Obama famously interefered in the Brexit vote a few days or perhaps weeks beforehand (I don't recall exactly) by calling for a Yes vote to staying in the EU.
He was invited by Cameron, who then stood there grinning inanely as Obama explained there was a queue. It irritated a lot of people and boosted Leave.
The Westminster constituency loses the substantial rural area of North Kincardshire, but gains a chunk of Aberdeen Central Holyrood constituency.
There were 46 365 votes cast in July 24 in Aberdeen South on a 59.9% turnout, while 34 669 were cast on a 55% turnout in May's Holyrood election in Aberdeen Deeside and North Kincardshire. So it is clear that the urban population gained is larger than the rural population lost.
The area gained was in Holyrood constituency Aberdeen Central which was heavily SNP (44%) with Lab in second and SCon on 13.9% in 4th place.
So the differences in boundaries favours an SNP hold. Particularly as SLab voters often seem reluctant to switch to SCon, and indeed often prefer the SNP when we look at transfers in local elections.
While the SCon are trying to make this a referendum on Oil and Gas, the Nationalist vote seems very sticky.
So I think SNP hold.
"The first rule of politics is to learn to count."
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
We should sanction the officers who did this. Don’t need them coming on vacation to the US. An absolute travesty.
I wonder if she realises that many Britons are avoiding/cancelling US vacations due to the current regime in the US.
Do the stats actually show that?
Staggering dip in US tourism is a troubling sign for the future
Son works for a middle sized tour company who mentioned this earlier in the year. Canada is up as are bookings worldwide for 2027/2028. It's not the lack of cash.
A man pled guilty to making a death threat against a local Councillor - he sent a picture of a hanging tree, and a "one day it will be you" message:
A man who sent death threats to a councillor has admitted to sending the messages in court.
Grzegorz Grzech, 36, of Beech Crescent, pleaded guilty to sending a message which "conveyed a threat of death" to Bingley councillor Susan Fricker at Bradford Magistrates Court on Thursday. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cgjpjd5595po
It's good to see a result. Note that this is still Sub Judice until after sentencing.
We should sanction the officers who did this. Don’t need them coming on vacation to the US. An absolute travesty.
I wonder if she realises that many Britons are avoiding/cancelling US vacations due to the current regime in the US.
Do the stats actually show that?
Staggering dip in US tourism is a troubling sign for the future
Son works for a middle sized tour company who mentioned this earlier in the year. Canada is up as are bookings worldwide for 2027/2028. It's not the lack of cash.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
Park the outrage bus. Did you actually read the article linked?
"Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said the organisation's 'foremost objective' was maintaining the security of banknotes and combating increasingly sophisticated counterfeiting techniques.
The Bank also pointed to an earlier public consultation which found a majority of respondents favoured nature as the theme for future notes."
Historical figures on notes have always been changed from time to time (Elizabeth Fry was replaced by Churchill for example) as a security issue.
Wildlife makes a nice change, and no doubt will be replaced by something else in time.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
Park the outrage bus. Did you actually read the article linked?
"Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said the organisation's 'foremost objective' was maintaining the security of banknotes and combating increasingly sophisticated counterfeiting techniques.
The Bank also pointed to an earlier public consultation which found a majority of respondents favoured nature as the theme for future notes."
Historical figures on notes have always been changed from time to time (Elizabeth Fry was replaced by Churchill for example) as a security issue.
Wildlife makes a nice change, and no doubt will be replaced by something else in time.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
Park the outrage bus. Did you actually read the article linked?
"Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said the organisation's 'foremost objective' was maintaining the security of banknotes and combating increasingly sophisticated counterfeiting techniques.
The Bank also pointed to an earlier public consultation which found a majority of respondents favoured nature as the theme for future notes."
Historical figures on notes have always been changed from time to time (Elizabeth Fry was replaced by Churchill for example) as a security issue.
Wildlife makes a nice change, and no doubt will be replaced by something else in time.
To recap: - 15th Naval Arsenal is currently detonating west of St Petersburg. - Kronstadt Naval Base has been hit again, days after corvette Boykiy was severely damaged. - Mariupol port is burning (likely oil storage). - Oil storage is burning at Ust-Labinsk, Krasnodar Krai.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
It's quite funny. The Daily Mail and Bobajob Jenners are trying a bit too hard in the outrage fluffing department.
The Bank of England's version is 'we held a consultation and the public said they wanted British natural heritage on our banknotes.' It's a bit of an open and shut case.
Aren't populists supposed to want to follow the voters?
These loonies just want to stop the technology full stop.
‘ LIVING STREETS DOES NOT WANT TO SEE DELIVERY ROBOTS ON OUR PAVEMENTS.’
In all caps too. Sign of issues with the person who wrote the original.
I think you have your groups muddled up - Living Streets used to be called the Pedestrians' Association, and have been around since 1929. They were involved in things like the introduction of the Highway Code in the early 1930s and the invention of Pedestrian Crossings, including Zebras.
I don't that keeping vehicles off pavements is much of a demand. They are pedestrian spaces.
Here they will stand more after things like making sure robots no not knock visually impaired people over; if left unaddressed it will go exactly like lithium batteries have, and before you know it the robots will double or treble in size and we will have a whole new wild west full of problems that were ignored rather than thought about ahead of time.
Are you thinking of Reclaim the Streets, who have somewhat anarchistic habits?
Bugger - typos and time limits.
"I don't see that keeping vehicles, especially ones not under control of a driver, off pavements, is much of a demand. They are pedestrian spaces."
As an aside, robots aren't the main problem around here but the increasing amount of pavement being taken over by people who won't cut their hedges. This is forcing people, prams and others onto busy roads. Presume the council could, if they had funds, require people to get their plants off the highway. Anyone campaigning for that? (Problem of living in a green and pleasant land!)
There are lots of people working on that.
It is the type of thing you can usually report via a web form or the Council App, probably under "obstructed pavement" or "obstructed highway" (the pavement/footway is a public highway, on which pedestrians are entitled to use of the full width). *
In Notts I can report it via the app and I think it picks up the location from the phone, and I can upload a piccie directly. If vulnerable groups (elderly, disabled, children) were being forced into the road I would categorise it as an emergency. That is how the police usually categorise pavement parking they are willing to deal with in most of England.
The best way is imo always "report it on the spot", otherwise there's an overhead of remembering, recording, finding time etc. Most of my stuff is longer term requiring commentary, so I have a big spreadsheet to maintain.
* As an aside, Double Yellow lines also cover the full width of the footway as well as the carriageway, so Council Officers can enforce on those where the problem is on the pavement.
These loonies just want to stop the technology full stop.
‘ LIVING STREETS DOES NOT WANT TO SEE DELIVERY ROBOTS ON OUR PAVEMENTS.’
In all caps too. Sign of issues with the person who wrote the original.
I think you have your groups muddled up - Living Streets used to be called the Pedestrians' Association, and have been around since 1929. They were involved in things like the introduction of the Highway Code in the early 1930s and the invention of Pedestrian Crossings, including Zebras.
I don't that keeping vehicles off pavements is much of a demand. They are pedestrian spaces.
Here they will stand more after things like making sure robots no not knock visually impaired people over; if left unaddressed it will go exactly like lithium batteries have, and before you know it the robots will double or treble in size and we will have a whole new wild west full of problems that were ignored rather than thought about ahead of time.
Are you thinking of Reclaim the Streets, who have somewhat anarchistic habits?
Bugger - typos and time limits.
"I don't see that keeping vehicles, especially ones not under control of a driver, off pavements, is much of a demand. They are pedestrian spaces."
As an aside, robots aren't the main problem around here but the increasing amount of pavement being taken over by people who won't cut their hedges. This is forcing people, prams and others onto busy roads. Presume the council could, if they had funds, require people to get their plants off the highway. Anyone campaigning for that? (Problem of living in a green and pleasant land!)
There are lots of people working on that.
It is the type of thing you can usually report via a web form or the Council App, probably under "obstructed pavement" or "obstructed highway" (the pavement/footway is a public highway, on which pedestrians are entitled to use of the full width). *
In Notts I can report it via the app and I think it picks up the location from the phone, and I can upload a piccie directly. If vulnerable groups (elderly, disabled, children) were being forced into the road I would categorise it as an emergency. That is how the police usually categorise pavement parking they are willing to deal with in most of England.
The best way is imo always "report it on the spot", otherwise there's an overhead of remembering, recording, finding time etc. Most of my stuff is longer term requiring commentary, so I have a big spreadsheet to maintain.
* As an aside, Double Yellow lines also cover the full width of the footway as well as the carriageway, so Council Officers can enforce on those where the problem is on the pavement.
A bonus bit: Local disabled or pensioner groups will be concerned about this, so useful places to ask might be eg the local U3A, or walking or civic amenity groups. It will also be an issue on which they agree, unlike say bus stop bypasses where disabled groups would have disagreements.
It is an increasing trend that walking / wheeling / cycling groups work across their common interests, so for example Walk-Ride-GM are very active, and "Bike Worcester" (who have broadened out) have a Google Map of where they want to see benches put in for pedestrians who are less energetic than our PB Postman to take a pause, catch breath and admire the view. They are mainly cycling orientated, but have also mapped free parking, the benches mentioned and road crossings.
We should sanction the officers who did this. Don’t need them coming on vacation to the US. An absolute travesty.
I wonder if she realises that many Britons are avoiding/cancelling US vacations due to the current regime in the US.
Do the stats actually show that?
Staggering dip in US tourism is a troubling sign for the future
Son works for a middle sized tour company who mentioned this earlier in the year. Canada is up as are bookings worldwide for 2027/2028. It's not the lack of cash.
I think the piece is a few months behind international perceptions, and is still trying to believe that it is a flesh wound, not an amputation. There are various things missing - such as the $250 surcharge Trump has imposed on international visitors over domestic visitors to visit national parks (and the problem that the pass has a picture of Trump on it - US Resident's version below):
For international (non-U.S.) tourists, national park entrance fees now include a surcharge. Foreign visitors pay a $250 non-resident annual pass. At 11 premium parks, tourists without an annual pass must pay an additional $100 per-person surcharge on top of the regular entrance fee.
We should sanction the officers who did this. Don’t need them coming on vacation to the US. An absolute travesty.
I wonder if she realises that many Britons are avoiding/cancelling US vacations due to the current regime in the US.
Do the stats actually show that?
Staggering dip in US tourism is a troubling sign for the future
Son works for a middle sized tour company who mentioned this earlier in the year. Canada is up as are bookings worldwide for 2027/2028. It's not the lack of cash.
I think the piece is a few months behind international perceptions, and is still trying to believe that it is a flesh wound, not an amputation. There are various things missing - such as the $250 surcharge Trump has imposed on international visitors over domestic visitors to visit national parks (and the problem that the pass has a picture of Trump on it - US Resident's version below):
For international (non-U.S.) tourists, national park entrance fees now include a surcharge. Foreign visitors pay a $250 non-resident annual pass. At 11 premium parks, tourists without an annual pass must pay an additional $100 per-person surcharge on top of the regular entrance fee.
That picture alone is enough to put me off visiting.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
It's quite funny. The Daily Mail and Bobajob Jenners are trying a bit too hard in the outrage fluffing department.
The Bank of England's version is 'we held a consultation and the public said they wanted British natural heritage on our banknotes.' It's a bit of an open and shut case.
Aren't populists supposed to want to follow the voters?
Surely it's the other way round - voters are supposed to follow the populists. Or else...
A man pled guilty to making a death threat against a local Councillor - he sent a picture of a hanging tree, and a "one day it will be you" message:
A man who sent death threats to a councillor has admitted to sending the messages in court.
Grzegorz Grzech, 36, of Beech Crescent, pleaded guilty to sending a message which "conveyed a threat of death" to Bingley councillor Susan Fricker at Bradford Magistrates Court on Thursday. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cgjpjd5595po
It's good to see a result. Note that this is still Sub Judice until after sentencing.
Just a note that unlike schools in Cirencester, Malvern or Thetford this one had nothing at all to do with VAT and nobody is even pretending it did. The school was actually in a very good financial position.
I'm not saying too much but I very much hope that the police are investigating.
FWIW, I thought at the time that Obama's interference in the Brexit vote was wrong -- and may have been counter-productive, having the opposite effect he intended.
(What should he have done? Stayed silent unless asked, and then said he hoped that the EU and Britain would work through this to be better friends, however the vote went. And then changed the subject.)
I wasn't bothered by Obama's intervention because I'm a global free speech advocate, but the interesting point is how the left in the UK is fine with interventions from abroad as long as they agree with them, but they don't like it when they don't agree with them. So hypocrisy, in other words.
I suppose there is a thread. The US, then, felt they had an interest in the UK remaining part of the European Union. Now they seem to feel they have an interest in the UK succumbing to racial division and turning to far-right ethno-nationalism.
Obama's intervention, particularly the "back of the queue" comment was unusually unwise but stated an opinion based on evidence and reality. Trump has similarly intervene on this level regularly for eighteen months.
The DoJ and Vance's intervention is somewhat different. It is promoting, an, at best, questionable narrative by a political opponent of the elected Government and it is fermenting discord predicated on what most of us consider to be a lie.
There is an irony to Vance's assertion that Nowak demonstrates, if you like, a Roman Empire like decline in first World standards when we can point to Renee Good, Alex Pretti, Sandra Bland and dare, I say it, George Floyd.
Normalising the Trump crime family regime by comparing to what went before and claiming hypocrisy from previous administrations is laughable.
We should sanction the officers who did this. Don’t need them coming on vacation to the US. An absolute travesty.
I wonder if she realises that many Britons are avoiding/cancelling US vacations due to the current regime in the US.
Do the stats actually show that?
Staggering dip in US tourism is a troubling sign for the future
Son works for a middle sized tour company who mentioned this earlier in the year. Canada is up as are bookings worldwide for 2027/2028. It's not the lack of cash.
I think the piece is a few months behind international perceptions, and is still trying to believe that it is a flesh wound, not an amputation. There are various things missing - such as the $250 surcharge Trump has imposed on international visitors over domestic visitors to visit national parks (and the problem that the pass has a picture of Trump on it - US Resident's version below):
For international (non-U.S.) tourists, national park entrance fees now include a surcharge. Foreign visitors pay a $250 non-resident annual pass. At 11 premium parks, tourists without an annual pass must pay an additional $100 per-person surcharge on top of the regular entrance fee.
That picture alone is enough to put me off visiting.
You can get very nifty stickers to go over it with animal or landscape pictures.
We should sanction the officers who did this. Don’t need them coming on vacation to the US. An absolute travesty.
I wonder if she realises that many Britons are avoiding/cancelling US vacations due to the current regime in the US.
Do the stats actually show that?
Staggering dip in US tourism is a troubling sign for the future
Son works for a middle sized tour company who mentioned this earlier in the year. Canada is up as are bookings worldwide for 2027/2028. It's not the lack of cash.
I think the piece is a few months behind international perceptions, and is still trying to believe that it is a flesh wound, not an amputation. There are various things missing - such as the $250 surcharge Trump has imposed on international visitors over domestic visitors to visit national parks (and the problem that the pass has a picture of Trump on it - US Resident's version below):
For international (non-U.S.) tourists, national park entrance fees now include a surcharge. Foreign visitors pay a $250 non-resident annual pass. At 11 premium parks, tourists without an annual pass must pay an additional $100 per-person surcharge on top of the regular entrance fee.
That picture alone is enough to put me off visiting.
You can get very nifty stickers to go over it with animal or landscape pictures.
We should sanction the officers who did this. Don’t need them coming on vacation to the US. An absolute travesty.
I wonder if she realises that many Britons are avoiding/cancelling US vacations due to the current regime in the US.
Do the stats actually show that?
Staggering dip in US tourism is a troubling sign for the future
Son works for a middle sized tour company who mentioned this earlier in the year. Canada is up as are bookings worldwide for 2027/2028. It's not the lack of cash.
I think the piece is a few months behind international perceptions, and is still trying to believe that it is a flesh wound, not an amputation. There are various things missing - such as the $250 surcharge Trump has imposed on international visitors over domestic visitors to visit national parks (and the problem that the pass has a picture of Trump on it - US Resident's version below):
For international (non-U.S.) tourists, national park entrance fees now include a surcharge. Foreign visitors pay a $250 non-resident annual pass. At 11 premium parks, tourists without an annual pass must pay an additional $100 per-person surcharge on top of the regular entrance fee.
That picture alone is enough to put me off visiting.
You can get very nifty stickers to go over it with animal or landscape pictures.
We should sanction the officers who did this. Don’t need them coming on vacation to the US. An absolute travesty.
I wonder if she realises that many Britons are avoiding/cancelling US vacations due to the current regime in the US.
Do the stats actually show that?
Staggering dip in US tourism is a troubling sign for the future
Son works for a middle sized tour company who mentioned this earlier in the year. Canada is up as are bookings worldwide for 2027/2028. It's not the lack of cash.
I think the piece is a few months behind international perceptions, and is still trying to believe that it is a flesh wound, not an amputation. There are various things missing - such as the $250 surcharge Trump has imposed on international visitors over domestic visitors to visit national parks (and the problem that the pass has a picture of Trump on it - US Resident's version below):
For international (non-U.S.) tourists, national park entrance fees now include a surcharge. Foreign visitors pay a $250 non-resident annual pass. At 11 premium parks, tourists without an annual pass must pay an additional $100 per-person surcharge on top of the regular entrance fee.
That picture alone is enough to put me off visiting.
You can get very nifty stickers to go over it with animal or landscape pictures.
So the sticker now goes on a transparent sleeve you put it in.
The whole problem is de face on de pass.
I had not considered it before, but the origin of "deface" is from Medieval times when the face of eg a miscreant would be "defaced" ('mutilatio'), such as removal of the nose or the ears.
We should sanction the officers who did this. Don’t need them coming on vacation to the US. An absolute travesty.
I wonder if she realises that many Britons are avoiding/cancelling US vacations due to the current regime in the US.
Do the stats actually show that?
Staggering dip in US tourism is a troubling sign for the future
Son works for a middle sized tour company who mentioned this earlier in the year. Canada is up as are bookings worldwide for 2027/2028. It's not the lack of cash.
I think the piece is a few months behind international perceptions, and is still trying to believe that it is a flesh wound, not an amputation. There are various things missing - such as the $250 surcharge Trump has imposed on international visitors over domestic visitors to visit national parks (and the problem that the pass has a picture of Trump on it - US Resident's version below):
For international (non-U.S.) tourists, national park entrance fees now include a surcharge. Foreign visitors pay a $250 non-resident annual pass. At 11 premium parks, tourists without an annual pass must pay an additional $100 per-person surcharge on top of the regular entrance fee.
That picture alone is enough to put me off visiting.
You can get very nifty stickers to go over it with animal or landscape pictures.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
It's quite funny. The Daily Mail and Bobajob Jenners are trying a bit too hard in the outrage fluffing department.
The Bank of England's version is 'we held a consultation and the public said they wanted British natural heritage on our banknotes.' It's a bit of an open and shut case.
Aren't populists supposed to want to follow the voters?
Surely it's the other way round - voters are supposed to follow the populists. Or else...
Also wrong. Populists want to be on the bank notes. That's what they mean by "great men of history"
We should sanction the officers who did this. Don’t need them coming on vacation to the US. An absolute travesty.
I wonder if she realises that many Britons are avoiding/cancelling US vacations due to the current regime in the US.
Do the stats actually show that?
Staggering dip in US tourism is a troubling sign for the future
Son works for a middle sized tour company who mentioned this earlier in the year. Canada is up as are bookings worldwide for 2027/2028. It's not the lack of cash.
I think the piece is a few months behind international perceptions, and is still trying to believe that it is a flesh wound, not an amputation. There are various things missing - such as the $250 surcharge Trump has imposed on international visitors over domestic visitors to visit national parks (and the problem that the pass has a picture of Trump on it - US Resident's version below):
For international (non-U.S.) tourists, national park entrance fees now include a surcharge. Foreign visitors pay a $250 non-resident annual pass. At 11 premium parks, tourists without an annual pass must pay an additional $100 per-person surcharge on top of the regular entrance fee.
That picture alone is enough to put me off visiting.
You can get very nifty stickers to go over it with animal or landscape pictures.
Last month, Vladimir Putin listed the economic benefits Armenia stood to lose if it pursued closer ties with the West, and pointedly noted that "the crisis in Ukraine began with efforts to move toward EU accession".
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
US pharmaceutical companies in Ireland rushed exports a year ago to get ahead of the tariffs - that's now unwinding in the figures.
So did that rush last year boost Ireland's and thus the Eurozone's GDP?
Yes. That was noted at the time in relation to Ireland's figures - the statistic bods here highlight a measure called Modified Domestic Demand (MDD) which gives a measure of the local economy without the distortions from multinationals - but I don't remember anyone pointing to it to explain away growth in Eurozone GDP.
US pharmaceutical companies in Ireland rushed exports a year ago to get ahead of the tariffs - that's now unwinding in the figures.
So did that rush last year boost Ireland's and thus the Eurozone's GDP?
Yes. That was noted at the time in relation to Ireland's figures - the statistic bods here highlight a measure called Modified Domestic Demand (MDD) which gives a measure of the local economy without the distortions from multinationals - but I don't remember anyone pointing to it to explain away growth in Eurozone GDP.
Here's an article about 2025H1 economic figures for Ireland.
But when the impact of multinationals is included Gross Domestic Product surged by 18.5% due to strong exports - particularly in the pharmaceutical sector.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
We should sanction the officers who did this. Don’t need them coming on vacation to the US. An absolute travesty.
I wonder if she realises that many Britons are avoiding/cancelling US vacations due to the current regime in the US.
Do the stats actually show that?
Staggering dip in US tourism is a troubling sign for the future
Son works for a middle sized tour company who mentioned this earlier in the year. Canada is up as are bookings worldwide for 2027/2028. It's not the lack of cash.
I think the piece is a few months behind international perceptions, and is still trying to believe that it is a flesh wound, not an amputation. There are various things missing - such as the $250 surcharge Trump has imposed on international visitors over domestic visitors to visit national parks (and the problem that the pass has a picture of Trump on it - US Resident's version below):
For international (non-U.S.) tourists, national park entrance fees now include a surcharge. Foreign visitors pay a $250 non-resident annual pass. At 11 premium parks, tourists without an annual pass must pay an additional $100 per-person surcharge on top of the regular entrance fee.
That picture alone is enough to put me off visiting.
You can get very nifty stickers to go over it with animal or landscape pictures.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
Park the outrage bus. Did you actually read the article linked?
"Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said the organisation's 'foremost objective' was maintaining the security of banknotes and combating increasingly sophisticated counterfeiting techniques.
The Bank also pointed to an earlier public consultation which found a majority of respondents favoured nature as the theme for future notes."
Historical figures on notes have always been changed from time to time (Elizabeth Fry was replaced by Churchill for example) as a security issue.
Wildlife makes a nice change, and no doubt will be replaced by something else in time.
Yes, I read it.
Didn't read your silly post though.
Quite clearly you did!
No, I read the first line only. Skipped over the rest.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
It's quite funny. The Daily Mail and Bobajob Jenners are trying a bit too hard in the outrage fluffing department.
The Bank of England's version is 'we held a consultation and the public said they wanted British natural heritage on our banknotes.' It's a bit of an open and shut case.
Aren't populists supposed to want to follow the voters?
It was a self-selecting consultation, and rather a weak one at that, not a general election.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
young people dont use bank notes
You don't speak for young people.
In the style of Northern Ireland, I’ve just elected myself Community Leader For Young People.
I’ll need 6 figures a year, a big pension and a blind eye turned to my entrepreneurial activities.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Burnham wants stronger public control OR public ownership of utilities.
I think this is the right move. Being non-ideological but accepting the market has totally failed is the right move here.
One option that hasn’t been mentioned is letting Thames Water go bust, the government saves the suppliers (with a loan) and the government creates a golden share in the revived business.
Dunno, he seems to do a remarkable job of uniting the countries in whose politics he sticks his shit covered oar.
Didn't he visit Hungary prior to the election where Orban lost? And failed to get Iran onside. He's does like a good sermon so perhaps the/a church is calling him.
That does not seem to cover the detail, which seems to have slightly unfortunate timing.
1950s+ USA spent tens of millions of $ on eradication programmes, using "sterile flies". North American eradication by 2000. 2024/2025 New world screwworm detected in Mexico. Mid 2025: DOGE cuts funding for project to monitor the New world screwworm in Mexico/Central America. Slightly further on in Mid 2025: US Govt ended temporary ban on import of cattle from Mexico. Mid 2026: Screw worm cases detected in Texas.
That's still arguably circumstantial, but it won't help the Republicans in Texas unless they nail it down. It will perhaps appear in Democrat campaign adverts.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
young people dont use bank notes
You don't speak for young people.
Can I speak for some of them?
You can, and you actually think and reflect and have a mind of your own which is a refreshing change on here.
There's a fire at an oil refinery in Tyumen oblast - just under 2,000 km from Ukraine. This refinery was previously hit in October 2025.
There is no let up for Russia from the attacks on its oil infrastructure.
Seems this might not have been a Ukrainian drone. Being suggested that this was due to a lack of maintenance, or low quality parts due to import substitution. Oops.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Burnham wants stronger public control OR public ownership of utilities.
I think this is the right move. Being non-ideological but accepting the market has totally failed is the right move here.
It is undoubtedly true that our regulation of privatised service suppliers has been absolutely chronic even by our own dismal standards. Who could possibly have foreseen that loading water companies with billions of debt underwritten by customer income flows would not end well? Who could have imagined that regulatory capture was an inevitable consequence of allowing those employed by those services to move to the private sector on early "retirement"? Who could have realised that incentivising capital investment with guaranteed returns was not the most efficient way of allocating resources?
Anyone who might have taken an O level in maths or economics perhaps?
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
It's quite funny. The Daily Mail and Bobajob Jenners are trying a bit too hard in the outrage fluffing department.
The Bank of England's version is 'we held a consultation and the public said they wanted British natural heritage on our banknotes.' It's a bit of an open and shut case.
Aren't populists supposed to want to follow the voters?
What's funny is the tendency of our hip and trendy progressives (average age 62) to leap on any unjustifiable shite as long as it's anti-traditional and Farage wouldn't like it.
I'll give you at least a small amount of credit for not demeaning your own intelligence by going on the 'security' angle, as if dots arranged on a substrate are somehow more secure when they are arranged in the shape of a hedgehog than Winston Churchill.
But the 'public consultation' isn't much better as a figleaf. Focus groups are not a plebiscite, and I think we all know you can get them to say whatever you like. The public are allowed to vote on which animal of farthing wood they want on the notes - if the Bank is so confident that public opinion is behind them, why not allow them to vote for Churchill and the rest too, to test their theory?
These figures from our history have not diminished. Europe still enjoys the freedom from Nazism that Churchill helped to give it. Readers worldwide still fall in love with Austen's books. It is not that our history has become irrelevant, it is that in some quarters we're clearly doing a shit job of teaching it. If young people don't find Churchill relevant, we realise we need to teach them better, we don't welcome their complacent ignorance and change everything to fit around it.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
It's quite funny. The Daily Mail and Bobajob Jenners are trying a bit too hard in the outrage fluffing department.
The Bank of England's version is 'we held a consultation and the public said they wanted British natural heritage on our banknotes.' It's a bit of an open and shut case.
Aren't populists supposed to want to follow the voters?
What's funny is the tendency of our hip and trendy progressives (average age 62) to leap on any unjustifiable shite as long as it's anti-traditional and Farage wouldn't like it.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
It's quite funny. The Daily Mail and Bobajob Jenners are trying a bit too hard in the outrage fluffing department.
The Bank of England's version is 'we held a consultation and the public said they wanted British natural heritage on our banknotes.' It's a bit of an open and shut case.
Aren't populists supposed to want to follow the voters?
What's funny is the tendency of our hip and trendy progressives (average age 62) to leap on any unjustifiable shite as long as it's anti-traditional and Farage wouldn't like it.
I'll give you at least a small amount of credit for not demeaning your own intelligence by going on the 'security' angle, as if dots arranged on a substrate are somehow more secure when they are arranged in the shape of a hedgehog than Winston Churchill.
But the 'public consultation' isn't much better as a figleaf. Focus groups are not a plebiscite, and I think we all know you can get them to say whatever you like. The public are allowed to vote on which animal of farthing wood they want on the notes - if the Bank is so confident that public opinion is behind them, why not allow them to vote for Churchill and the rest too, to test their theory?
These figures from our history have not diminished. Europe still enjoys the freedom from Nazism that Churchill gave it. Readers worldwide still fall in love with Austen's books. It is not that our history has become irrelevant, it is that in some quarters we're clearly doing a shit job of teaching it. If young people don't find Churchill relevant, we realise we need to teach them better, we don't welcome their complacent ignorance and change everything to fit around it.
You're developing a fine pomposity. It's just a banknote.
Most voters don't seem greatly to care. (Though is you read the rest of this link, you'll find that Ed Davey agrees with you.) https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cy03zy1lr8go ..A YouGov poll of more than 5,000 people last July suggested 34% of Lib Dems wanted nature on notes, compared with 19% wanting notable British historical figures. It was close among Conservative and Reform supporters. Some 30% of Tories and Reform voters wanted historical figures, compared with 26% for the Conservatives and 25% for Reform favouring nature...
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
It's quite funny. The Daily Mail and Bobajob Jenners are trying a bit too hard in the outrage fluffing department.
The Bank of England's version is 'we held a consultation and the public said they wanted British natural heritage on our banknotes.' It's a bit of an open and shut case.
Aren't populists supposed to want to follow the voters?
What's funny is the tendency of our hip and trendy progressives (average age 62) to leap on any unjustifiable shite as long as it's anti-traditional and Farage wouldn't like it.
This site is dominated by these pillocks.
It's quite remarkable that they fondly imagine that the grandeur of 'dull competence' hangs around them like ermine, when all the time they're furiously arguing that black is white in defence of whatever god-awful shit sandwich we're being served by the blob this week.
"Bank of England axed Churchill, Turing, and Austen from notes after being told they were 'not representative of the UK's cultural and natural diversity'"
Totally circular logic. Young people who've become largely ignorant of our history and where knowledge is shared, told that it is shameful and wicked, strangely don't like or appreciate representations of it. Therefore we take it off bank notes so even fewer people are aware of our history and the idea that it is shameful is further reinforced. The only thing that should change on the banknotes is they should add text in plain English explaining why these people are there.
The way round this is to "Woke it up" to the powers that be, so they get all excited instead.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
It's quite funny. The Daily Mail and Bobajob Jenners are trying a bit too hard in the outrage fluffing department.
The Bank of England's version is 'we held a consultation and the public said they wanted British natural heritage on our banknotes.' It's a bit of an open and shut case.
Aren't populists supposed to want to follow the voters?
What's funny is the tendency of our hip and trendy progressives (average age 62) to leap on any unjustifiable shite as long as it's anti-traditional and Farage wouldn't like it.
I'll give you at least a small amount of credit for not demeaning your own intelligence by going on the 'security' angle, as if dots arranged on a substrate are somehow more secure when they are arranged in the shape of a hedgehog than Winston Churchill.
But the 'public consultation' isn't much better as a figleaf. Focus groups are not a plebiscite, and I think we all know you can get them to say whatever you like. The public are allowed to vote on which animal of farthing wood they want on the notes - if the Bank is so confident that public opinion is behind them, why not allow them to vote for Churchill and the rest too, to test their theory?
These figures from our history have not diminished. Europe still enjoys the freedom from Nazism that Churchill helped to give it. Readers worldwide still fall in love with Austen's books. It is not that our history has become irrelevant, it is that in some quarters we're clearly doing a shit job of teaching it. If young people don't find Churchill relevant, we realise we need to teach them better, we don't welcome their complacent ignorance and change everything to fit around it.
It is not even traditional. Traditionally UK banknotes have been plain.
We have only had historical figures on our banknotes since 1970, and Churchill has only been on there since 2016.
It is a manufactured, attention-seeking fuss about a complete non-issue. This is peak snowflake.
That does not seem to cover the detail, which seems to have slightly unfortunate timing.
1950s+ USA spent tens of millions of $ on eradication programmes, using "sterile flies". North American eradication by 2000. 2024/2025 New world screwworm detected in Mexico. Mid 2025: DOGE cuts funding for project to monitor the New world screwworm in Mexico/Central America. Slightly further on in Mid 2025: US Govt ended temporary ban on import of cattle from Mexico. Mid 2026: Screw worm cases detected in Texas.
That's still arguably circumstantial, but it won't help the Republicans in Texas unless they nail it down. It will perhaps appear in Democrat campaign adverts.
He is the sole reason to hope that Trump survives his full term.
BBC Radio 4 news this morning going big on this. They seem pretty outraged that someone as senior and as impressive as the VPOTUS has had to intervene to call out the murderous, white hating, two tier racist scum that is the British Government.
Renee Good and Alex Pretti wave meekly. I am humming a Manic Street Preachers song to myself.
Comments
A real low point.
Thus, Turing is Gay, Austen a feminist icon and Churchill, with his dual British-American heritage, an internationalist and global citizen; you could try and put on there advocacy for a united Europe as well.
Watch how they lap it up.
Pressure from Russia on Armenia: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3626n1epd5o
A man pled guilty to making a death threat against a local Councillor - he sent a picture of a hanging tree, and a "one day it will be you" message:
A man who sent death threats to a councillor has admitted to sending the messages in court.
Grzegorz Grzech, 36, of Beech Crescent, pleaded guilty to sending a message which "conveyed a threat of death" to Bingley councillor Susan Fricker at Bradford Magistrates Court on Thursday.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cgjpjd5595po
It's good to see a result. Note that this is still Sub Judice until after sentencing.
https://www.theguardian.com/football/2026/jun/05/toronto-world-cup-fifa?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Other
"Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said the organisation's 'foremost objective' was maintaining the security of banknotes and combating increasingly sophisticated counterfeiting techniques.
The Bank also pointed to an earlier public consultation which found a majority of respondents favoured nature as the theme for future notes."
Historical figures on notes have always been changed from time to time (Elizabeth Fry was replaced by Churchill for example) as a security issue.
Wildlife makes a nice change, and no doubt will be replaced by something else in time.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kjDXjcNU2rw
PS have a sickbag handy almost from the start
Didn't read your silly post though.
To recap:
- 15th Naval Arsenal is currently detonating west of St Petersburg.
- Kronstadt Naval Base has been hit again, days after corvette Boykiy was severely damaged.
- Mariupol port is burning (likely oil storage).
- Oil storage is burning at Ust-Labinsk, Krasnodar Krai.
The Bank of England's version is 'we held a consultation and the public said they wanted British natural heritage on our banknotes.' It's a bit of an open and shut case.
Aren't populists supposed to want to follow the voters?
It is the type of thing you can usually report via a web form or the Council App, probably under "obstructed pavement" or "obstructed highway" (the pavement/footway is a public highway, on which pedestrians are entitled to use of the full width). *
In Notts I can report it via the app and I think it picks up the location from the phone, and I can upload a piccie directly. If vulnerable groups (elderly, disabled, children) were being forced into the road I would categorise it as an emergency. That is how the police usually categorise pavement parking they are willing to deal with in most of England.
The best way is imo always "report it on the spot", otherwise there's an overhead of remembering, recording, finding time etc. Most of my stuff is longer term requiring commentary, so I have a big spreadsheet to maintain.
* As an aside, Double Yellow lines also cover the full width of the footway as well as the carriageway, so Council Officers can enforce on those where the problem is on the pavement.
It is an increasing trend that walking / wheeling / cycling groups work across their common interests, so for example Walk-Ride-GM are very active, and "Bike Worcester" (who have broadened out) have a Google Map of where they want to see benches put in for pedestrians who are less energetic than our PB Postman to take a pause, catch breath and admire the view. They are mainly cycling orientated, but have also mapped free parking, the benches mentioned and road crossings.
This is their map page: https://www.bikeworcester.org.uk/maps
When the eggs hatch, hundreds of larvae burrow through living flesh with sharp mouths, eventually killing their host if left untreated.
Bonus point: White or Brown?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cevpv3r7jmpo
Betting PostF1: backed Leclerc at 2.18 to win the race.
https://morrisf1.blogspot.com/2026/06/monaco-2026-pre-qualifying.html
I think the piece is a few months behind international perceptions, and is still trying to believe that it is a flesh wound, not an amputation. There are various things missing - such as the $250 surcharge Trump has imposed on international visitors over domestic visitors to visit national parks (and the problem that the pass has a picture of Trump on it - US Resident's version below):
For international (non-U.S.) tourists, national park entrance fees now include a surcharge. Foreign visitors pay a $250 non-resident annual pass. At 11 premium parks, tourists without an annual pass must pay an additional $100 per-person surcharge on top of the regular entrance fee.
Susan is my councillor.
I'm not saying too much but I very much hope that the police are investigating.
The DoJ and Vance's intervention is somewhat different. It is promoting, an, at best, questionable narrative by a political opponent of the elected Government and it is fermenting discord predicated on what most of us consider to be a lie.
There is an irony to Vance's assertion that Nowak demonstrates, if you like, a Roman Empire like decline in first World standards when we can point to Renee Good, Alex Pretti, Sandra Bland and dare, I say it, George Floyd.
Normalising the Trump crime family regime by comparing to what went before and claiming hypocrisy from previous administrations is laughable.
Is the Ivanka tape for real though? The speak looks a bit odd, could be poor lipsynch or AI maybe? Who knows these days.
Funny though.
So it is now policy that if a pass is "defaced" by a sticker it is invalid.
https://www.npr.org/2026/01/09/nx-s1-5672341/national-park-updates-guidelines-stop-visitors-defacing-trump-picture-pass
So the sticker now goes on a transparent sleeve you put it in.
The man behind why living people are legally bound NOT to be put on US legal tender can be viewed below.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spencer_M._Clark
Who knew ? Not me.
Can't wait to go to their exclusive island in the Mediterranean though.
Last month, Vladimir Putin listed the economic benefits Armenia stood to lose if it pursued closer ties with the West, and pointedly noted that "the crisis in Ukraine began with efforts to move toward EU accession".
https://www.rte.ie/news/business/2025/0904/1531781-cso-gdp-figures/
But when the impact of multinationals is included Gross Domestic Product surged by 18.5% due to strong exports - particularly in the pharmaceutical sector.
One thing I wonder is how well these will function in US suburbs, which are usually designed to make walking difficult or impossible.
How will Bo and Luke driving their planker-tanker with some DUI treat a delivery robot 2ft out in the road doing 4mph ?
(There will be a fat-fatter-fattest-robot war, just as there is currently a fat-fatter-fattest-SUV war.)
Tight control of the money supply - a la Maggie !!
Can the policy be announced in advance, so no one wants one?
I think this is the right move. Being non-ideological but accepting the market has totally failed is the right move here.
There is no let up for Russia from the attacks on its oil infrastructure.
I’ll need 6 figures a year, a big pension and a blind eye turned to my entrepreneurial activities.
But the suburbs are sparsely populated enough that there are fewer issues with using flying drones.
Massive Ukrainian drone attack on Russia currently underway. More than 400.
Areas of St Petersburg and Kronstadt have been closed, with mobile internet shutdown. Reports that some prime military sites have been targeted.
Super #explodey
https://bsky.app/profile/chadbourn.bsky.social/post/3mnm65fuhts23
With explicit vetos over various things.
1950s+ USA spent tens of millions of $ on eradication programmes, using "sterile flies". North American eradication by 2000.
2024/2025 New world screwworm detected in Mexico.
Mid 2025: DOGE cuts funding for project to monitor the New world screwworm in Mexico/Central America.
Slightly further on in Mid 2025: US Govt ended temporary ban on import of cattle from Mexico.
Mid 2026: Screw worm cases detected in Texas.
That's still arguably circumstantial, but it won't help the Republicans in Texas unless they nail it down. It will perhaps appear in Democrat campaign adverts.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/maryroeloffs/2026/06/04/screwworm-in-texas-cattle-could-drive-up-beef-prices-after-doge-axed-prevention-efforts/
Have a good day everyone.
https://x.com/FaeTheYY/status/2062926619040235746?s=20
A certain PB quality to it..
Michael Spicer
@MrMichaelSpicer
·
37m
Nigel Farage Listens to the News
https://x.com/MrMichaelSpicer/status/2063164571200671777?s=20
NEW THREAD
Anyone who might have taken an O level in maths or economics perhaps?
I'll give you at least a small amount of credit for not demeaning your own intelligence by going on the 'security' angle, as if dots arranged on a substrate are somehow more secure when they are arranged in the shape of a hedgehog than Winston Churchill.
But the 'public consultation' isn't much better as a figleaf. Focus groups are not a plebiscite, and I think we all know you can get them to say whatever you like. The public are allowed to vote on which animal of farthing wood they want on the notes - if the Bank is so confident that public opinion is behind them, why not allow them to vote for Churchill and the rest too, to test their theory?
These figures from our history have not diminished. Europe still enjoys the freedom from Nazism that Churchill helped to give it. Readers worldwide still fall in love with Austen's books. It is not that our history has become irrelevant, it is that in some quarters we're clearly doing a shit job of teaching it. If young people don't find Churchill relevant, we realise we need to teach them better, we don't welcome their complacent ignorance and change everything to fit around it.
I am not sure how Bo and Luke will treat those.
Most voters don't seem greatly to care. (Though is you read the rest of this link, you'll find that Ed Davey agrees with you.)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cy03zy1lr8go
..A YouGov poll of more than 5,000 people last July suggested 34% of Lib Dems wanted nature on notes, compared with 19% wanting notable British historical figures.
It was close among Conservative and Reform supporters. Some 30% of Tories and Reform voters wanted historical figures, compared with 26% for the Conservatives and 25% for Reform favouring nature...
We have only had historical figures on our banknotes since 1970, and Churchill has only been on there since 2016.
It is a manufactured, attention-seeking fuss about a complete non-issue. This is peak snowflake.
And there's problems with cattle as well.
Renee Good and Alex Pretti wave meekly. I am humming a Manic Street Preachers song to myself.
Yet when a US politician weighs in on a U.K. matter it’s terrible.
🙄