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Is Andy about to crash and burn-ham? – politicalbetting.com

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  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 36,478

    .

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    A great comfort to us all.

    Unless support for populist parties is not founded on careful statistical analysis but on visceral outrage at children being stabbed in the street, amplified by social media. Then it might make a difference.
    So, what can we do about that?
    Dunno. The ban on buying pointy knives has not helped. Turns out mum keeps a set in the kitchen, ready for use.

    It is surely only a question of time before the government, fresh from demanding phone cameras that can't photograph nudes, extends the bar to filming punch-ups.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 56,944
    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Lots of unused corporate seats.

    To be fair, some pretty decent football matches. The World Cup is bloated, overhyped, far too costly and corrupt to the core, but like the Premier League it actually produces decent spectacle on the pitch.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 36,478
    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 79,571

    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
    Are you thinking of some pedo guy?
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 5,488
    edited 7:00AM

    .

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    A great comfort to us all.

    Unless support for populist parties is not founded on careful statistical analysis but on visceral outrage at children being stabbed in the street, amplified by social media. Then it might make a difference.
    So, what can we do about that?
    Well, when a hospital was shamed by patients being left so thirsty that they drank the water in flower vases, officialdom ensured it wouldn't happen again by banning flowers in hospitals.

    So the obvious cure for this source of outrage is to prohibit any publication of the news. I think they call it a D notice.

    Edit typo
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 22,963

    .

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    A great comfort to us all.

    Unless support for populist parties is not founded on careful statistical analysis but on visceral outrage at children being stabbed in the street, amplified by social media. Then it might make a difference.
    So, what can we do about that?
    We could round up everyone involved in social media companies, strap them to a rocket and fire it into the Sun, though that might be controversial.

    Saw this yesterday, which rather implies that the distrust of government that fuels populism is one of the prices we pay for a free press. The graph looks convincing and the mechanism plausible.



    https://bsky.app/profile/warringfictions.bsky.social/post/3mo3s54p45k2t

    (See Peter Cook's line on how successful the satirical scene of 1930s Berlin was in stopping the Nazis.)
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 72,259

    Sandpit said:

    No 10 was braced for Reeves or Miliband to quit. Then Healey jumped ship
    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/keir-starmer-defence-strategy-john-healey-bsncps22n (£££)

    Healy and Carns resigning, with blistering letters to the PM, was about the worst case scenario for No.10.

    No-one would have mourned Reeves or Miliband walking away.
    On what possible planet would Reeves have resigned? Her only hope of remaining as chancellor is for Starmer to stay on.
    Does Reeves want to remain Chancellor for an extra few weeks or would she fancy three years of first class flights and state banquets as Foreign Secretary to a grateful Wes Streeting Andy Burnham? Or even, since this is Labour, a chance to build something running a spending department – whether you like what Miliband, Phillipson and Streeting have done or not, at least they've done something.
    Too late - she’s too politically damaged and too closely associated with Starmer for Burnham to offer her a job.
    We'll see. I'm not convinced Burnham will want to exacerbate party splits on day one.
    Good morning

    I suspect the bond market's patience is going to be stretched to breaking point in the next few weeks, especially if Burnham carries out his threat to nationalise water and energy
  • TazTaz Posts: 28,447

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Most reassuring to the victim and her family.

    This also wasn’t ‘homicide’.
  • TazTaz Posts: 28,447
    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    How’s the WPC one of them bludgeoned and accused of being complicit in a Genocide ?
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 23,295
    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    Almost every game at the Rec (Bath) this season has been announced as a full house/sell out. Yet almost every game there are free seats around because season tickets don’t always come. So it can be true that all tickets are sold and that there are empty seats.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 79,571
    edited 7:08AM

    Sandpit said:

    No 10 was braced for Reeves or Miliband to quit. Then Healey jumped ship
    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/keir-starmer-defence-strategy-john-healey-bsncps22n (£££)

    Healy and Carns resigning, with blistering letters to the PM, was about the worst case scenario for No.10.

    No-one would have mourned Reeves or Miliband walking away.
    On what possible planet would Reeves have resigned? Her only hope of remaining as chancellor is for Starmer to stay on.
    Does Reeves want to remain Chancellor for an extra few weeks or would she fancy three years of first class flights and state banquets as Foreign Secretary to a grateful Wes Streeting Andy Burnham? Or even, since this is Labour, a chance to build something running a spending department – whether you like what Miliband, Phillipson and Streeting have done or not, at least they've done something.
    Too late - she’s too politically damaged and too closely associated with Starmer for Burnham to offer her a job.
    We'll see. I'm not convinced Burnham will want to exacerbate party splits on day one.
    Good morning

    I suspect the bond market's patience is going to be stretched to breaking point in the next few weeks, especially if Burnham carries out his threat to nationalise water and energy
    Nationalising water is already priced in. The difficulty, and the reason it hasn't happened yet, is nationalising them without a major knock on effect on pension funds who foolishly bought this junk stock and rated it as gilts - notably the Local Government pension scheme. Otherwise, wiping out the shareholders and bondholders would be a good thing, especially if we can hurt the real villains (Macquarie) en route.

    Energy companies may become inevitable too. Octopus, for example, has been struggling to hit OFGEM's capital ratios, while British Gas despite being micro-managed by Centrica (or because of it) appear to have been struggling to pay their debts even before OFGEM slapped them with a £20 million fine and unspecified compensation over falsified court documents. £20 million seems on the small side for what they did and I am assuming this is because OFGEM think they can't afford any more. So I'm not sure that's quite the killer you think it is.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 18,530
    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    I am not a lawyer so I don't understand how their sentencing can possibly be legal.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 60,490

    Sandpit said:

    No 10 was braced for Reeves or Miliband to quit. Then Healey jumped ship
    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/keir-starmer-defence-strategy-john-healey-bsncps22n (£££)

    Healy and Carns resigning, with blistering letters to the PM, was about the worst case scenario for No.10.

    No-one would have mourned Reeves or Miliband walking away.
    On what possible planet would Reeves have resigned? Her only hope of remaining as chancellor is for Starmer to stay on.
    Does Reeves want to remain Chancellor for an extra few weeks or would she fancy three years of first class flights and state banquets as Foreign Secretary to a grateful Wes Streeting Andy Burnham? Or even, since this is Labour, a chance to build something running a spending department – whether you like what Miliband, Phillipson and Streeting have done or not, at least they've done something.
    Too late - she’s too politically damaged and too closely associated with Starmer for Burnham to offer her a job.
    We'll see. I'm not convinced Burnham will want to exacerbate party splits on day one.
    Depends if he wants to excacerbate voter splits if he doesn't.

    She's toxic.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 14,339
    edited 7:14AM
    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    How’s the WPC one of them bludgeoned and accused of being complicit in a Genocide ?
    The man who did that was rightly convicted of grievous bodily harm. He was not convicted of a terrorism offence, and has been sentenced for that anyway, along with those only (rightly) convicted of criminal damage.

    Future such convictions have been put in jeopardy by this. There is zero chance I would now convict any political protestor of any crime because I would be afraid I would be inadvertently convicting them of terrorism, having been duped by the State.

    We haven't had WPC's for 27 years btw. Keep up.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 47,962

    .

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    A great comfort to us all.

    Unless support for populist parties is not founded on careful statistical analysis but on visceral outrage at children being stabbed in the street, amplified by social media. Then it might make a difference.
    So, what can we do about that?
    We could round up everyone involved in social media companies, strap them to a rocket and fire it into the Sun, though that might be controversial.

    Saw this yesterday, which rather implies that the distrust of government that fuels populism is one of the prices we pay for a free press. The graph looks convincing and the mechanism plausible.



    https://bsky.app/profile/warringfictions.bsky.social/post/3mo3s54p45k2t

    (See Peter Cook's line on how successful the satirical scene of 1930s Berlin was in stopping the Nazis.)
    Good zinger from Pete, otoh the sensible centrists, political sharp minds and establishment guys were just as unsuccessful. Indeed some of them were the Nazis’ little helpers.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 21,094
    Taz said:

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Most reassuring to the victim and her family.

    This also wasn’t ‘homicide’.
    I was thinking of William’s use of the word “again”, as if implying some epidemic of violence.
  • TazTaz Posts: 28,447

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    I am not a lawyer so I don't understand how their sentencing can possibly be legal.
    All four were convicted of criminal damage and sentenced for that crime. One other sentenced for twatting a WPC.

    People are whining because. From the BBC site.

    ‘ The case is believed to be the first time that convictions for criminal damage have been classified as being connected to terrorism.’
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 36,478
    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
    Are you thinking of some pedo guy?
    No. Musk is the ket guy.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 21,094

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
    Are you thinking of some pedo guy?
    No. Musk is the ket guy.
    He repeatedly asked to go to Epstein Island, but Epstein didn’t want him.
  • TazTaz Posts: 28,447

    Taz said:

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Most reassuring to the victim and her family.

    This also wasn’t ‘homicide’.
    I was thinking of William’s use of the word “again”, as if implying some epidemic of violence.
    Yet there was the Belfast Beheader earlier in the week. On social media too.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 10,078
    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    No 10 was braced for Reeves or Miliband to quit. Then Healey jumped ship
    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/keir-starmer-defence-strategy-john-healey-bsncps22n (£££)

    Healy and Carns resigning, with blistering letters to the PM, was about the worst case scenario for No.10.

    No-one would have mourned Reeves or Miliband walking away.
    On what possible planet would Reeves have resigned? Her only hope of remaining as chancellor is for Starmer to stay on.
    Does Reeves want to remain Chancellor for an extra few weeks or would she fancy three years of first class flights and state banquets as Foreign Secretary to a grateful Wes Streeting Andy Burnham? Or even, since this is Labour, a chance to build something running a spending department – whether you like what Miliband, Phillipson and Streeting have done or not, at least they've done something.
    Too late - she’s too politically damaged and too closely associated with Starmer for Burnham to offer her a job.
    We'll see. I'm not convinced Burnham will want to exacerbate party splits on day one.
    Good morning

    I suspect the bond market's patience is going to be stretched to breaking point in the next few weeks, especially if Burnham carries out his threat to nationalise water and energy
    Nationalising water is already priced in. The difficulty, and the reason it hasn't happened yet, is nationalising them without a major knock on effect on pension funds who foolishly bought this junk stock and rated it as gilts - notably the Local Government pension scheme. Otherwise, wiping out the shareholders and bondholders would be a good thing, especially if we can hurt the real villains (Macquarie) en route.

    Energy companies may become inevitable too. Octopus, for example, has been struggling to hit OFGEM's capital ratios, while British Gas despite being micro-managed by Centrica (or because of it) appear to have been struggling to pay their debts even before OFGEM slapped them with a £20 million fine and unspecified compensation over falsified court documents. £20 million seems on the small side for what they did and I am assuming this is because OFGEM think they can't afford any more. So I'm not sure that's quite the killer you think it is.
    Thames Water as a percentage of pension fund assets is tiny and mainly written down in any case.
  • TresTres Posts: 3,679

    Taz said:

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Most reassuring to the victim and her family.

    This also wasn’t ‘homicide’.
    I was thinking of William’s use of the word “again”, as if implying some epidemic of violence.
    i thought he was implying an epidemic of twitter fuelled riots
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 79,571

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
    Are you thinking of some pedo guy?
    No. Musk is the ket guy.
    You say ket? A mine of information you are, sir.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 61,839

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    Almost every game at the Rec (Bath) this season has been announced as a full house/sell out. Yet almost every game there are free seats around because season tickets don’t always come. So it can be true that all tickets are sold and that there are empty seats.
    FIFA haven’t sold season tickets for the World Cup, but there will be a lot of allocation to sponsors and various partners, for some matches even the participant FAs, which are supposed to be returned if unused, but for the early group games might not happen. Add that a lot of the general sale has gone to ‘official touts’, with FIFA taking a cut of the resale, and it’s not difficult to imagine how the place might be half empty for a lot of matches.

    The host nations and major European sides will likely be properly sold out, as will most of the later knockout matches. But small and/or poor nations aren’t going to get massive crowds to some of the world’s most expensve countries.

    Probably the expansion from 32 to 48 teams is too much, there’s more than a hundred matches!
  • TazTaz Posts: 28,447
    Eabhal said:

    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    How’s the WPC one of them bludgeoned and accused of being complicit in a Genocide ?
    The man who did that was rightly convicted of grievous bodily harm. He was not convicted of a terrorism offence, and has been sentenced for that anyway, along with those only (rightly) convicted of criminal damage.

    Future such convictions have been put in jeopardy by this. There is zero chance I would now convict any political protestor of any crime because I would be afraid I would be inadvertently convicting them of terrorism, having been duped by the State.

    We haven't had WPC's for 27 years btw. Keep up.
    No one gives a shit. Her health and wellbeing is more important. To most of,us.

    If I was on the jury of such a case I’d gladly convict if the evidence was there. I wouldn’t let off terrorists from acts of terror and I wouldn’t convict if the evidence was not there to my satisfaction.

  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 14,339
    Christ, it's even worse than I realised. The prosecution successfully applied for the motivation of these crimes to be excluded from the trial, before subsequently arguing for the sentencing to be based on that evidence. Insane.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 61,839

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
    Are you thinking of some pedo guy?
    No. Musk is the ket guy.
    He repeatedly asked to go to Epstein Island, but Epstein didn’t want him.
    Other way around. Epstein kept asking Musk to go to his island, and Musk repeatedly turned him down.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 47,962
    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    I am not a lawyer so I don't understand how their sentencing can possibly be legal.
    All four were convicted of criminal damage and sentenced for that crime. One other sentenced for twatting a WPC.

    People are whining because. From the BBC site.

    ‘ The case is believed to be the first time that convictions for criminal damage have been classified as being connected to terrorism.’
    Isn’t it the post hoc classification of terrorism that people have a problem with? If I get a speeding ticket I don’t want a dangerous driving charge coming down the line after I’ve (reluctantly) paid the fine.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 79,571
    Sandpit said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
    Are you thinking of some pedo guy?
    No. Musk is the ket guy.
    He repeatedly asked to go to Epstein Island, but Epstein didn’t want him.
    Other way around. Epstein kept asking Musk to go to his island, and Musk repeatedly turned him down.
    That's his version, but it isn't borne out by the actual emails they exchanged:

    https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/elon-musk/expressed-interest-visiting-jeffrey-epstein-island-emails-show-doj-rcna256784
  • TresTres Posts: 3,679
    edited 7:26AM
    Sandpit said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
    Are you thinking of some pedo guy?
    No. Musk is the ket guy.
    He repeatedly asked to go to Epstein Island, but Epstein didn’t want him.
    Other way around. Epstein kept asking Musk to go to his island, and Musk repeatedly turned him down.
    Lies. Not what we read in the epstein files.

    you gonna file this under ignore like trump repeatedly abusing teenage beauty parade contestants?
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 14,339
    edited 7:25AM
    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    How’s the WPC one of them bludgeoned and accused of being complicit in a Genocide ?
    The man who did that was rightly convicted of grievous bodily harm. He was not convicted of a terrorism offence, and has been sentenced for that anyway, along with those only (rightly) convicted of criminal damage.

    Future such convictions have been put in jeopardy by this. There is zero chance I would now convict any political protestor of any crime because I would be afraid I would be inadvertently convicting them of terrorism, having been duped by the State.

    We haven't had WPC's for 27 years btw. Keep up.
    No one gives a shit. Her health and wellbeing is more important. To most of,us.

    If I was on the jury of such a case I’d gladly convict if the evidence was there. I wouldn’t let off terrorists from acts of terror and I wouldn’t convict if the evidence was not there to my satisfaction.

    Everyone should give a shit. It's the most important principle in a criminal justice system. You just don't have the imagination required to realise this.

    Your post demonstrates that you don't understand - the jury wasn't asked to convict them on an act of terror, and the evidence of political motivation was deliberately excluded from the trial.
  • TazTaz Posts: 28,447
    Eabhal said:

    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    How’s the WPC one of them bludgeoned and accused of being complicit in a Genocide ?
    The man who did that was rightly convicted of grievous bodily harm. He was not convicted of a terrorism offence, and has been sentenced for that anyway, along with those only (rightly) convicted of criminal damage.

    Future such convictions have been put in jeopardy by this. There is zero chance I would now convict any political protestor of any crime because I would be afraid I would be inadvertently convicting them of terrorism, having been duped by the State.

    We haven't had WPC's for 27 years btw. Keep up.
    No one gives a shit. Her health and wellbeing is more important. To most of,us.

    If I was on the jury of such a case I’d gladly convict if the evidence was there. I wouldn’t let off terrorists from acts of terror and I wouldn’t convict if the evidence was not there to my satisfaction.

    Everyone should give a shit. It's the most important principle in a criminal justice system. You just don't have the imagination required to realise this.

    Your post demonstrates this - the jury wasn't asked to convict them on an act of terror, and the evidence of political motivation was deliberately excluded from the trial.
    I couldn’t give a shit that there have not been WPCs for 27 years, which was what the comment was made in response too. Why would I. 😂😂
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 35,297

    Holyrood’s new health committee convener has been criticised after a recently surfaced video shows her drawing a comparison between pregnant women seeking abortions and “feral cats”.

    Ms McDade, Reform UK MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, who was elected convener of the Scottish Parliament’s Health, Care and Sport Committee this week, also described the move to decriminalise abortion in England and Wales as "appalling".


    https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/26188787.holyrood-health-convener-compares-pregnant-women-feral-cats/

    That is an extremely misleading headline. I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and assume you did not read the full remarks.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 36,478
    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    How’s the WPC one of them bludgeoned and accused of being complicit in a Genocide ?
    The man who did that was rightly convicted of grievous bodily harm. He was not convicted of a terrorism offence, and has been sentenced for that anyway, along with those only (rightly) convicted of criminal damage.

    Future such convictions have been put in jeopardy by this. There is zero chance I would now convict any political protestor of any crime because I would be afraid I would be inadvertently convicting them of terrorism, having been duped by the State.

    We haven't had WPC's for 27 years btw. Keep up.
    No one gives a shit. Her health and wellbeing is more important. To most of,us.

    If I was on the jury of such a case I’d gladly convict if the evidence was there. I wouldn’t let off terrorists from acts of terror and I wouldn’t convict if the evidence was not there to my satisfaction.

    Yes, and that is the point. Try people for terrorism and let juries convict. What has happened here is they were found guilty of lesser offences after which the prosecution and judge conjured terrorism out of thin air to pass far stiffer sentences.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 14,339
    edited 7:31AM

    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    I am not a lawyer so I don't understand how their sentencing can possibly be legal.
    All four were convicted of criminal damage and sentenced for that crime. One other sentenced for twatting a WPC.

    People are whining because. From the BBC site.

    ‘ The case is believed to be the first time that convictions for criminal damage have been classified as being connected to terrorism.’
    Isn’t it the post hoc classification of terrorism that people have a problem with? If I get a speeding ticket I don’t want a dangerous driving charge coming down the line after I’ve (reluctantly) paid the fine.
    That, and the fact that this post hoc classification is only applied to one type of violent protestor. Why isn't trying to burn down an ayslum hostel a terrorist offence? Blowing up ULEZ cameras? Both have underlying political motivations.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 35,297

    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    How’s the WPC one of them bludgeoned and accused of being complicit in a Genocide ?
    The man who did that was rightly convicted of grievous bodily harm. He was not convicted of a terrorism offence, and has been sentenced for that anyway, along with those only (rightly) convicted of criminal damage.

    Future such convictions have been put in jeopardy by this. There is zero chance I would now convict any political protestor of any crime because I would be afraid I would be inadvertently convicting them of terrorism, having been duped by the State.

    We haven't had WPC's for 27 years btw. Keep up.
    No one gives a shit. Her health and wellbeing is more important. To most of,us.

    If I was on the jury of such a case I’d gladly convict if the evidence was there. I wouldn’t let off terrorists from acts of terror and I wouldn’t convict if the evidence was not there to my satisfaction.

    Yes, and that is the point. Try people for terrorism and let juries convict. What has happened here is they were found guilty of lesser offences after which the prosecution and judge conjured terrorism out of thin air to pass far stiffer sentences.

    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    How’s the WPC one of them bludgeoned and accused of being complicit in a Genocide ?
    The man who did that was rightly convicted of grievous bodily harm. He was not convicted of a terrorism offence, and has been sentenced for that anyway, along with those only (rightly) convicted of criminal damage.

    Future such convictions have been put in jeopardy by this. There is zero chance I would now convict any political protestor of any crime because I would be afraid I would be inadvertently convicting them of terrorism, having been duped by the State.

    We haven't had WPC's for 27 years btw. Keep up.
    No one gives a shit. Her health and wellbeing is more important. To most of,us.

    If I was on the jury of such a case I’d gladly convict if the evidence was there. I wouldn’t let off terrorists from acts of terror and I wouldn’t convict if the evidence was not there to my satisfaction.

    Yes, and that is the point. Try people for terrorism and let juries convict. What has happened here is they were found guilty of lesser offences after which the prosecution and judge conjured terrorism out of thin air to pass far stiffer sentences.
    Agree.
  • scampi25scampi25 Posts: 587

    Sandpit said:

    No 10 was braced for Reeves or Miliband to quit. Then Healey jumped ship
    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/keir-starmer-defence-strategy-john-healey-bsncps22n (£££)

    Healy and Carns resigning, with blistering letters to the PM, was about the worst case scenario for No.10.

    No-one would have mourned Reeves or Miliband walking away.
    On what possible planet would Reeves have resigned? Her only hope of remaining as chancellor is for Starmer to stay on.
    Does Reeves want to remain Chancellor for an extra few weeks or would she fancy three years of first class flights and state banquets as Foreign Secretary to a grateful Wes Streeting Andy Burnham? Or even, since this is Labour, a chance to build something running a spending department – whether you like what Miliband, Phillipson and Streeting have done or not, at least they've done something.
    Too late - she’s too politically damaged and too closely associated with Starmer for Burnham to offer her a job.
    We'll see. I'm not convinced Burnham will want to exacerbate party splits on day one.
    Stop denying there's a problem would be a good start. Remember the Brexit vote - that came after another deluge of stats which the public cared zilch about.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 61,839
    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
    Are you thinking of some pedo guy?
    No. Musk is the ket guy.
    He repeatedly asked to go to Epstein Island, but Epstein didn’t want him.
    Other way around. Epstein kept asking Musk to go to his island, and Musk repeatedly turned him down.
    That's his version, but it isn't borne out by the actual emails they exchanged:

    https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/elon-musk/expressed-interest-visiting-jeffrey-epstein-island-emails-show-doj-rcna256784
    Epstein initiated the conversation, and Musk didn’t go to the island.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 47,962
    edited 7:35AM
    Tres said:

    Sandpit said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
    Are you thinking of some pedo guy?
    No. Musk is the ket guy.
    He repeatedly asked to go to Epstein Island, but Epstein didn’t want him.
    Other way around. Epstein kept asking Musk to go to his island, and Musk repeatedly turned him down.
    Lies. Not what we read in the epstein files.

    you gonna file this under ignore like trump repeatedly abusing teenage beauty parade contestants?
    Surely it’s the beauty parade contestants’ fault for being nubile teenagers? Trump and his little helpers would say they were asking for it.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 79,571
    Sandpit said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
    Are you thinking of some pedo guy?
    No. Musk is the ket guy.
    He repeatedly asked to go to Epstein Island, but Epstein didn’t want him.
    Other way around. Epstein kept asking Musk to go to his island, and Musk repeatedly turned him down.
    That's his version, but it isn't borne out by the actual emails they exchanged:

    https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/elon-musk/expressed-interest-visiting-jeffrey-epstein-island-emails-show-doj-rcna256784
    Epstein initiated the conversation, and Musk didn’t go to the island.
    Which conversation? Epstein may have made initial contact (although the files we have cast doubt on that, they are not conclusive) but certainly on the evidence we have (rather than Musk's statements) it's certainly Musk that was angling for the invitation and Epstein kept putting him off.
  • TazTaz Posts: 28,447

    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    Taz said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    How’s the WPC one of them bludgeoned and accused of being complicit in a Genocide ?
    The man who did that was rightly convicted of grievous bodily harm. He was not convicted of a terrorism offence, and has been sentenced for that anyway, along with those only (rightly) convicted of criminal damage.

    Future such convictions have been put in jeopardy by this. There is zero chance I would now convict any political protestor of any crime because I would be afraid I would be inadvertently convicting them of terrorism, having been duped by the State.

    We haven't had WPC's for 27 years btw. Keep up.
    No one gives a shit. Her health and wellbeing is more important. To most of,us.

    If I was on the jury of such a case I’d gladly convict if the evidence was there. I wouldn’t let off terrorists from acts of terror and I wouldn’t convict if the evidence was not there to my satisfaction.

    Yes, and that is the point. Try people for terrorism and let juries convict. What has happened here is they were found guilty of lesser offences after which the prosecution and judge conjured terrorism out of thin air to pass far stiffer sentences.
    They’re tried for criminal damage but from the Beeb report the terrorism element was an aggravating factor as determined by the court.

    “ Under the law, anyone guilty of a standard offence can receive a longer sentence if a court rules that the manner in which the crime was committed could be said to meet the definition of terrorism.”
  • scampi25scampi25 Posts: 587

    Taz said:

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Most reassuring to the victim and her family.

    This also wasn’t ‘homicide’.
    I was thinking of William’s use of the word “again”, as if implying some epidemic of violence.
    You're full of hyperbole - you just can't help yourself.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 47,962

    Holyrood’s new health committee convener has been criticised after a recently surfaced video shows her drawing a comparison between pregnant women seeking abortions and “feral cats”.

    Ms McDade, Reform UK MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, who was elected convener of the Scottish Parliament’s Health, Care and Sport Committee this week, also described the move to decriminalise abortion in England and Wales as "appalling".


    https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/26188787.holyrood-health-convener-compares-pregnant-women-feral-cats/

    That is an extremely misleading headline. I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and assume you did not read the full remarks.
    For those of us who don’t have a Herald sub, can you say why it’s misleading?
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 36,478
    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
    Are you thinking of some pedo guy?
    No. Musk is the ket guy.
    He repeatedly asked to go to Epstein Island, but Epstein didn’t want him.
    Other way around. Epstein kept asking Musk to go to his island, and Musk repeatedly turned him down.
    That's his version, but it isn't borne out by the actual emails they exchanged:

    https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/elon-musk/expressed-interest-visiting-jeffrey-epstein-island-emails-show-doj-rcna256784
    Epstein initiated the conversation, and Musk didn’t go to the island.
    Which conversation? Epstein may have made initial contact (although the files we have cast doubt on that, they are not conclusive) but certainly on the evidence we have (rather than Musk's statements) it's certainly Musk that was angling for the invitation and Epstein kept putting him off.
    Otoh Musk proposed taking his wife/girlfriend along so even if he expected an orgy, it was probably not an underaged one he had in mind.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 61,839
    Friend of David Hockney saying the F-word on BBC news in the middle of the afternoon.

    https://x.com/scottygb/status/2065529025229930924

    He’d have been proud of that! RIP.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 15,668
    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    The "terrorism" was only brought into it because the Zionist Entity was involved. That much is obvious.
  • Alphabet_SoupAlphabet_Soup Posts: 3,864

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
    Are you thinking of some pedo guy?
    No. Musk is the ket guy.
    He repeatedly asked to go to Epstein Island, but Epstein didn’t want him.
    Other way around. Epstein kept asking Musk to go to his island, and Musk repeatedly turned him down.
    That's his version, but it isn't borne out by the actual emails they exchanged:

    https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/elon-musk/expressed-interest-visiting-jeffrey-epstein-island-emails-show-doj-rcna256784
    Epstein initiated the conversation, and Musk didn’t go to the island.
    Which conversation? Epstein may have made initial contact (although the files we have cast doubt on that, they are not conclusive) but certainly on the evidence we have (rather than Musk's statements) it's certainly Musk that was angling for the invitation and Epstein kept putting him off.
    Otoh Musk proposed taking his wife/girlfriend along so even if he expected an orgy, it was probably not an underaged one he had in mind.
    Someone once said that taking your wife to an orgy is like taking your own cookies to a restaurant.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 66,683

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Were we getting many stabbings in the neck and attempted public beheadings in 1977?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 66,683
    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    Today, still wanted by the government, they survive as soldiers of fortune.

    If you have a problem, if no one else can help, and if you can find them, maybe you can hire: the A-Team.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 19,701
    edited 7:58AM

    .

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    A great comfort to us all.

    Unless support for populist parties is not founded on careful statistical analysis but on visceral outrage at children being stabbed in the street, amplified by social media. Then it might make a difference.
    So, what can we do about that?
    We could round up everyone involved in social media companies, strap them to a rocket and fire it into the Sun, though that might be controversial.

    Saw this yesterday, which rather implies that the distrust of government that fuels populism is one of the prices we pay for a free press. The graph looks convincing and the mechanism plausible.



    https://bsky.app/profile/warringfictions.bsky.social/post/3mo3s54p45k2t

    (See Peter Cook's line on how successful the satirical scene of 1930s Berlin was in stopping the Nazis.)
    A key question I suppose is how much you can trust people saying they trust the government in places where there is no freedom of the press.

    I should address your point though. The much venerated John Stuart Mill was wrong I think in his assumption that unmoderated falsehoods would be exposed if allowed to air.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 9,640

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Were we getting many stabbings in the neck and attempted public beheadings in 1977?
    Who knows, because back in 1977 we didn't have phones and CCTV to film all this stuff and make it as 'newsworthy'. That's what's different now - the amount captured on film and distributed on social media.

    However, data shows that the rate of violent crime was higher in 1977 than it is now.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 23,295
    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    Acquited of the terrorism charge or ALL the charges?

    I do think this is a challenging case on I don't think the approach taken here is the right one. If you think someone is a terrorist, use the laws that exist already to establish this and give the appropriate punishment.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 47,962
    Dura_Ace said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    The "terrorism" was only brought into it because the Zionist Entity was involved. That much is obvious.
    Only a matter of time until the English judiciary introduces committing a blood libel onto the statute sheet.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 47,962
    edited 7:58AM
    Duplicate
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 14,339

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    Today, still wanted by the government, they survive as soldiers of fortune.

    If you have a problem, if no one else can help, and if you can find them, maybe you can hire: the A-Team.
    Aren't you the guy who made a massive fuss about Lammy trying to change jury trial sentencing requirements from 1 year to 3 years? See you on the barricades; we can exchange notes on real ale.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 63,689

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Were we getting many stabbings in the neck and attempted public beheadings in 1977?
    Tons of stabbings. Blades and horrific usage of same come up frequently in the history of crime (organised and otherwise) in London, Liverpool, Birmingham, Glasgow…

    The change is that, in the Goode Olde Days* such things were rarely reported in the “major” papers, unless they were especially egregious or happened to “decent people”**

    As opposed to spammed to every discussion fora and going ping on your personal telephonic device.

    *Which weren’t that good, really
    **yes, the definition of “decent” was a whole problem by itself.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 23,295
    Sandpit said:

    Friend of David Hockney saying the F-word on BBC news in the middle of the afternoon.

    https://x.com/scottygb/status/2065529025229930924

    He’d have been proud of that! RIP.

    Granddaugther of Hockney's muse eh? Any odds she is also his actual Granddaughter?
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 59,026
    Barnesian said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    No 10 was braced for Reeves or Miliband to quit. Then Healey jumped ship
    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/keir-starmer-defence-strategy-john-healey-bsncps22n (£££)

    Healy and Carns resigning, with blistering letters to the PM, was about the worst case scenario for No.10.

    No-one would have mourned Reeves or Miliband walking away.
    On what possible planet would Reeves have resigned? Her only hope of remaining as chancellor is for Starmer to stay on.
    Does Reeves want to remain Chancellor for an extra few weeks or would she fancy three years of first class flights and state banquets as Foreign Secretary to a grateful Wes Streeting Andy Burnham? Or even, since this is Labour, a chance to build something running a spending department – whether you like what Miliband, Phillipson and Streeting have done or not, at least they've done something.
    Too late - she’s too politically damaged and too closely associated with Starmer for Burnham to offer her a job.
    We'll see. I'm not convinced Burnham will want to exacerbate party splits on day one.
    Good morning

    I suspect the bond market's patience is going to be stretched to breaking point in the next few weeks, especially if Burnham carries out his threat to nationalise water and energy
    Nationalising water is already priced in. The difficulty, and the reason it hasn't happened yet, is nationalising them without a major knock on effect on pension funds who foolishly bought this junk stock and rated it as gilts - notably the Local Government pension scheme. Otherwise, wiping out the shareholders and bondholders would be a good thing, especially if we can hurt the real villains (Macquarie) en route.

    Energy companies may become inevitable too. Octopus, for example, has been struggling to hit OFGEM's capital ratios, while British Gas despite being micro-managed by Centrica (or because of it) appear to have been struggling to pay their debts even before OFGEM slapped them with a £20 million fine and unspecified compensation over falsified court documents. £20 million seems on the small side for what they did and I am assuming this is because OFGEM think they can't afford any more. So I'm not sure that's quite the killer you think it is.
    Thames Water as a percentage of pension fund assets is tiny and mainly written down in any case.
    One of my very few direct interventions when I was a pension trustee was to direct the fund managers not to buy Thames Water bonds. In fairness to them they were offering a risk premium and this has gone on a lot longer than I expected but I am comfortable that was a good call.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 14,339
    edited 8:06AM

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    Acquited of the terrorism charge or ALL the charges?

    I do think this is a challenging case on I don't think the approach taken here is the right one. If you think someone is a terrorist, use the laws that exist already to establish this and give the appropriate punishment.
    In Scotland you often get a choice between, say, careless and dangerous driving or full acquittal. If that were the case for this I think most people would have certainly convicted the sledgehammer guy of greivous bodily harm and possibly terrorism too. if it was just plain terrorism for criminal damage then it would have been full acquittals 90% of the time.

    But this is rather beside the point. If juries want to convict on terrorism charges then fair enough - but they should be given the choice rather than have it deliberately concealed from them.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 63,689
    FF43 said:

    .

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    A great comfort to us all.

    Unless support for populist parties is not founded on careful statistical analysis but on visceral outrage at children being stabbed in the street, amplified by social media. Then it might make a difference.
    So, what can we do about that?
    We could round up everyone involved in social media companies, strap them to a rocket and fire it into the Sun, though that might be controversial.

    Saw this yesterday, which rather implies that the distrust of government that fuels populism is one of the prices we pay for a free press. The graph looks convincing and the mechanism plausible.



    https://bsky.app/profile/warringfictions.bsky.social/post/3mo3s54p45k2t

    (See Peter Cook's line on how successful the satirical scene of 1930s Berlin was in stopping the Nazis.)
    A key question I suppose is how much you can trust people saying they trust the government in places where there is no freedom of the press.

    I should address your point though. The much venerated John Stuart Mill was wrong I think in his assumption that unmoderated falsehoods would be exposed if allowed to air.
    Also, definitions of trust.

    I would trust the Saudi Government to brutally repress opposition. Justice for minorities, much less so.

    The U.K. government, the reverse.
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,523

    Musk has more wealth than three quarters of the world’s nations.

    And I bet it still doesn’t make him happy.

    Point of order ( I’m not defending it): if he is a $ trillionaire that’s his wealth on a given day. The figures the media are bandying about that he’s as “wealthy as Switzerland or Saudi” are an apples and pears situation, in that they are comparing Swiss and Saudi GDPs which are income not the stock of Swiss and Saudi net assets which are wealth.

  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,523

    Musk has more wealth than three quarters of the world’s nations.

    And I bet it still doesn’t make him happy.

    Point of order ( I’m not defending it): if he is a $ trillionaire that’s his wealth on a given day. The figures the media are bandying about that he’s as “wealthy as Switzerland or Saudi” are an apples and pears situation, in that they are comparing Swiss and Saudi GDPs which are income not the stock of Swiss and Saudi net assets which are wealth.

  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,926
    I think makerfield will go to the wire . Mrs Duffy is about to chose the PM
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 66,683

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Were we getting many stabbings in the neck and attempted public beheadings in 1977?
    Who knows, because back in 1977 we didn't have phones and CCTV to film all this stuff and make it as 'newsworthy'. That's what's different now - the amount captured on film and distributed on social media.

    However, data shows that the rate of violent crime was higher in 1977 than it is now.
    I think we knew on public murders, because cameras and newspapers still existed even if they didn't capture in "real time".

    FWIW, this is @bondegezou usual one-man-rebuttal-unit bullshit again. The graph he's referring to is here and the murder rate was higher than in 1977 less than 2 years ago:

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/crimeandjustice/articles/homicideinenglandandwales/yearendingmarch2025

    There's a big spike in 2003. Initially my mind jumped to the 7/7 terror attacks, but they were in 2005 and those are probably captured differently.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 23,295
    Eabhal said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    Acquited of the terrorism charge or ALL the charges?

    I do think this is a challenging case on I don't think the approach taken here is the right one. If you think someone is a terrorist, use the laws that exist already to establish this and give the appropriate punishment.
    In Scotland you often get a choice between, say, careless and dangerous driving or full acquittal. If that were the case for this I think most people would have certainly convicted the sledgehammer guy of greivous bodily harm and possibly terrorism too. if it was just plain terrorism for criminal damage then it would have been full acquittals 90% of the time.

    But this is rather beside the point. If juries want to convict on terrorism charges then fair enough - but they should be given the choice rather than have it deliberately concealed from them.
    Is the terrorism an aggravating factor such as racism? If someone is convicted of murder do the jury consider if it was racially motivated or is that for the judge in sentencing? You can argue that a case should be decided on the evidence - did person X do Y. Then apply the sentence. A jury acquiting because of sympathy for the cause (e.g. Colston 4) is part of the system, but it is challenging.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 56,944

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Were we getting many stabbings in the neck and attempted public beheadings in 1977?
    Nah, the Teddy boys were a bit before then and the football casuals a bit after.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 22,963

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Were we getting many stabbings in the neck and attempted public beheadings in 1977?
    Who knows, because back in 1977 we didn't have phones and CCTV to film all this stuff and make it as 'newsworthy'. That's what's different now - the amount captured on film and distributed on social media.

    However, data shows that the rate of violent crime was higher in 1977 than it is now.
    Here are the numbers for reported homicide rates;

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/crimeandjustice/articles/homicideinenglandandwales/yearendingmarch2024

    Going up in the Good Old Days of the 70s to 90s, going down slightly since then.

    And it's grimly sort-of reassuring that single horrible events/individuals (Shipman, Ryan, migrants in a lorry) show up as visible spikes.

    None of which is any consolation to those who mourn, because every individual is important. But it's relevant for understanding if society is going to the dogs or not. And there is a perception/reality gap there, because the owners of our windows on the world have installed distorting windows.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 23,295

    I think makerfield will go to the wire . Mrs Duffy is about to chose the PM

    I think we won't know until Friday.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 46,500

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    Almost every game at the Rec (Bath) this season has been announced as a full house/sell out. Yet almost every game there are free seats around because season tickets don’t always come. So it can be true that all tickets are sold and that there are empty seats.
    yes pay exorbitant prices for tickets and don't bother turning up, pull the other one. It is one game ticket not a 36 or so ticket where missing odd game is not a loss.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 14,339

    Eabhal said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    Acquited of the terrorism charge or ALL the charges?

    I do think this is a challenging case on I don't think the approach taken here is the right one. If you think someone is a terrorist, use the laws that exist already to establish this and give the appropriate punishment.
    In Scotland you often get a choice between, say, careless and dangerous driving or full acquittal. If that were the case for this I think most people would have certainly convicted the sledgehammer guy of greivous bodily harm and possibly terrorism too. if it was just plain terrorism for criminal damage then it would have been full acquittals 90% of the time.

    But this is rather beside the point. If juries want to convict on terrorism charges then fair enough - but they should be given the choice rather than have it deliberately concealed from them.
    Is the terrorism an aggravating factor such as racism? If someone is convicted of murder do the jury consider if it was racially motivated or is that for the judge in sentencing? You can argue that a case should be decided on the evidence - did person X do Y. Then apply the sentence. A jury acquiting because of sympathy for the cause (e.g. Colston 4) is part of the system, but it is challenging.
    I think that would be fine if the judge explained that rather than concealing it. And yes, it is challenging but that is jury trials for you.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 66,683
    Foxy said:

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Were we getting many stabbings in the neck and attempted public beheadings in 1977?
    Nah, the Teddy boys were a bit before then and the football casuals a bit after.
    Casual violence has declined, which is a good thing.

    Terrorism has probably declined too, tbh, which is also a good thing.

    That doesn't mean we should brush aside horrific attacks like Belfast because we want to hold on to cherished beliefs about the enrichment immigration offers us, which is all @bondegezou cares about.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 59,026
    Eabhal said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    Acquited of the terrorism charge or ALL the charges?

    I do think this is a challenging case on I don't think the approach taken here is the right one. If you think someone is a terrorist, use the laws that exist already to establish this and give the appropriate punishment.
    In Scotland you often get a choice between, say, careless and dangerous driving or full acquittal. If that were the case for this I think most people would have certainly convicted the sledgehammer guy of greivous bodily harm and possibly terrorism too. if it was just plain terrorism for criminal damage then it would have been full acquittals 90% of the time.

    But this is rather beside the point. If juries want to convict on terrorism charges then fair enough - but they should be given the choice rather than have it deliberately concealed from them.
    Not really. If someone is charged and taken to trial for dangerous driving the jury are told that they have the option of convicting of careless driving in the alternative and the difference is explained.

    I think the problem with the English case, and I have not read it thoroughly, is that the motive for the offence is not relevant to the question of guilt. You either did it or you didn't and that is what the jury decides. But it is relevant to sentence and to any risk assessment that arises on conviction. It does seem odd though that having chosen not to put terrorism charges on the indictment they are then treated as if they were terrorists.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 22,963

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Were we getting many stabbings in the neck and attempted public beheadings in 1977?
    Who knows, because back in 1977 we didn't have phones and CCTV to film all this stuff and make it as 'newsworthy'. That's what's different now - the amount captured on film and distributed on social media.

    However, data shows that the rate of violent crime was higher in 1977 than it is now.
    I think we knew on public murders, because cameras and newspapers still existed even if they didn't capture in "real time".

    FWIW, this is @bondegezou usual one-man-rebuttal-unit bullshit again. The graph he's referring to is here and the murder rate was higher than in 1977 less than 2 years ago:

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/crimeandjustice/articles/homicideinenglandandwales/yearendingmarch2025

    There's a big spike in 2003. Initially my mind jumped to the 7/7 terror attacks, but they were in 2005 and those are probably captured differently.
    2003 was when all Shipman's victims went on the books.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 66,683

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Were we getting many stabbings in the neck and attempted public beheadings in 1977?
    Who knows, because back in 1977 we didn't have phones and CCTV to film all this stuff and make it as 'newsworthy'. That's what's different now - the amount captured on film and distributed on social media.

    However, data shows that the rate of violent crime was higher in 1977 than it is now.
    I think we knew on public murders, because cameras and newspapers still existed even if they didn't capture in "real time".

    FWIW, this is @bondegezou usual one-man-rebuttal-unit bullshit again. The graph he's referring to is here and the murder rate was higher than in 1977 less than 2 years ago:

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/crimeandjustice/articles/homicideinenglandandwales/yearendingmarch2025

    There's a big spike in 2003. Initially my mind jumped to the 7/7 terror attacks, but they were in 2005 and those are probably captured differently.
    2003 was when all Shipman's victims went on the books.
    Ah, of course.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 66,683

    I think makerfield will go to the wire . Mrs Duffy is about to chose the PM

    That encounter perfectly symbolised the disillusionment of working-class Labour voters, and the alienation felt as a result of the party's perceived detachment from their everyday concerns, which Brown so memorably validated.

    It explains Reform.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 63,689
    edited 8:16AM
    welshowl said:

    Musk has more wealth than three quarters of the world’s nations.

    And I bet it still doesn’t make him happy.

    Point of order ( I’m not defending it): if he is a $ trillionaire that’s his wealth on a given day. The figures the media are bandying about that he’s as “wealthy as Switzerland or Saudi” are an apples and pears situation, in that they are comparing Swiss and Saudi GDPs which are income not the stock of Swiss and Saudi net assets which are wealth.

    Perhaps of interest, using total economy net worth (sum of public and private assets and liabilities)
    Rank Country National Net Wealth
    (US$ trillions, approx.)
    1United States156
    2Japan25
    3Germany20
    4United Kingdom17
    5France16
    6Canada13
    7Italy12
    8South Korea11
    9Australia10
    10Spain9
    11Netherlands6
    12Switzerland5
    13Belgium3
    14Sweden3
    15Denmark2.5
    16Norway2.4
    17Poland2
    18Austria2
    19Israel1.8
    20Turkey1.7
    21Portugal1.5
    22New Zealand1.4
    23Ireland1.2
    24Czech Republic1.1
    25Finland0.9
    26Greece0.8
    27Hungary0.5
    28Slovakia0.4
    29Slovenia0.3
    30Lithuania0.3
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 21,094
    Sandpit said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    One day into the World Cup, FIFA is doing “actually, the stadiums ARE full” posts stating that there are “ticketed fans… standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats”

    https://bsky.app/profile/rodger.bsky.social/post/3mo4o2wcf622m

    Three matches in and the first two big matches...two of the three host nations. Full stadiums is hardly surprising at this stage and tonights was only a 40k capacity.

    Peter.
    yeah, the point is the stadiums are not full. FIFA are claiming the empty seats belong to people who definitely bought the tickets and are definitely at the stadiums, you just can't see them on TV
    I recall the same story from the opening days of London 2012, which they had to act quickly to resolve?
    Start warming up the school busses!
    America's flying start last night, beating a hapless Paraguay 4-1 (and Paraguay has form against Argentina and Brazil) might help sell a few tickets. Does anyone know any trillionaires who might subsidise tickets for schools?
    Are you thinking of some pedo guy?
    No. Musk is the ket guy.
    He repeatedly asked to go to Epstein Island, but Epstein didn’t want him.
    Other way around. Epstein kept asking Musk to go to his island, and Musk repeatedly turned him down.
    You're so gullible! That’s what Musk has claimed, but the released emails clearly show it’s Musk asking Epstein: https://time.com/7362868/elon-musk-epstein-emails/
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 61,839
    US to impose export controls on the latest Anthropic AI models.

    https://x.com/anthropicai/status/2065597531644743999

    I’m sure everyone in UK and Europe calling for more AI regulation will be happy with this one. Right?
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 14,339
    edited 8:18AM
    DavidL said:

    Eabhal said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    Acquited of the terrorism charge or ALL the charges?

    I do think this is a challenging case on I don't think the approach taken here is the right one. If you think someone is a terrorist, use the laws that exist already to establish this and give the appropriate punishment.
    In Scotland you often get a choice between, say, careless and dangerous driving or full acquittal. If that were the case for this I think most people would have certainly convicted the sledgehammer guy of greivous bodily harm and possibly terrorism too. if it was just plain terrorism for criminal damage then it would have been full acquittals 90% of the time.

    But this is rather beside the point. If juries want to convict on terrorism charges then fair enough - but they should be given the choice rather than have it deliberately concealed from them.
    Not really. If someone is charged and taken to trial for dangerous driving the jury are told that they have the option of convicting of careless driving in the alternative and the difference is explained.

    I think the problem with the English case, and I have not read it thoroughly, is that the motive for the offence is not relevant to the question of guilt. You either did it or you didn't and that is what the jury decides. But it is relevant to sentence and to any risk assessment that arises on conviction. It does seem odd though that having chosen not to put terrorism charges on the indictment they are then treated as if they were terrorists.
    I think we are in agreement on the driving analogy, and I obviously can't do as good a job as explaining it as you did.

    I think it's obvious why they didn't charge on that basis - they know juries don't think this stuff is terrorism (particularly the criminal damage) but want to get that result anyway. This mechanism allows it, and it's particularly attractive because the CPS can pick and choose which political motivations they don't like. I don't say that lightly - I just can't dismiss the blatant inconsistency in the sentencing approach.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 21,094

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Were we getting many stabbings in the neck and attempted public beheadings in 1977?
    Who knows, because back in 1977 we didn't have phones and CCTV to film all this stuff and make it as 'newsworthy'. That's what's different now - the amount captured on film and distributed on social media.

    However, data shows that the rate of violent crime was higher in 1977 than it is now.
    I think we knew on public murders, because cameras and newspapers still existed even if they didn't capture in "real time".

    FWIW, this is @bondegezou usual one-man-rebuttal-unit bullshit again. The graph he's referring to is here and the murder rate was higher than in 1977 less than 2 years ago:

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/crimeandjustice/articles/homicideinenglandandwales/yearendingmarch2025

    There's a big spike in 2003. Initially my mind jumped to the 7/7 terror attacks, but they were in 2005 and those are probably captured differently.
    How does that rebut what I said? The most recent figures (2025) show the lowest homicide rate since 1977. The figures have been coming down. So, yes, they were higher two years ago. I wasn’t claiming the figures two years ago were the lowest since 1977.
  • BattlebusBattlebus Posts: 3,337

    I think makerfield will go to the wire . Mrs Duffy is about to chose the PM

    That encounter perfectly symbolised the disillusionment of working-class Labour voters, and the alienation felt as a result of the party's perceived detachment from their everyday concerns, which Brown so memorably validated.

    It explains Reform.
    There's a parallel with the SNP who started life as a right leaning party (Tartan Tories). They then pivoted left towards Labour voters and now sit there on the left. You could also argue it was the formula for the LibDems. A quite right leaning but declining Liberal Party merges with the left leaning SDP.

    Whether Reform and the SNP eventually suffer the LibDem fate (always the bridesmaid) time will tell.
  • eekeek Posts: 33,981
    Sandpit said:

    US to impose export controls on the latest Anthropic AI models.

    https://x.com/anthropicai/status/2065597531644743999

    I’m sure everyone in UK and Europe calling for more AI regulation will be happy with this one. Right?

    Boots up a VPN connecting to the States, that will work for the next 10 yrars
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 23,735

    welshowl said:

    Musk has more wealth than three quarters of the world’s nations.

    And I bet it still doesn’t make him happy.

    Point of order ( I’m not defending it): if he is a $ trillionaire that’s his wealth on a given day. The figures the media are bandying about that he’s as “wealthy as Switzerland or Saudi” are an apples and pears situation, in that they are comparing Swiss and Saudi GDPs which are income not the stock of Swiss and Saudi net assets which are wealth.

    Perhaps of interest, using total economy net worth (sum of public and private assets and liabilities)
    Rank Country National Net Wealth
    (US$ trillions, approx.)
    1United States156
    2Japan25
    3Germany20
    4United Kingdom17
    5France16
    6Canada13
    7Italy12
    8South Korea11
    9Australia10
    10Spain9
    11Netherlands6
    12Switzerland5
    13Belgium3
    14Sweden3
    15Denmark2.5
    16Norway2.4
    17Poland2
    18Austria2
    19Israel1.8
    20Turkey1.7
    21Portugal1.5
    22New Zealand1.4
    23Ireland1.2
    24Czech Republic1.1
    25Finland0.9
    26Greece0.8
    27Hungary0.5
    28Slovakia0.4
    29Slovenia0.3
    30Lithuania0.3
    China? Russia? India? Saudi? et al?
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,523
    edited 8:25AM

    welshowl said:

    Musk has more wealth than three quarters of the world’s nations.

    And I bet it still doesn’t make him happy.

    Point of order ( I’m not defending it): if he is a $ trillionaire that’s his wealth on a given day. The figures the media are bandying about that he’s as “wealthy as Switzerland or Saudi” are an apples and pears situation, in that they are comparing Swiss and Saudi GDPs which are income not the stock of Swiss and Saudi net assets which are wealth.

    Perhaps of interest, using total economy net worth (sum of public and private assets and liabilities)
    Rank Country National Net Wealth
    (US$ trillions, approx.)
    1United States156
    2Japan25
    3Germany20
    4United Kingdom17
    5France16
    6Canada13
    7Italy12
    8South Korea11
    9Australia10
    10Spain9
    11Netherlands6
    12Switzerland5
    13Belgium3
    14Sweden3
    15Denmark2.5
    16Norway2.4
    17Poland2
    18Austria2
    19Israel1.8
    20Turkey1.7
    21Portugal1.5
    22New Zealand1.4
    23Ireland1.2
    24Czech Republic1.1
    25Finland0.9
    26Greece0.8
    27Hungary0.5
    28Slovakia0.4
    29Slovenia0.3
    30Lithuania0.3
    Indeed.

    But that’s a bit too nuanced for much of the meeja (!) “Bit richer than Finland@ doesn’t quite have the same ring to it.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 21,094

    Foxy said:

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Were we getting many stabbings in the neck and attempted public beheadings in 1977?
    Nah, the Teddy boys were a bit before then and the football casuals a bit after.
    Casual violence has declined, which is a good thing.

    Terrorism has probably declined too, tbh, which is also a good thing.

    That doesn't mean we should brush aside horrific attacks like Belfast because we want to hold on to cherished beliefs about the enrichment immigration offers us, which is all @bondegezou cares about.
    My comment was in reply to a post about an attack in Lancashire. As far as I know, we know nothing about the ethnicity or immigration status of the attacker.

    We shouldn’t brush aside horrific attacks, but we should also acknowledge that the overall picture is improving.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 59,026
    Eabhal said:

    DavidL said:

    Eabhal said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    Acquited of the terrorism charge or ALL the charges?

    I do think this is a challenging case on I don't think the approach taken here is the right one. If you think someone is a terrorist, use the laws that exist already to establish this and give the appropriate punishment.
    In Scotland you often get a choice between, say, careless and dangerous driving or full acquittal. If that were the case for this I think most people would have certainly convicted the sledgehammer guy of greivous bodily harm and possibly terrorism too. if it was just plain terrorism for criminal damage then it would have been full acquittals 90% of the time.

    But this is rather beside the point. If juries want to convict on terrorism charges then fair enough - but they should be given the choice rather than have it deliberately concealed from them.
    Not really. If someone is charged and taken to trial for dangerous driving the jury are told that they have the option of convicting of careless driving in the alternative and the difference is explained.

    I think the problem with the English case, and I have not read it thoroughly, is that the motive for the offence is not relevant to the question of guilt. You either did it or you didn't and that is what the jury decides. But it is relevant to sentence and to any risk assessment that arises on conviction. It does seem odd though that having chosen not to put terrorism charges on the indictment they are then treated as if they were terrorists.
    I think we are in agreement on the driving analogy, and I obviously can't do as good a job as explaining it as you did.

    I think it's obvious why they didn't charge on that basis - they know juries don't think this stuff is terrorism (particularly the criminal damage) but want to get that result anyway. This mechanism allows it, and it's particularly attractive because the CPS can pick and choose which political motivations they don't like. I don't say that lightly - I just can't dismiss the blatant inconsistency in the sentencing approach.
    Its not unique. So, in sexual offences, is someone has a bad record or is assessed as being a serious risk (neither of which the jury will know about when making their decisions) then they can get an order for life long restriction which imposes a lot of limitations on them even when they get out of jail. So, there can be factors the court has to take into account that the jury don't. This does seem an extreme case though.
  • Brixian59Brixian59 Posts: 2,303

    Sandpit said:

    No 10 was braced for Reeves or Miliband to quit. Then Healey jumped ship
    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/keir-starmer-defence-strategy-john-healey-bsncps22n (£££)

    Healy and Carns resigning, with blistering letters to the PM, was about the worst case scenario for No.10.

    No-one would have mourned Reeves or Miliband walking away.
    On what possible planet would Reeves have resigned? Her only hope of remaining as chancellor is for Starmer to stay on.
    Does Reeves want to remain Chancellor for an extra few weeks or would she fancy three years of first class flights and state banquets as Foreign Secretary to a grateful Wes Streeting Andy Burnham? Or even, since this is Labour, a chance to build something running a spending department – whether you like what Miliband, Phillipson and Streeting have done or not, at least they've done something.
    Too late - she’s too politically damaged and too closely associated with Starmer for Burnham to offer her a job.
    We'll see. I'm not convinced Burnham will want to exacerbate party splits on day one.
    Good morning

    I suspect the bond market's patience is going to be stretched to breaking point in the next few weeks, especially if Burnham carries out his threat to nationalise water and energy
    Utilities were publicly owned

    Stolen and Thatcher ruined by greed and corruption.

    Labour should take back in to public ownership paying shareholders a minimal peppercorn sum

    Power to the People

    Bringing accountability back

  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 47,962
    Foxy said:

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Were we getting many stabbings in the neck and attempted public beheadings in 1977?
    Nah, the Teddy boys were a bit before then and the football casuals a bit after.
    This was 1975 but I think it could qualify as an attempted public beheading (ending in death in this case). Maybe because it was in the Irish part of the UK it doesn't count.

    'Murphy repeatedly told Crossin: "I'm going to kill you, you bastard", before the taxi stopped at an entry off Wimbledon Street. Crossin was dragged into an alleyway and Murphy, brandishing a butcher's knife, cut his throat almost through to the spine.'

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shankill_Butchers
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 63,689

    welshowl said:

    Musk has more wealth than three quarters of the world’s nations.

    And I bet it still doesn’t make him happy.

    Point of order ( I’m not defending it): if he is a $ trillionaire that’s his wealth on a given day. The figures the media are bandying about that he’s as “wealthy as Switzerland or Saudi” are an apples and pears situation, in that they are comparing Swiss and Saudi GDPs which are income not the stock of Swiss and Saudi net assets which are wealth.

    Perhaps of interest, using total economy net worth (sum of public and private assets and liabilities)
    Rank Country National Net Wealth
    (US$ trillions, approx.)
    1United States156
    2Japan25
    3Germany20
    4United Kingdom17
    5France16
    6Canada13
    7Italy12
    8South Korea11
    9Australia10
    10Spain9
    11Netherlands6
    12Switzerland5
    13Belgium3
    14Sweden3
    15Denmark2.5
    16Norway2.4
    17Poland2
    18Austria2
    19Israel1.8
    20Turkey1.7
    21Portugal1.5
    22New Zealand1.4
    23Ireland1.2
    24Czech Republic1.1
    25Finland0.9
    26Greece0.8
    27Hungary0.5
    28Slovakia0.4
    29Slovenia0.3
    30Lithuania0.3
    China? Russia? India? Saudi? et al?
    That’s what I could find. China and Russia would be very hard to do, given fiddling with numbers by the state. Saudi would be their oil reserves, which they lie about. India would be possible - but couldn’t find the data.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 17,458
    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    I am not sure you account is full and complete. But whatever:

    1) They can appeal
    2) Sentencing takes account of circumstances; the judge does not normally ask the jury's view of the mitigating or aggravating circumstances
    3) Relatedly, I just note that the Liberty talking head on R4 Today this morning was loquacious on all subjects except one, where she pivoted and and no commented on the GBH aspect of the case.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 63,689
    welshowl said:

    welshowl said:

    Musk has more wealth than three quarters of the world’s nations.

    And I bet it still doesn’t make him happy.

    Point of order ( I’m not defending it): if he is a $ trillionaire that’s his wealth on a given day. The figures the media are bandying about that he’s as “wealthy as Switzerland or Saudi” are an apples and pears situation, in that they are comparing Swiss and Saudi GDPs which are income not the stock of Swiss and Saudi net assets which are wealth.

    Perhaps of interest, using total economy net worth (sum of public and private assets and liabilities)
    Rank Country National Net Wealth
    (US$ trillions, approx.)
    1United States156
    2Japan25
    3Germany20
    4United Kingdom17
    5France16
    6Canada13
    7Italy12
    8South Korea11
    9Australia10
    10Spain9
    11Netherlands6
    12Switzerland5
    13Belgium3
    14Sweden3
    15Denmark2.5
    16Norway2.4
    17Poland2
    18Austria2
    19Israel1.8
    20Turkey1.7
    21Portugal1.5
    22New Zealand1.4
    23Ireland1.2
    24Czech Republic1.1
    25Finland0.9
    26Greece0.8
    27Hungary0.5
    28Slovakia0.4
    29Slovenia0.3
    30Lithuania0.3
    Indeed.

    But that’s a bit too nuanced for much of the meeja (!) “Bit richer than Finland@ doesn’t quite have the same ring to it.
    Then again, “Personally richer than Finland” is fairly startling in its own way
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 66,683

    It's happened again. See social media for video footage of the incident.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gypqp0rp9o

    Girl, 17, stabbed in the neck in street attack

    The homicide rate in the UK is at its lowest since 1977.
    Were we getting many stabbings in the neck and attempted public beheadings in 1977?
    Who knows, because back in 1977 we didn't have phones and CCTV to film all this stuff and make it as 'newsworthy'. That's what's different now - the amount captured on film and distributed on social media.

    However, data shows that the rate of violent crime was higher in 1977 than it is now.
    I think we knew on public murders, because cameras and newspapers still existed even if they didn't capture in "real time".

    FWIW, this is @bondegezou usual one-man-rebuttal-unit bullshit again. The graph he's referring to is here and the murder rate was higher than in 1977 less than 2 years ago:

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/crimeandjustice/articles/homicideinenglandandwales/yearendingmarch2025

    There's a big spike in 2003. Initially my mind jumped to the 7/7 terror attacks, but they were in 2005 and those are probably captured differently.
    How does that rebut what I said? The most recent figures (2025) show the lowest homicide rate since 1977. The figures have been coming down. So, yes, they were higher two years ago. I wasn’t claiming the figures two years ago were the lowest since 1977.
    Lol!
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 24,360

    kinabalu said:

    I couldn't give a shit about the World Cup.

    Sorry.

    You will if we go deep. No true patriot can remain unmoved in that event. Bet you any money I'm right. You might not be able to get into the football itself but you'll be rooting hard for us to do it. Just simply because of the joy it will bring to so many English people.
    Probably, but that will be for different reasons to the love of football.

    Which I just don't have.
    I don't love football but I do like it. I think that objectively it is the best sport. There's a reason it is the most widely played game in the world.
    I think it's the simplest ball game - jumpers for goalposts, sort of thing - and so it's the easiest to set up and play in any space, with any number of people. This also extends to being a game that's easy to play without a referee - an informal game of cricket abandons lbw, for example, because there's no umpire to adjudicate.

    Low barriers to enter are how you get mass participation. That's a widely applicable lesson.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 61,839
    edited 8:33AM
    Brixian59 said:

    Sandpit said:

    No 10 was braced for Reeves or Miliband to quit. Then Healey jumped ship
    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/keir-starmer-defence-strategy-john-healey-bsncps22n (£££)

    Healy and Carns resigning, with blistering letters to the PM, was about the worst case scenario for No.10.

    No-one would have mourned Reeves or Miliband walking away.
    On what possible planet would Reeves have resigned? Her only hope of remaining as chancellor is for Starmer to stay on.
    Does Reeves want to remain Chancellor for an extra few weeks or would she fancy three years of first class flights and state banquets as Foreign Secretary to a grateful Wes Streeting Andy Burnham? Or even, since this is Labour, a chance to build something running a spending department – whether you like what Miliband, Phillipson and Streeting have done or not, at least they've done something.
    Too late - she’s too politically damaged and too closely associated with Starmer for Burnham to offer her a job.
    We'll see. I'm not convinced Burnham will want to exacerbate party splits on day one.
    Good morning

    I suspect the bond market's patience is going to be stretched to breaking point in the next few weeks, especially if Burnham carries out his threat to nationalise water and energy
    Utilities were publicly owned

    Stolen and Thatcher ruined by greed and corruption.

    Labour should take back in to public ownership paying shareholders a minimal peppercorn sum

    Power to the People

    Bringing accountability back

    Some of us are old enough to remember 1980s British Telecom, where you’d wait three months for line to be installed, it would end up being a shared party line, and you’d better be damn grateful they were kind enough to give you service in the first place.

    Privatisation and competition were the best things to ever happen to utilities.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 24,360
    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    Er, link?
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 4,486

    welshowl said:

    Musk has more wealth than three quarters of the world’s nations.

    And I bet it still doesn’t make him happy.

    Point of order ( I’m not defending it): if he is a $ trillionaire that’s his wealth on a given day. The figures the media are bandying about that he’s as “wealthy as Switzerland or Saudi” are an apples and pears situation, in that they are comparing Swiss and Saudi GDPs which are income not the stock of Swiss and Saudi net assets which are wealth.

    Perhaps of interest, using total economy net worth (sum of public and private assets and liabilities)
    Rank Country National Net Wealth
    (US$ trillions, approx.)
    1United States156
    2Japan25
    3Germany20
    4United Kingdom17
    5France16
    6Canada13
    7Italy12
    8South Korea11
    9Australia10
    10Spain9
    11Netherlands6
    12Switzerland5
    13Belgium3
    14Sweden3
    15Denmark2.5
    16Norway2.4
    17Poland2
    18Austria2
    19Israel1.8
    20Turkey1.7
    21Portugal1.5
    22New Zealand1.4
    23Ireland1.2
    24Czech Republic1.1
    25Finland0.9
    26Greece0.8
    27Hungary0.5
    28Slovakia0.4
    29Slovenia0.3
    30Lithuania0.3
    Source? Since no China, Russia, I am assuming OECD, can you confirm?
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 14,339
    edited 8:38AM
    algarkirk said:

    Eabhal said:

    ICYMI: yesterday was a very dark day for the UK justice system.

    Four people sentenced for a crime they were not convicted of, after a trial where the judge deliberately concealed that possibility from the jury and prevented the media from reporting on it.

    I’ve not doubt they would have been acquitted had the jury been made aware of what crime they were convicting them off, so in effect trial by jury has ended in the UK.

    The only logical response for jurors is to always acquit in the future.

    I am not sure you account is full and complete. But whatever:

    1) They can appeal
    2) Sentencing takes account of circumstances; the judge does not normally ask the jury's view of the mitigating or aggravating circumstances
    3) Relatedly, I just note that the Liberty talking head on R4 Today this morning was loquacious on all subjects except one, where she pivoted and and no commented on the GBH aspect of the case.
    1) Yes, and? If it gets overturned on appeal it’s even more egregious because the system has failed in the first instance
    2) It’s not an aggravating factor, it’s a different crime. There are people with simple criminal damage convictions being locked up for terrorism. It has lifelong implications.
    3) That’s entirely beside the point. The guy was charged with GBH, evidence was put to the jury, and he was rightly convicted.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 61,839
    eek said:

    Sandpit said:

    US to impose export controls on the latest Anthropic AI models.

    https://x.com/anthropicai/status/2065597531644743999

    I’m sure everyone in UK and Europe calling for more AI regulation will be happy with this one. Right?

    Boots up a VPN connecting to the States, that will work for the next 10 yrars
    Except that they’ve pulled the new models completely, while they work out how to comply with the export controls.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 22,046
    Sandpit said:

    US to impose export controls on the latest Anthropic AI models.

    https://x.com/anthropicai/status/2065597531644743999

    I’m sure everyone in UK and Europe calling for more AI regulation will be happy with this one. Right?

    Has a whiff of market manipulation
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