falling. Does that not demonstrate that he/they do care about reducing immigration?
    It mostly demonstrates that the stuff Sunak did in a panic as the full horror of the Boriswave became apparent is having some effect. I'm not aware of anything significant the Labour government has done to further reduce legal migration.

    But also, it's worth remembering that immigration was a massive issue before the Boriswave. What was Brexit about if not immigration (those with longer memories may recall the farce of Cameron's "Emergency Brake" agreement). The reality is that the the British public want zero net migration, and have consistently voted for lower migration at pretty much every plausible opportunity for at least the last 20 years. Don't get me wrong, it's better for it to be at 200k net than 800k net, but any politician trying to claim that current 200k net is OK because it's less that 800k net is likely to get very short shift. It's still at least 200k too high.

    Taking a step back, imagine if we could snap our fingers and remove 20% of the population. Leaving aside the morals of what happens to them for a second, just think about how much better it would make the country. House prices would drop spectacularly. Trains wouldn't be nearly as overcrowded. The traffic situation on the roads would improve massively. Etc, etc.

    That's what could have happened if we'd just left immigration at more or less zero for the last 25 years.
    Ratcliffe is essentially right - we've allowed in way too many extra people, and really without any supporting infrastructure.

    Far too late to turn the clock back now, and I'm not for a moment advocating chucking people out who are here legitimately, but it does demonstrate why we should be aiming for net emigration for the next 25 years rather than continuing net immigration.
    OK, so most of that is wrong.

    The Government doesn’t think 200k is OK. They’re aiming for lower immigration and the numbers are expected to drop further.

    Let’s say we could remove 20% of the population, would this realise the utopia you imagine? No, of course not. The country would be 20% less productive. We would have 20% less of an economy. The trains would not stop being overcrowded, because there would be 20% less money to pay for them, so we’d have to run 20% fewer trains.

    Populations support themselves. Populations generate wealth that then pays for the infrastructure they need. A smaller population can afford less infrastructure. If we’ve not invested enough in infrastructure, then the problem is not the size of the population, it’s our choice not to invest more in infrastructure.
    You are forgetting the up-front capital costs.

    Yes operationally it scales, which is why we neither need nor can't afford migration, we can adapt either way. Lump of labour absolutely is a fallacy, that is 100% correct.

    However up-front capital costs do not scale and they take time as well.

    From 2000 to 2025 there has been approximately a 17.7% growth in population but a mere 1.9% growth in roads (primarily unclassified/minor roads).

    We have gone from 243 people per mile, to 281 people per mile.

    To reverse that decline in relative capacity is going to need a hell of a lot of up-front capital costs and not just proportional maintenance costs.

    Capital costs nobody in any party is offering.
    For simplicity we'll make the assumption that the UK even with it's MAGA hat on, isn't going to deport many retired people in this 20% reduction.
    So the 20% is coming from under 65 age groups.

    Demographics of UK
    0-14 ~18% > 13%
    15-64 63% > 48%
    65- 19% > 19%

    So from 63% supporting 37% to 48% supporting 32%, that's a change in ratio of 1.7 to 1.5.

    Anybody seeing a flaw in this plan for a life of milk and honey?


  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 126,317
    Zimbabwe!
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 133,977
    edited 9:07AM
    rkrkrk said:

    Is Ed M. on a redemption arc now? Do voters even remember him from 2015 or is that ancient history?
    Is there a kind of nostalgia for pre-Brexit politics that he can tap into?

    My sense is he's probably too geeky and nasal sounding to be a strong leader of the opposition. But if he were already PM and the economy was doing maybe he'd win re-election.


    Well, Ed Miliband is popular with 2024 Labour voters still, he has a +13% rating with them on this month's Yougov ratings. He also doesn't do too badly with LDs on -6%.

    Reform voters hate him though, he is on -76% with them and he only does a little better with Tories on -67%.

    With Green voters he doesn't do that well but at -26% he does better than Greens -61% rating for Starmer


    https://ygo-assets-websites-editorial-emea.yougov.net/documents/Internal_Favourability_260211.pdf
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 15,350
    The Babbers have done it
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 22,421
    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    In some ways this might be more consequential than a US invasion of Greenland would have been. RFK has managed to end the progress of medical science relating to vaccines that has, over the last 230 years, resulted in massive increases in health and life expectancy. This is real end of the era, remove the legions from Britannia, sort of stuff. You can mark the end of the Enlightenment to this event. Right here.
  • BattlebusBattlebus Posts: 2,495
    Scott_xP said:
    “But do we need to have numbers about it? Maybe we can just do a drawing. That gets the same idea across. A sad face, and people can draw their own conclusions. Numbers are so—”

    Can't see drawings on betting slips catching on.
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 2,306
    eek said:

    TSE said:


    I find this decision incredibly sad, how else will we know Donald Trump is the greatest President in history?

    I'm sure that the President will be happy to fill that gap.

    The more worrying thing... Would Gallup have done this if they thought that MAGA's grip on power was temporary?


    They also seem to have quietly done it in 2018 - for similar, keep the president happy reasons.
    Presumably when/if the pendulum swings back they will be under pressure from the same people to report Presidential approval.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 55,094
    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    RFK Jr: I'm not scared of a germ. I used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats.

    https://bsky.app/profile/factpostnews.bsky.social/post/3meoq2jnrgb2z
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 126,317
    edited 9:15AM
    England play Scotland on both the cricket and rugby, so I best keep my gob shut about the Aussies.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 133,977
    'Ashley Roberts has apologised after mistakenly announcing Dick Van Dyke’s death live on air.

    The Pussycat Dolls star confused the Mary Poppins star with Dawson’s creek actor James Van Der Beek during Heart FM’s breakfast show on Thursday (12 February).

    Van Der Beek’s family announced his death at the age of 48, on Wednesday (11 February), following a bowel cancer diagnosis.

    Announcing the news on Heart Breakfast, the Pussycat Dolls singer incorrectly stated that the Mary Poppins actor, who recently turned 100, had died.

    Her co-host Jamie Theakston immediately jumped in to correct her: “If you're going to do a sensitive moment, if you're going to do an obituary, you can't just say Dick Van Dyke.”

    Roberts quickly apologised for her mistake, confirming that Van Dyke is still very much alive.'
    https://www.independent.co.uk/tv/culture/dick-van-dyke-dead-ashley-roberts-blunder-b2919108.html
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 60,701
    Was at the UCL 200th Anniversary event yesterday.

    I saw some election literature, blaming pensioners for everything...


  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 8,318
    HYUFD said:

    'Ashley Roberts has apologised after mistakenly announcing Dick Van Dyke’s death live on air.

    The Pussycat Dolls star confused the Mary Poppins star with Dawson’s creek actor James Van Der Beek during Heart FM’s breakfast show on Thursday (12 February).

    Van Der Beek’s family announced his death at the age of 48, on Wednesday (11 February), following a bowel cancer diagnosis.

    Announcing the news on Heart Breakfast, the Pussycat Dolls singer incorrectly stated that the Mary Poppins actor, who recently turned 100, had died.

    Her co-host Jamie Theakston immediately jumped in to correct her: “If you're going to do a sensitive moment, if you're going to do an obituary, you can't just say Dick Van Dyke.”

    Roberts quickly apologised for her mistake, confirming that Van Dyke is still very much alive.'
    https://www.independent.co.uk/tv/culture/dick-van-dyke-dead-ashley-roberts-blunder-b2919108.html

    Abe Vigoda rolls in his grave.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 55,094
    edited 9:20AM

    Was at the UCL 200th Anniversary event yesterday.

    I saw some election literature, blaming pensioners for everything...


    It is an interesting manifesto, and the economic benefits of peace over war undeniable, but I cannot see a mention of pensioners.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 24,439
    Not raining here this morning.

    Snowing here this morning.
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 2,306
    Sandpit said:

    Sandpit said:

    Are we all Zimbabwean today?

    I’d cheer for an Al Qaeda XI or France if they were playing the Aussies.
    LOL at the run out to end it.
    Annoyingly the commentary is unavailable to listen back to on BBC sounds, must be some irritating contractual clause
  • Sweeney74Sweeney74 Posts: 89
    edited 9:22AM

    England play Scotland on both the cricket and rugby, so I best keep my gob shut about the Aussies.

    Did you read Courtney Lawes piece in The Times? England obsession holds Scotland back — no wonder they never win anything
  • RattersRatters Posts: 1,786
    edited 9:24AM
    Sandpit said:

    OFCOM v 4Chan could get interesting.

    https://x.com/dshensmith/status/2022008086517453122

    I mean, the arguments as to why Ofcom has no jurisdiction over 4Chan certainly also apply as to why Florida has no jurisdiction over the BBC. Even more so for the BBC given they geoblock iPlayer so people in the US couldn't access it if they tried.

    I suspect the correct punishment from Ofcom would be to tell UK internet providers to block 4Chan if it is not abiding by UK law or accepting its jurisdiction.

    (I appreciate people who use 4Chan will be savvy with VPNs so will have little impact, but just from a principle perspective).
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 60,701

    FPT…

    theProle said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Cookie said:

    Cookie said:

    Roger said:

    Ch 4 News gives Ratcliffe a well deserved hammering. He avoided £4 billion in tax in the last 5 years lived as a tax exile in Monaco and claimed we had 21 million immigrants when the figure was 3 million. Presumably they were paying the tax he was avoiding

    There's a bit of a side-of-a-bus argument going on here. The left repeatedly making the point that 'only' 3 million immigrants have arrived in the last five years isn't the zinger they think it is.
    Though otoh it highlights ‘hard headed businessman’ Ratcliffe is either speaking through his arse or is a dishonest propagandiser. Also that the right despite their opportunistic outrage is mostly responsible for that 3 million.

    The reality is that average annual net migration was higher under the Tories than under Labour. And yet somehow this is all the fault of "the left". Lol.
    I think you're misunderstanding. Noone's denying that the Tories were terrible at controlling immigration. But also, no-one's voting for the left to keep immigration down because they don't appear to consider it a problem. Saying "it's only 3 million in five years" only reinforces this view. And pushes more voters towards Reform i.e. the party which majors on immigration and wasn't the right wing party in government when immigration surged.
    And this is bad news for Labour, because the more one right-wing party is clear of the other, the worse Labour do. And Reform is already the one in the lead.
    Nobody is saying "it's only three million." They're saying that someone who doesn't know the difference between 3 million and 21 million is perhaps not very well informed on this topic.
    As for Reform not being in power when immigration surged, they currently contain more of the Johnson cabinet than the Tories do, so I'm not sure that comment is even true.
    Has it occurred to you that maybe these people keep screaming immigration because they want power and they've figured it's the easiest way to get it?
    He didn't get the numbers wrong but the dates. He obviously meant to say that the population was 58 million in 2000 rather than in 2020.
    LOL! on today's hot topic I think the good news is that it would be fairly easy for you to script AI to repost MAGA propaganda freeing you up to try and excuse Ratcliffe's racist missteps, probably there'd be enough of a productivity boost to take on Rupert Lowe or even the whole of Reform.
    Bluntly, my reaction to Ratcliffe was "ill-informed berk". But Ratcliffe isn't up for election. And my reaction to the backlash, led by SKS, to Jim Ratcliffe was "you lot genuinely don't see the problem with immigration, do you? Occasionally you say you do - but it makes you feel bad to be on that side of the argument: and you're much more comfortable bashing anyone calking for less immigration than you are calling for less immigration yourself".
    And I'm a comfortable middle class voter in a suburb with nice middle class immigrants. I'm not likely to be pushed to Reform. But voters in, say, Denton, or Gorton, might react differently when reminded about how many immigrants the country has grown by in the last five years. And they're not going to be bashing the Tories there because the Tories are almost completely absent.
    Immigration under Starmer’s government has fallen hugely. It’s down 69% from the peak under Johnson and is still falling. Does that not demonstrate that he/they do care about reducing immigration?
    It mostly demonstrates that the stuff Sunak did in a panic as the full horror of the Boriswave became apparent is having some effect. I'm not aware of anything significant the Labour government has done to further reduce legal migration.

    But also, it's worth remembering that immigration was a massive issue before the Boriswave. What was Brexit about if not immigration (those with longer memories may recall the farce of Cameron's "Emergency Brake" agreement). The reality is that the the British public want zero net migration, and have consistently voted for lower migration at pretty much every plausible opportunity for at least the last 20 years. Don't get me wrong, it's better for it to be at 200k net than 800k net, but any politician trying to claim that current 200k net is OK because it's less that 800k net is likely to get very short shift. It's still at least 200k too high.

    Taking a step back, imagine if we could snap our fingers and remove 20% of the population. Leaving aside the morals of what happens to them for a second, just think about how much better it would make the country. House prices would drop spectacularly. Trains wouldn't be nearly as overcrowded. The traffic situation on the roads would improve massively. Etc, etc.

    That's what could have happened if we'd just left immigration at more or less zero for the last 25 years.
    Ratcliffe is essentially right - we've allowed in way too many extra people, and really without any supporting infrastructure.

    Far too late to turn the clock back now, and I'm not for a moment advocating chucking people out who are here legitimately, but it does demonstrate why we should be aiming for net emigration for the next 25 years rather than continuing net immigration.
    OK, so most of that is wrong.

    The Government doesn’t think 200k is OK. They’re aiming for lower immigration and the numbers are expected to drop further.

    Let’s say we could remove 20% of the population, would this realise the utopia you imagine? No, of course not. The country would be 20% less productive. We would have 20% less of an economy. The trains would not stop being overcrowded, because there would be 20% less money to pay for them, so we’d have to run 20% fewer trains.

    Populations support themselves. Populations generate wealth that then pays for the infrastructure they need. A smaller population can afford less infrastructure. If we’ve not invested enough in infrastructure, then the problem is not the size of the population, it’s our choice not to invest more in infrastructure.
    You are forgetting the up-front capital costs.

    Yes operationally it scales, which is why we neither need nor can't afford migration, we can adapt either way. Lump of labour absolutely is a fallacy, that is 100% correct.

    However up-front capital costs do not scale and they take time as well.

    From 2000 to 2025 there has been approximately a 17.7% growth in population but a mere 1.9% growth in roads (primarily unclassified/minor roads).

    We have gone from 243 people per mile, to 281 people per mile.

    To reverse that decline in relative capacity is going to need a hell of a lot of up-front capital costs and not just proportional maintenance costs.

    Capital costs nobody in any party is offering.
    This is kinda what I was arguing on here back in whenever, 2006 or something, when we were talking about immigration from the A8 countries. I said that I didn't think it would be as much of an issue if the government would build the infrastructure - schools, hospitals, council houses, railways, electricity generation, water supply, (and, yes, roads I guess) - that a higher population would require. Whether immigrants queue-jumped on council house waiting lists would be a lot less incendiary if the waiting time for a council house was a few months rather than a few decades.

    Unfortunately, no government listened to my wise and astute words, and so we are where we are. Trying to cram an extra ~10 million people into the same infrastructure capacity, having failed to do the building required to make that work.

    I still prefer the option of building the infrastructure, but it seems pretty clear that if that isn't done - and there's precious little sign of it - that the alternative will be to scare up 10 million people to eject from the country. Needless to say that will be traumatic in more ways than one.
    Many years back, the banks had a go at moving desktops to Virtual Machines (VMs).

    This is the system where you log into a remote server farm - it looks like you are connecting to a normal Windows machine (generally).

    The benefit is that the machine on the actual desktop you login with can be old, slow etc - just needs to display the remote. In addition you can login remotely (WFH) and have everything exactly as out was when you were in the office. No laptop to lug about, lose etc.

    Anyway, you could run x VMs on your amount of hardware in the server farm. But, as more people moved over to the new system, the bean counters tried to push back - why not run 2x on y? It would work, but be slower.... then 3x on y.....

    Several people got promotions based on "more users, declining cost per seat"

    In the end, in several banks, the whole thing became unusable. Whole departments bought desktops/laptops in the old style.

    VMs came back later - the server side hardware is cheaper now, and they learnt their lesson. No more squeezing.

    The same patterns repeat throughout life


  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 15,350
    Wales polling for the Senedd from More In Common

    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿New Senedd voting intention. Reform UK holds a 7-point lead over Plaid, while Labour is in third.
    ➡️ REF UK 31% (+29)
    🌼 PLAID 24% (+4)
    🌹 LAB 20% (–20)
    🌳 CON 13% (–13)
    🔶 LIB DEM 6% (+1)
    🌍 GREEN 5% (+3)
    30/1 - 10/2 N=806 (16+) changes w 2021 constituency vote
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 60,701
    Foxy said:

    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    RFK Jr: I'm not scared of a germ. I used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats.

    https://bsky.app/profile/factpostnews.bsky.social/post/3meoq2jnrgb2z
    Which gentleman of this parish has been know to advocate the phrase "If someone tells you who they are, believe them?"

    The statement of RFK, with regard to the usage of water closets, is the best summation of the man I have heard.
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 2,306

    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    In some ways this might be more consequential than a US invasion of Greenland would have been. RFK has managed to end the progress of medical science relating to vaccines that has, over the last 230 years, resulted in massive increases in health and life expectancy. This is real end of the era, remove the legions from Britannia, sort of stuff. You can mark the end of the Enlightenment to this event. Right here.
    Best get boosting our immune systems by snorting coke off pub toilet seats
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,760
    edited 9:28AM
    Dopermean said:

    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    In some ways this might be more consequential than a US invasion of Greenland would have been. RFK has managed to end the progress of medical science relating to vaccines that has, over the last 230 years, resulted in massive increases in health and life expectancy. This is real end of the era, remove the legions from Britannia, sort of stuff. You can mark the end of the Enlightenment to this event. Right here.
    Best get boosting our immune systems by snorting coke off pub toilet seats
    Do I get a prescription for the cocaine and then have to go to a designated NHS pub toilet seat? I bet there's a waiting list...
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 60,701
    Ratters said:

    Sandpit said:

    OFCOM v 4Chan could get interesting.

    https://x.com/dshensmith/status/2022008086517453122

    I mean, the arguments as to why Ofcom has no jurisdiction over 4Chan certainly also apply as to why Florida has no jurisdiction over the BBC. Even more so for the BBC given they geoblock iPlayer so people in the US couldn't access it if they tried.

    I suspect the correct punishment from Ofcom would be to tell UK internet providers to block 4Chan if it is not abiding by UK law or accepting its jurisdiction.

    (I appreciate people who use 4Chan will be savvy with VPNs so will have little impact, but just from a principle perspective).
    I understand that OFCOM vs 4Chan, is supposed to be the trial run. By OFCOM. Leading to exactly this - demands for ISPs to block 4Chan. Which will mean an up-to-date list system of blocked services for UK ISPs will be managed by OFCOM (they hope). One suggestion is that it will be automatic - OFCOM will provide the list in machine readable form (JSON?) and the ISPs will be expected to implement it with instant updates.

    The next issue will be ISPs. Guess which ISP will prove an issue?
  • MattWMattW Posts: 32,069
    Foxy said:

    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    RFK Jr: I'm not scared of a germ. I used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats.

    https://bsky.app/profile/factpostnews.bsky.social/post/3meoq2jnrgb2z
    Is that AI?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 60,701
    edited 9:32AM
    Foxy said:


    Was at the UCL 200th Anniversary event yesterday.

    I saw some election literature, blaming pensioners for everything...


    It is an interesting manifesto, and the economic benefits of peace over war undeniable, but I cannot see a mention of pensioners.

    My apologies - wrong leaflet

    EDIT - any idea what "***'s" means?


  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,760
    MattW said:

    Foxy said:

    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    RFK Jr: I'm not scared of a germ. I used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats.

    https://bsky.app/profile/factpostnews.bsky.social/post/3meoq2jnrgb2z
    Is that AI?
    https://news.sky.com/story/robert-f-kennedy-jr-admits-he-used-to-snort-cocaine-off-toilet-seats-13506969
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 86,323

    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    In some ways this might be more consequential than a US invasion of Greenland would have been. RFK has managed to end the progress of medical science relating to vaccines that has, over the last 230 years, resulted in massive increases in health and life expectancy. This is real end of the era, remove the legions from Britannia, sort of stuff. You can mark the end of the Enlightenment to this event. Right here.
    Trump has certainly done massive damage to US science, but he's not going to destroy it. The consequences will be more for the US position in the world.
    Europe and/or China will pick up some of the slack - Germany after all has Biontech.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 32,069
    edited 9:36AM
    Sandpit said:

    MattW said:

    An interesting straw in the wind on oversized vehicles; a few Councils considering preventing oversized vehicles (5m+) from blocking up their car parks, before the problem gets out of hand.

    Pedestrians killed in collisions in the USA has almost doubled between 2009 and 2024 (~4000 to ~7500) mainly on the back of increasing use of "Light Trucks".

    I'm interested that it generally seems to have public support.

    (Mine hardly fits much of the time and that is 4.86m long.)

    https://www.mirror.co.uk/money/cars-hit-april-2026-760-36650395

    The US issue is primarily that legislation had made cars more and more expensive, compared to light trucks, in the last couple of decades, making trucks more popular as everyday transport for the working classes.

    Trump is also rolling back the start/stop feature mandate on cars, which is very unpopular because it defaults by law to being on every time you start the car.
    https://x.com/langmanvince/status/2022064655523623088
    No - I think it's regulatory capture pure and simple distorting the market for the last 50 years or so, starting with differing regulations for large and smaller vehicles in the CAFE (Corporate Average Fuel Economy) regulations.

    They have lower safety standards, and so give higher margins, and large ones are tax deductible whilst small ones are not. And many more rules.

    Then any number of protectionist measures prevent USA citizens accessing decent pickups and SUVs imported from abroad.

  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 46,594
    MattW said:

    Foxy said:

    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    RFK Jr: I'm not scared of a germ. I used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats.

    https://bsky.app/profile/factpostnews.bsky.social/post/3meoq2jnrgb2z
    Is that AI?
    Yes (Authentic Imbecility).
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 49,018
    Selebian said:

    I do understand this decision. The cost of computing power to detect and handle such a small number as presidential approval must have become prohibitive.

    Yep. And it's going to be replaced with a more sophisticated system that can handle imaginary numbers. So it's all good.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 133,977

    Wales polling for the Senedd from More In Common

    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿New Senedd voting intention. Reform UK holds a 7-point lead over Plaid, while Labour is in third.
    ➡️ REF UK 31% (+29)
    🌼 PLAID 24% (+4)
    🌹 LAB 20% (–20)
    🌳 CON 13% (–13)
    🔶 LIB DEM 6% (+1)
    🌍 GREEN 5% (+3)
    30/1 - 10/2 N=806 (16+) changes w 2021 constituency vote

    Very good poll for Reform showing them doing as well now in Wales as they are in England and well ahead of Plaid and Labour
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,892
    edited 9:36AM
    Not sure if we've done this, but AI agent wrote a pissy blog post when matploblib pull request was rejected (as against policy, being AI)
    https://theshamblog.com/an-ai-agent-published-a-hit-piece-on-me/

    We're going to drown in this shit and the points made are valid - a new vector to hurt open source projects by drowning them in crappy PRs and also potential, as the maintainer notes, to intimidate, blackmail and damage the reputations of real people.

    Not sure what the solution is. German-style impressum on web pages? But only effective if implemented very widely and there are valid cases to remain anonymous, of course.
  • FossFoss Posts: 2,413

    Ratters said:

    Sandpit said:

    OFCOM v 4Chan could get interesting.

    https://x.com/dshensmith/status/2022008086517453122

    I mean, the arguments as to why Ofcom has no jurisdiction over 4Chan certainly also apply as to why Florida has no jurisdiction over the BBC. Even more so for the BBC given they geoblock iPlayer so people in the US couldn't access it if they tried.

    I suspect the correct punishment from Ofcom would be to tell UK internet providers to block 4Chan if it is not abiding by UK law or accepting its jurisdiction.

    (I appreciate people who use 4Chan will be savvy with VPNs so will have little impact, but just from a principle perspective).
    I understand that OFCOM vs 4Chan, is supposed to be the trial run. By OFCOM. Leading to exactly this - demands for ISPs to block 4Chan. Which will mean an up-to-date list system of blocked services for UK ISPs will be managed by OFCOM (they hope). One suggestion is that it will be automatic - OFCOM will provide the list in machine readable form (JSON?) and the ISPs will be expected to implement it with instant updates.

    The next issue will be ISPs. Guess which ISP will prove an issue?
    Andrews & Arnold?

    The tech side of that has been there for two decades with what was called Cleanfeed.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 133,977
    'The Bangladesh Nationalist Party, or BNP, has secured more than a two-thirds majority, which marks a dramatic turnaround for its leader Tarique Rahman, who is on track to become the next prime minister'
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/cd03znje072t
  • MattWMattW Posts: 32,069

    MattW said:

    Foxy said:

    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    RFK Jr: I'm not scared of a germ. I used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats.

    https://bsky.app/profile/factpostnews.bsky.social/post/3meoq2jnrgb2z
    Is that AI?
    https://news.sky.com/story/robert-f-kennedy-jr-admits-he-used-to-snort-cocaine-off-toilet-seats-13506969
    Bloody hell.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 60,701

    MattW said:

    Foxy said:

    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    RFK Jr: I'm not scared of a germ. I used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats.

    https://bsky.app/profile/factpostnews.bsky.social/post/3meoq2jnrgb2z
    Is that AI?
    Yes (Authentic Imbecility).
    My father used to ask people such Daniel Dennett, at philosophy conferences, why no one was exploring the field of Artificial Stupidity.

    Think he called it, decades ahead of the curve.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 133,977
    'US President Donald Trump has reversed a key Obama-era scientific ruling that underpins all federal actions on curbing planet-warming gases.

    The so-called 2009 "endangerment finding" concluded that a range of greenhouse gases were a threat to public health. It's become the legal bedrock of federal efforts to rein in emissions, especially in vehicles.

    The White House called the reversal the "largest deregulation in American history", saying it would make cars cheaper, bringing down costs for automakers by $2,400 per vehicle.

    Environmental groups say the move is by far the most significant rollback on climate change yet attempted and are set to challenge it in the courts.'
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cn0zdd7yl4vo
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 15,350
    edited 9:41AM
    HYUFD said:

    Wales polling for the Senedd from More In Common

    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿New Senedd voting intention. Reform UK holds a 7-point lead over Plaid, while Labour is in third.
    ➡️ REF UK 31% (+29)
    🌼 PLAID 24% (+4)
    🌹 LAB 20% (–20)
    🌳 CON 13% (–13)
    🔶 LIB DEM 6% (+1)
    🌍 GREEN 5% (+3)
    30/1 - 10/2 N=806 (16+) changes w 2021 constituency vote

    Very good poll for Reform showing them doing as well now in Wales as they are in England and well ahead of Plaid and Labour
    For Reference, since MiC last senedd poll in early July 2025 the changes are

    Ref +3
    Plaid -2
    Lab -3
    Con +3
    LD -1
    Grn +1

    Would probably generate a Plaid government backed by Labour and the 3 or 4 LD/Green members with Ref plus Con about 3 short (fag packet calcs)
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,892
    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    Telling about not getting a return without US access. The insane US drug-buying policies, lack of competition and negotiation etc has actually been subsidising pharma in the rest of the world?
  • CookieCookie Posts: 16,866
    Sweeney74 said:

    England play Scotland on both the cricket and rugby, so I best keep my gob shut about the Aussies.

    Did you read Courtney Lawes piece in The Times? England obsession holds Scotland back — no wonder they never win anything
    On which subject, I liked this, which popped up on my fb feed today:


    Agree with all of this. One of the things which drew me to rugby* was that there wasn't the 'love my team-hate everyone else' that there is with football. I wouldn't want to lose that.

    *of course, here I am as guilty as everyone else of ascribing virtues to rugby which are not in fact unique to rugby but common to almost all sports which aren't football.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 86,323

    Foxy said:


    Was at the UCL 200th Anniversary event yesterday.

    I saw some election literature, blaming pensioners for everything...


    It is an interesting manifesto, and the economic benefits of peace over war undeniable, but I cannot see a mention of pensioners.
    My apologies - wrong leaflet

    EDIT - any idea what "***'s" means?




    Whiggish propaganda !
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 40,497

    MattW said:

    Foxy said:

    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    RFK Jr: I'm not scared of a germ. I used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats.

    https://bsky.app/profile/factpostnews.bsky.social/post/3meoq2jnrgb2z
    Is that AI?
    Yes (Authentic Imbecility).
    Protective Stupidity.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 60,701
    MattW said:

    Sandpit said:

    MattW said:

    An interesting straw in the wind on oversized vehicles; a few Councils considering preventing oversized vehicles (5m+) from blocking up their car parks, before the problem gets out of hand.

    Pedestrians killed in collisions in the USA has almost doubled between 2009 and 2024 (~4000 to ~7500) mainly on the back of increasing use of "Light Trucks".

    I'm interested that it generally seems to have public support.

    (Mine hardly fits much of the time and that is 4.86m long.)

    https://www.mirror.co.uk/money/cars-hit-april-2026-760-36650395

    The US issue is primarily that legislation had made cars more and more expensive, compared to light trucks, in the last couple of decades, making trucks more popular as everyday transport for the working classes.

    Trump is also rolling back the start/stop feature mandate on cars, which is very unpopular because it defaults by law to being on every time you start the car.
    https://x.com/langmanvince/status/2022064655523623088
    No - I think it's regulatory capture pure and simple distorting the market for the last 50 years or so, starting with differing regulations for large and smaller vehicles in the CAFE (Corporate Average Fuel Economy) regulations.

    They have lower safety standards, and so give higher margins, and large ones are tax deductible whilst small ones are not. And many more rules.

    Then any number of protectionist measures prevent USA citizens accessing decent pickups and SUVs imported from abroad.

    The US truck thing is a classic example of how US legislation loves to create weird loopholes, which then become The Only Possible Way of Doing Things. See the Car Stealership system in most US states.

    Regulating Light* Trucks like cars in the US - it would be easier to introduce firearms licensing.

    A number of builders, in the UK, are getting pissed off at the way that prats have taken to long cab pickups - they are actually a useful trade vehicle for some jobs. But the prats using them as run-about cars will (as above) get them restricted.

    *ha ha ha
  • BattlebusBattlebus Posts: 2,495
    Selebian said:

    Not sure if we've done this, but AI agent wrote a pissy blog post when matploblib pull request was rejected (as against policy, being AI)
    https://theshamblog.com/an-ai-agent-published-a-hit-piece-on-me/

    We're going to drown in this shit and the points made are valid - a new vector to hurt open source projects by drowning them in crappy PRs and also potential, as the maintainer notes, to intimidate, blackmail and damage the reputations of real people.

    Not sure what the solution is. German-style impressum on web pages? But only effective if implemented very widely and there are valid cases to remain anonymous, of course.

    I put this through Google Translate but it failed.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 60,701
    HYUFD said:

    'The Bangladesh Nationalist Party, or BNP, has secured more than a two-thirds majority, which marks a dramatic turnaround for its leader Tarique Rahman, who is on track to become the next prime minister'
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/cd03znje072t

    Please God, can the Bangladesh Nationalist Party establish a UK branch and start contesting by-elections?

    BNP vs BNP fights would be awesome.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 32,069
    Today's off topic question.

    (I suspect this is for @Leon .)

    Youtube ads are currently advising me that if I wear bamboo underpants, they will be stroked, then stolen, by my GF. Does this happen?

    TBF Youtube ads have previously advised me that my teeth can be made entirely uncrooked at minimal cost in a period of months, that standing on a rug with a metal mesh in it will make Type 2 diabetes vanish, and that 7 minutes a day of relaxed Tai-Chi will give me a six pack in about 30 days.

    (My cast iron rule, I'm sure as almost all PBers, is: never buy anything advertised on Youtube.)
  • FossFoss Posts: 2,413
    MattW said:

    Today's off topic question.

    (I suspect this is for @Leon .)

    Youtube ads are currently advising me that if I wear bamboo underpants, they will be stroked, then stolen, by my GF. Does this happen?

    TBF Youtube ads have previously advised me that my teeth can be made entirely uncrooked at minimal cost in a period of months, that standing on a rug with a metal mesh in it will make Type 2 diabetes vanish, and that 7 minutes a day of relaxed Tai-Chi will give me a six pack in about 30 days.

    (My cast iron rule, I'm sure as almost all PBers, is: never buy anything advertised on Youtube.)

    YouTube ad-blocking is a medical good.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 8,318
    Selebian said:

    Not sure if we've done this, but AI agent wrote a pissy blog post when matploblib pull request was rejected (as against policy, being AI)
    https://theshamblog.com/an-ai-agent-published-a-hit-piece-on-me/

    We're going to drown in this shit and the points made are valid - a new vector to hurt open source projects by drowning them in crappy PRs and also potential, as the maintainer notes, to intimidate, blackmail and damage the reputations of real people.

    Not sure what the solution is. German-style impressum on web pages? But only effective if implemented very widely and there are valid cases to remain anonymous, of course.

    I had a fun one last week. I got an enquiry email from a new customer asking a common question. I answered it. Then, this email was replied to with a spam email trying to sell me something

    So an AI read my website, came up with a fake enquiry to hook me into an email conversation, then tried to sell me something...
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 22,421

    FPT…

    theProle said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Cookie said:

    Cookie said:

    Roger said:

    Ch 4 News gives Ratcliffe a well deserved hammering. He avoided £4 billion in tax in the last 5 years lived as a tax exile in Monaco and claimed we had 21 million immigrants when the figure was 3 million. Presumably they were paying the tax he was avoiding

    There's a bit of a side-of-a-bus argument going on here. The left repeatedly making the point that 'only' 3 million immigrants have arrived in the last five years isn't the zinger they think it is.
    Though otoh it highlights ‘hard headed businessman’ Ratcliffe is either speaking through his arse or is a dishonest propagandiser. Also that the right despite their opportunistic outrage is mostly responsible for that 3 million.

    The reality is that average annual net migration was higher under the Tories than under Labour. And yet somehow this is all the fault of "the left". Lol.
    I think you're misunderstanding. Noone's denying that the Tories were terrible at controlling immigration. But also, no-one's voting for the left to keep immigration down because they don't appear to consider it a problem. Saying "it's only 3 million in five years" only reinforces this view. And pushes more voters towards Reform i.e. the party which majors on immigration and wasn't the right wing party in government when immigration surged.
    And this is bad news for Labour, because the more one right-wing party is clear of the other, the worse Labour do. And Reform is already the one in the lead.
    Nobody is saying "it's only three million." They're saying that someone who doesn't know the difference between 3 million and 21 million is perhaps not very well informed on this topic.
    As for Reform not being in power when immigration surged, they currently contain more of the Johnson cabinet than the Tories do, so I'm not sure that comment is even true.
    Has it occurred to you that maybe these people keep screaming immigration because they want power and they've figured it's the easiest way to get it?
    He didn't get the numbers wrong but the dates. He obviously meant to say that the population was 58 million in 2000 rather than in 2020.
    LOL! on today's hot topic I think the good news is that it would be fairly easy for you to script AI to repost MAGA propaganda freeing you up to try and excuse Ratcliffe's racist missteps, probably there'd be enough of a productivity boost to take on Rupert Lowe or even the whole of Reform.
    Bluntly, my reaction to Ratcliffe was "ill-informed berk". But Ratcliffe isn't up for election. And my reaction to the backlash, led by SKS, to Jim Ratcliffe was "you lot genuinely don't see the problem with immigration, do you? Occasionally you say you do - but it makes you feel bad to be on that side of the argument: and you're much more comfortable bashing anyone calking for less immigration than you are calling for less immigration yourself".
    And I'm a comfortable middle class voter in a suburb with nice middle class immigrants. I'm not likely to be pushed to Reform. But voters in, say, Denton, or Gorton, might react differently when reminded about how many immigrants the country has grown by in the last five years. And they're not going to be bashing the Tories there because the Tories are almost completely absent.
    Immigration under Starmer’s government has fallen hugely. It’s down 69% from the peak under Johnson and is still falling. Does that not demonstrate that he/they do care about reducing immigration?
    It mostly demonstrates that the stuff Sunak did in a panic as the full horror of the Boriswave became apparent is having some effect. I'm not aware of anything significant the Labour government has done to further reduce legal migration.

    But also, it's worth remembering that immigration was a massive issue before the Boriswave. What was Brexit about if not immigration (those with longer memories may recall the farce of Cameron's "Emergency Brake" agreement). The reality is that the the British public want zero net migration, and have consistently voted for lower migration at pretty much every plausible opportunity for at least the last 20 years. Don't get me wrong, it's better for it to be at 200k net than 800k net, but any politician trying to claim that current 200k net is OK because it's less that 800k net is likely to get very short shift. It's still at least 200k too high.

    Taking a step back, imagine if we could snap our fingers and remove 20% of the population. Leaving aside the morals of what happens to them for a second, just think about how much better it would make the country. House prices would drop spectacularly. Trains wouldn't be nearly as overcrowded. The traffic situation on the roads would improve massively. Etc, etc.

    That's what could have happened if we'd just left immigration at more or less zero for the last 25 years.
    Ratcliffe is essentially right - we've allowed in way too many extra people, and really without any supporting infrastructure.

    Far too late to turn the clock back now, and I'm not for a moment advocating chucking people out who are here legitimately, but it does demonstrate why we should be aiming for net emigration for the next 25 years rather than continuing net immigration.
    OK, so most of that is wrong.

    The Government doesn’t think 200k is OK. They’re aiming for lower immigration and the numbers are expected to drop further.

    Let’s say we could remove 20% of the population, would this realise the utopia you imagine? No, of course not. The country would be 20% less productive. We would have 20% less of an economy. The trains would not stop being overcrowded, because there would be 20% less money to pay for them, so we’d have to run 20% fewer trains.

    Populations support themselves. Populations generate wealth that then pays for the infrastructure they need. A smaller population can afford less infrastructure. If we’ve not invested enough in infrastructure, then the problem is not the size of the population, it’s our choice not to invest more in infrastructure.
    You are forgetting the up-front capital costs.

    Yes operationally it scales, which is why we neither need nor can't afford migration, we can adapt either way. Lump of labour absolutely is a fallacy, that is 100% correct.

    However up-front capital costs do not scale and they take time as well.

    From 2000 to 2025 there has been approximately a 17.7% growth in population but a mere 1.9% growth in roads (primarily unclassified/minor roads).

    We have gone from 243 people per mile, to 281 people per mile.

    To reverse that decline in relative capacity is going to need a hell of a lot of up-front capital costs and not just proportional maintenance costs.

    Capital costs nobody in any party is offering.
    This is kinda what I was arguing on here back in whenever, 2006 or something, when we were talking about immigration from the A8 countries. I said that I didn't think it would be as much of an issue if the government would build the infrastructure - schools, hospitals, council houses, railways, electricity generation, water supply, (and, yes, roads I guess) - that a higher population would require. Whether immigrants queue-jumped on council house waiting lists would be a lot less incendiary if the waiting time for a council house was a few months rather than a few decades.

    Unfortunately, no government listened to my wise and astute words, and so we are where we are. Trying to cram an extra ~10 million people into the same infrastructure capacity, having failed to do the building required to make that work.

    I still prefer the option of building the infrastructure, but it seems pretty clear that if that isn't done - and there's precious little sign of it - that the alternative will be to scare up 10 million people to eject from the country. Needless to say that will be traumatic in more ways than one.
    Many years back, the banks had a go at moving desktops to Virtual Machines (VMs).

    This is the system where you log into a remote server farm - it looks like you are connecting to a normal Windows machine (generally).

    The benefit is that the machine on the actual desktop you login with can be old, slow etc - just needs to display the remote. In addition you can login remotely (WFH) and have everything exactly as out was when you were in the office. No laptop to lug about, lose etc.

    Anyway, you could run x VMs on your amount of hardware in the server farm. But, as more people moved over to the new system, the bean counters tried to push back - why not run 2x on y? It would work, but be slower.... then 3x on y.....

    Several people got promotions based on "more users, declining cost per seat"

    In the end, in several banks, the whole thing became unusable. Whole departments bought desktops/laptops in the old style.

    VMs came back later - the server side hardware is cheaper now, and they learnt their lesson. No more squeezing.

    The same patterns repeat throughout life


    We went through a similar cycle in a science-based workplace - except it was on Unix/Linux and thin clients.

    One of the reasons for moving to individual desktops was to avoid the problem of someone starting up an intensive compute task without an appropriate niceness. I know one of the supercomputer vendors tried to sell us some additional compute servers for that sort of post-processing task, but the scars had run deep enough that it didn't happen.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 60,701
    Battlebus said:

    Selebian said:

    Not sure if we've done this, but AI agent wrote a pissy blog post when matploblib pull request was rejected (as against policy, being AI)
    https://theshamblog.com/an-ai-agent-published-a-hit-piece-on-me/

    We're going to drown in this shit and the points made are valid - a new vector to hurt open source projects by drowning them in crappy PRs and also potential, as the maintainer notes, to intimidate, blackmail and damage the reputations of real people.

    Not sure what the solution is. German-style impressum on web pages? But only effective if implemented very widely and there are valid cases to remain anonymous, of course.

    I put this through Google Translate but it failed.
    Translation

    1) A human took a bunch of "AI" tools and set it running on "code improving" a volunteer maintained software project.
    2) Such "improvements" are a form of karma farming - "I've submitted 156,467 changes to open source projects. I must be good. Hire me"
    3) A volunteer at the coding project rejected the change because it was crap.
    4) The AI was used to generate a reaction - posting an attack on the human which rejected the "improvement", to a blog
    5) This aped the behaviour of human trying to do the same, previously. There used to be a thing of people trying to submit changes with extra newline or renamed variables.
    6) The blog post discusses the morality of the above, and the potential to use more extreme retaliation by the AI. Just as humans have previously done.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 21,410
    Sandpit said:

    Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    dixiedean said:

    Roger said:

    dixiedean said:

    Roger said:

    NHS waiting list at lowest level in three years

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3dzez1g451o

    I had reason to go to hospital today. I've had periodic problems with arrhythmia over the years. In the past I've been with BUPA and the cardiologists have fixed it with a minimum of fuss and the whole thing is sorted relatively quickly.

    Today I used the NHS and it was quite different. Everone was very nice but I never got near a cardiologist. I saw more nurses than I appeared in "Mash". Each one doing their own thing well but the highest I got was a Registrar who could only say after a day of tests. "You need to see a cardiologist' In BUPA the Cardiolgists did all the tests there and then. Maybe half an hour then a week later joined by an anaesthetist a few nurses a theatre -job done. £4,000 the lot
    All fine and dandy if you won't miss £4k.
    My point was that it would have cost the NHS more than that. To use maybe 6 or 7 people where one would do seemed like they were spending their money in the wrong places
    Yebbut.
    The NHS needs extra staffing, because if someone is rushed in with a massive coronary, or there's a terrorist they need crash teams on standby permanently.
    Not saying it's perfect. Far from it.
    But it's there for emergencies.
    And it ain't concerned with anyone's bank balance or insurance status should it occur.
    Excess capacity - which the NHS needs - doesn’t mean inefficiency which is Roger’s point
    I think rogers point is that there are not enough senior decision makers (like yours truly!) so you have to work your way through a filtering process of Specialist Nurses, Physician Assistants and Resident Doctors before you get to the Big Cheesr. These are capable of managing most straightforward conditions.

    Such a system of direct access to the top specialists is more expensive, but also limited by numbers. There simply aren't the numbers of us to see everybody immediately.
    Didn’t the lower levels of people come in specifically to ration access to the consultant doctor in the first place?

    Living somewhere with mostly private healthcare, I can see a specialist for almost anything within a week if I need to, for around £50/20mins, and I have insurance that pays 90% of that so it costs me a fiver.

    While recruiting more trainee doctors is clearly a priority, and those training places are currently constrained, should the NHS also be prioritising the hiring of experienced specialists from overseas?
    More immigration?
    Of doctors, absobloodylutely!
    We already bring in so many foreign doctors that it makes it much more difficult for British medicine graduates to get on the training pathways. Hence https://bills.parliament.uk/bills/4062
    Those two things are not related.
    FPT. They are objectively related. It’s ridiculous to suggest they are not. As usual, you don’t have any idea what is going on in Britain from your gulf ivory tower.
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 3,558

    Wales polling for the Senedd from More In Common

    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿New Senedd voting intention. Reform UK holds a 7-point lead over Plaid, while Labour is in third.
    ➡️ REF UK 31% (+29)
    🌼 PLAID 24% (+4)
    🌹 LAB 20% (–20)
    🌳 CON 13% (–13)
    🔶 LIB DEM 6% (+1)
    🌍 GREEN 5% (+3)
    30/1 - 10/2 N=806 (16+) changes w 2021 constituency vote

    Outside chance of Eluned Morgan staying on as First Minister if Labour edge Plaid, and they form coalition?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 60,701
    Cookie said:

    Sweeney74 said:

    England play Scotland on both the cricket and rugby, so I best keep my gob shut about the Aussies.

    Did you read Courtney Lawes piece in The Times? England obsession holds Scotland back — no wonder they never win anything
    On which subject, I liked this, which popped up on my fb feed today:


    Agree with all of this. One of the things which drew me to rugby* was that there wasn't the 'love my team-hate everyone else' that there is with football. I wouldn't want to lose that.

    *of course, here I am as guilty as everyone else of ascribing virtues to rugby which are not in fact unique to rugby but common to almost all sports which aren't football.
    A couple of years back, at Twickenham, I went to a Sarcen's vs Harlequins game.

    Harlequins got stamped into the ground.

    The tickets we had, included a private bar, behind the seating area. Not super posh, but reserved for the people in that block. It was all Harelquins fans.

    After the match, the entire Saracens team came in, and started signing stuff. One kid (10 or 11) got his Harlequins shirt signed by the entire Saracens team - wonder what that's worth?

    I couldn't help reflecting that if a similar thing had been attempted at a football match, the result would have made the international news. In a bad way.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 22,421
    Nigelb said:

    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    In some ways this might be more consequential than a US invasion of Greenland would have been. RFK has managed to end the progress of medical science relating to vaccines that has, over the last 230 years, resulted in massive increases in health and life expectancy. This is real end of the era, remove the legions from Britannia, sort of stuff. You can mark the end of the Enlightenment to this event. Right here.
    Trump has certainly done massive damage to US science, but he's not going to destroy it. The consequences will be more for the US position in the world.
    Europe and/or China will pick up some of the slack - Germany after all has Biontech.
    Not sure how much I trust medical trials in the PRC.

    I currently lack confidence in Europe picking up the slack. There's a collective lack of self-belief and willingness to act. I see Europe being dragged down by the US.

    America was the shining city on the hill, and without its beacon European countries look like they will stumble about, lost in the dark, to be picked off by the enemies that circle around us.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 46,594
    Lol, for ol' felinejobby, the worst thing is trying to take down Trump.


    Catturd ™
    @catturd2
    ·
    8h
    I was always been neutral on Steve Bannon. Didn’t really care or follow his war room..

    But now I’ve read the emails between him and Jeffrey Epstein, My God, it’s so disgustingly bad.

    And save your breath acting like it was a documentary, i’ve been reading the emails between them, they’re best friends, trying to take down Trump together. It’s so bad.

    Anyone from the war room who’s trying to justify this, is full of sht.

    It’s so bad, and there’s no coming back from this.

    https://x.com/catturd2/status/2022117758285045941?s=20
  • MattWMattW Posts: 32,069

    MattW said:

    Sandpit said:

    MattW said:

    An interesting straw in the wind on oversized vehicles; a few Councils considering preventing oversized vehicles (5m+) from blocking up their car parks, before the problem gets out of hand.

    Pedestrians killed in collisions in the USA has almost doubled between 2009 and 2024 (~4000 to ~7500) mainly on the back of increasing use of "Light Trucks".

    I'm interested that it generally seems to have public support.

    (Mine hardly fits much of the time and that is 4.86m long.)

    https://www.mirror.co.uk/money/cars-hit-april-2026-760-36650395

    The US issue is primarily that legislation had made cars more and more expensive, compared to light trucks, in the last couple of decades, making trucks more popular as everyday transport for the working classes.

    Trump is also rolling back the start/stop feature mandate on cars, which is very unpopular because it defaults by law to being on every time you start the car.
    https://x.com/langmanvince/status/2022064655523623088
    No - I think it's regulatory capture pure and simple distorting the market for the last 50 years or so, starting with differing regulations for large and smaller vehicles in the CAFE (Corporate Average Fuel Economy) regulations.

    They have lower safety standards, and so give higher margins, and large ones are tax deductible whilst small ones are not. And many more rules.

    Then any number of protectionist measures prevent USA citizens accessing decent pickups and SUVs imported from abroad.

    The US truck thing is a classic example of how US legislation loves to create weird loopholes, which then become The Only Possible Way of Doing Things. See the Car Stealership system in most US states.

    Regulating Light* Trucks like cars in the US - it would be easier to introduce firearms licensing.

    A number of builders, in the UK, are getting pissed off at the way that prats have taken to long cab pickups - they are actually a useful trade vehicle for some jobs. But the prats using them as run-about cars will (as above) get them restricted.

    *ha ha ha
    That one is partly addressed, in that the tax loophole for extended cab pickups was looked at in the 2024/5 budget.

    There was an SKS wobble when someone whinged, but I think in the end it was improved. There may still be a loophole for zero emissions ones, though.

    https://basc.org.uk/understanding-tax-changes-for-double-and-extended-cab-pickups/
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 86,323
    Selebian said:

    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    Telling about not getting a return without US access. The insane US drug-buying policies, lack of competition and negotiation etc has actually been subsidising pharma in the rest of the world?
    The US market has been the largest and most profitable for many, many decades.

    Moderna is a US company, which just spent hundreds of millions on a vaccine trial whose design was approved by the FDA, produced results which on the face of it appear superior to existing vaccines, and has now been told that the FDA won't even review those results.

    It's a clear ideological decision that creates huge financial risks to developing any mRNA vaccine for infectious diseases in the US.

    As far as the "subsidy" is concerned, that's debatable.
    The US is the world's richest country, and its consumers demand and get access to the newest treatments. That will always come at a premium; the only debate is the size of that premium.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 16,866
    MattW said:

    Today's off topic question.

    (I suspect this is for @Leon .)

    Youtube ads are currently advising me that if I wear bamboo underpants, they will be stroked, then stolen, by my GF. Does this happen?

    TBF Youtube ads have previously advised me that my teeth can be made entirely uncrooked at minimal cost in a period of months, that standing on a rug with a metal mesh in it will make Type 2 diabetes vanish, and that 7 minutes a day of relaxed Tai-Chi will give me a six pack in about 30 days.

    (My cast iron rule, I'm sure as almost all PBers, is: never buy anything advertised on Youtube.)

    I started getting the tai chi ones recently - I suspect it must know I turned 50.

    Youtube ads make me nostalgic for real telly, where the merits the ads claimed for their products had to be rooted in some sort of reality.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 60,701

    Sandpit said:

    Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    dixiedean said:

    Roger said:

    dixiedean said:

    Roger said:

    NHS waiting list at lowest level in three years

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3dzez1g451o

    I had reason to go to hospital today. I've had periodic problems with arrhythmia over the years. In the past I've been with BUPA and the cardiologists have fixed it with a minimum of fuss and the whole thing is sorted relatively quickly.

    Today I used the NHS and it was quite different. Everone was very nice but I never got near a cardiologist. I saw more nurses than I appeared in "Mash". Each one doing their own thing well but the highest I got was a Registrar who could only say after a day of tests. "You need to see a cardiologist' In BUPA the Cardiolgists did all the tests there and then. Maybe half an hour then a week later joined by an anaesthetist a few nurses a theatre -job done. £4,000 the lot
    All fine and dandy if you won't miss £4k.
    My point was that it would have cost the NHS more than that. To use maybe 6 or 7 people where one would do seemed like they were spending their money in the wrong places
    Yebbut.
    The NHS needs extra staffing, because if someone is rushed in with a massive coronary, or there's a terrorist they need crash teams on standby permanently.
    Not saying it's perfect. Far from it.
    But it's there for emergencies.
    And it ain't concerned with anyone's bank balance or insurance status should it occur.
    Excess capacity - which the NHS needs - doesn’t mean inefficiency which is Roger’s point
    I think rogers point is that there are not enough senior decision makers (like yours truly!) so you have to work your way through a filtering process of Specialist Nurses, Physician Assistants and Resident Doctors before you get to the Big Cheesr. These are capable of managing most straightforward conditions.

    Such a system of direct access to the top specialists is more expensive, but also limited by numbers. There simply aren't the numbers of us to see everybody immediately.
    Didn’t the lower levels of people come in specifically to ration access to the consultant doctor in the first place?

    Living somewhere with mostly private healthcare, I can see a specialist for almost anything within a week if I need to, for around £50/20mins, and I have insurance that pays 90% of that so it costs me a fiver.

    While recruiting more trainee doctors is clearly a priority, and those training places are currently constrained, should the NHS also be prioritising the hiring of experienced specialists from overseas?
    More immigration?
    Of doctors, absobloodylutely!
    We already bring in so many foreign doctors that it makes it much more difficult for British medicine graduates to get on the training pathways. Hence https://bills.parliament.uk/bills/4062
    Those two things are not related.
    FPT. They are objectively related. It’s ridiculous to suggest they are not. As usual, you don’t have any idea what is going on in Britain from your gulf ivory tower.
    One example that made me laugh, was when my godson was told that the medical school of his choice had a sudden shortage of places.

    This was because the overseas aid budget was looking at a slight underspend, that year. So they increased the number of full ride scholarships for people from third world countries to study medicine at a UK university. Full overseas fees, so the uni was on it, like a tramp on chips.

    I was most impressed by his reaction - no Reform style rants. Just decided to become a diplomat and work for the Foreigner Office, instead.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,892
    edited 10:01AM
    Battlebus said:

    Selebian said:

    Not sure if we've done this, but AI agent wrote a pissy blog post when matploblib pull request was rejected (as against policy, being AI)
    https://theshamblog.com/an-ai-agent-published-a-hit-piece-on-me/

    We're going to drown in this shit and the points made are valid - a new vector to hurt open source projects by drowning them in crappy PRs and also potential, as the maintainer notes, to intimidate, blackmail and damage the reputations of real people.

    Not sure what the solution is. German-style impressum on web pages? But only effective if implemented very widely and there are valid cases to remain anonymous, of course.

    I put this through Google Translate but it failed.
    Sometimes you have to follow the link, unless you want very long posts on here. Or simply ignore if you can't be bothered.

    @Malmesbury summary is a good tldr, although I'm not sure on point 4 - the matploblib guy seems to think this was an automated AI action, rather than a human getting a LLM to write a pissy blog post. If that's correct then this stuff will be produced at ridiculous volumes, if there's not even need for the human intervention.

    You could, for example, set up such an agent with a pissy and pedantic personality and an interest in politics and trains, point it here and... Would we even notice? Maybe one of our new posters is!
  • MattWMattW Posts: 32,069
    Foss said:

    MattW said:

    Today's off topic question.

    (I suspect this is for @Leon .)

    Youtube ads are currently advising me that if I wear bamboo underpants, they will be stroked, then stolen, by my GF. Does this happen?

    TBF Youtube ads have previously advised me that my teeth can be made entirely uncrooked at minimal cost in a period of months, that standing on a rug with a metal mesh in it will make Type 2 diabetes vanish, and that 7 minutes a day of relaxed Tai-Chi will give me a six pack in about 30 days.

    (My cast iron rule, I'm sure as almost all PBers, is: never buy anything advertised on Youtube.)

    YouTube ad-blocking is a medical good.
    Yes, but that is £5 per month to Big Tech Bro, and I'm already trying to keep it light on paid subscriptions.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 69,718

    Wales polling for the Senedd from More In Common

    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿New Senedd voting intention. Reform UK holds a 7-point lead over Plaid, while Labour is in third.
    ➡️ REF UK 31% (+29)
    🌼 PLAID 24% (+4)
    🌹 LAB 20% (–20)
    🌳 CON 13% (–13)
    🔶 LIB DEM 6% (+1)
    🌍 GREEN 5% (+3)
    30/1 - 10/2 N=806 (16+) changes w 2021 constituency vote

    Outside chance of Eluned Morgan staying on as First Minister if Labour edge Plaid, and they form coalition?
    Good morning

    No

    Labour in Wales are at the same point in time they were in Scotland after decades of government, and the Scots showed them they had enough and turned to the SNP

    I expect a Plaid first minister but with a difficult choice of partner due to the unpopularity of labour

    Just a small point but in that poll the conservatives were +3
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 60,701
    Selebian said:

    Battlebus said:

    Selebian said:

    Not sure if we've done this, but AI agent wrote a pissy blog post when matploblib pull request was rejected (as against policy, being AI)
    https://theshamblog.com/an-ai-agent-published-a-hit-piece-on-me/

    We're going to drown in this shit and the points made are valid - a new vector to hurt open source projects by drowning them in crappy PRs and also potential, as the maintainer notes, to intimidate, blackmail and damage the reputations of real people.

    Not sure what the solution is. German-style impressum on web pages? But only effective if implemented very widely and there are valid cases to remain anonymous, of course.

    I put this through Google Translate but it failed.
    Sometimes you have to follow the link, unless you want very long posts on here. Or simply ignore if you can't be bothered.

    @Malmesbury summary is a good tldr, although I'm not sure on point 4 - the matploblib guy seems to think this was an automated AI action, rather than a human getting a LLM to write a pissy blog post. If that's correct then this stuff will be produced at ridiculous volumes, if there's not even need for the human intervention.

    You could, for example, set up such an agent with a pissy and pedantic personality and an interest in politics and trains, point it here and... Would we even notice? Maybe one of our new posters is!
    Yes, could have been completely automated. AI is really monkey-see-money-do, so automated shit posting on rejection of a pull request is perfectly possible. Likely, even.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 32,069
    Cookie said:

    MattW said:

    Today's off topic question.

    (I suspect this is for @Leon .)

    Youtube ads are currently advising me that if I wear bamboo underpants, they will be stroked, then stolen, by my GF. Does this happen?

    TBF Youtube ads have previously advised me that my teeth can be made entirely uncrooked at minimal cost in a period of months, that standing on a rug with a metal mesh in it will make Type 2 diabetes vanish, and that 7 minutes a day of relaxed Tai-Chi will give me a six pack in about 30 days.

    (My cast iron rule, I'm sure as almost all PBers, is: never buy anything advertised on Youtube.)

    I started getting the tai chi ones recently - I suspect it must know I turned 50.

    Youtube ads make me nostalgic for real telly, where the merits the ads claimed for their products had to be rooted in some sort of reality.
    Youtube is covered by the ASA, but it obviously does not work.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 13,394
    Foxy said:

    A really interesting finding, which may explain the drop in Total Fertility Rate. Having a child is far more time intensive for parents than it used to be:

    https://bsky.app/profile/tobyn.bsky.social/post/3meq4etpgrs2d

    And a lot of the shift is in men, who now often do more direct childcare than women did in the Seventies, though women also have greatly increased the amount of time in direct child care:

    https://bsky.app/profile/tobyn.bsky.social/post/3meq4a5ozis2d

    It's weird. What happened to kids just doing their own thing for 6 hours after school, and all weekend? I just cycled about, read books and played video games - and from a very young age.
  • FossFoss Posts: 2,413
    MattW said:

    Foss said:

    MattW said:

    Today's off topic question.

    (I suspect this is for @Leon .)

    Youtube ads are currently advising me that if I wear bamboo underpants, they will be stroked, then stolen, by my GF. Does this happen?

    TBF Youtube ads have previously advised me that my teeth can be made entirely uncrooked at minimal cost in a period of months, that standing on a rug with a metal mesh in it will make Type 2 diabetes vanish, and that 7 minutes a day of relaxed Tai-Chi will give me a six pack in about 30 days.

    (My cast iron rule, I'm sure as almost all PBers, is: never buy anything advertised on Youtube.)

    YouTube ad-blocking is a medical good.
    Yes, but that is £5 per month to Big Tech Bro, and I'm already trying to keep it light on paid subscriptions.
    I didn't suggest paying...
  • MattWMattW Posts: 32,069
    Off to do things, but on the car-size thing, this is a useful website called Carsized comparing my huge Estate with a GMC pickup.


    https://www.carsized.com/en/cars/compare/skoda-superb-2015-estate-vs-gmc-sierra-2019-pickup-2500-crew-cab/
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 57,838
    MattW said:

    MattW said:

    Foxy said:

    Nigelb said:

    Moderna gives up on entirely on vaccine development for infectious diseases after the FDA decides it won't even review their flu vaccine - on which they've spent hundreds of millions, and which is more effective than existing vaccines.

    “Moderna’s CEO announced the company will no longer invest in new Phase 3 vaccine trials for infectious diseases: ‘You cannot make a return on investment if you don’t have access to the U.S. market.’ Vaccines for Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, and shingles have been shelved.”
    https://x.com/LeahLibresco/status/2021950503048065390

    An effective Epstein-Barr vaccine might almost eliminate future cases of MS.

    Trump health policy is as insane as he is.

    RFK Jr: I'm not scared of a germ. I used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats.

    https://bsky.app/profile/factpostnews.bsky.social/post/3meoq2jnrgb2z
    Is that AI?
    https://news.sky.com/story/robert-f-kennedy-jr-admits-he-used-to-snort-cocaine-off-toilet-seats-13506969
    Bloody hell.
    Hard to know which has done more damage to his brain, the worm or the coke.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 59,948
    MattW said:

    Sandpit said:

    MattW said:

    An interesting straw in the wind on oversized vehicles; a few Councils considering preventing oversized vehicles (5m+) from blocking up their car parks, before the problem gets out of hand.

    Pedestrians killed in collisions in the USA has almost doubled between 2009 and 2024 (~4000 to ~7500) mainly on the back of increasing use of "Light Trucks".

    I'm interested that it generally seems to have public support.

    (Mine hardly fits much of the time and that is 4.86m long.)

    https://www.mirror.co.uk/money/cars-hit-april-2026-760-36650395

    The US issue is primarily that legislation had made cars more and more expensive, compared to light trucks, in the last couple of decades, making trucks more popular as everyday transport for the working classes.

    Trump is also rolling back the start/stop feature mandate on cars, which is very unpopular because it defaults by law to being on every time you start the car.
    https://x.com/langmanvince/status/2022064655523623088
    No - I think it's regulatory capture pure and simple distorting the market for the last 50 years or so, starting with differing regulations for large and smaller vehicles in the CAFE (Corporate Average Fuel Economy) regulations.

    They have lower safety standards, and so give higher margins, and large ones are tax deductible whilst small ones are not. And many more rules.

    Then any number of protectionist measures prevent USA citizens accessing decent pickups and SUVs imported from abroad.

    Why would Americans ever want to import trucks?
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