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Wanderers Ways. Neil Thompson 1961-2021

Rudy

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17 minutes ago, boltondiver said:

We voted against PR in 2010 or so.

Clearly the will of the public to retain the system and given we are one of the great nations, then it has obviously worked.

Aye. Doesn't alter the fact that a majority of folk would rather not have the cunt.

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I'm not sure I massively get this london centric bias, I might feel differently if I wasn't here but the difference between the tiers isn't huge but it does make a difference to the rate of the growth. I went to one independant pub in central and a small slice of pizza counted for a meal and then drink as much as you want, which would happen everywhere. Keep us all at tier 3 with amendments, I don't agree with not opening social distanced resturants, museums etc these have to be booked and time slots allocated - same with a thetare, went twice and was fine with the rules - although not as nice an experience to be fair.

I get that many haven't had the same freedoms as I have enjoyed for a lot longer. Its only been a few weeks of relative hardship.

I'd be surpised if the NW went to T2, and as people say, that's maybe the payoff for the christmas mixing. Anyway, just back from Bomley town, I have to say it is a bit depressing with all the cafe's shut.

 

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1 hour ago, Spider said:

140,000 a week

Lets say they need to get 30 million done to cover the main groups

Thats 4 years.

Need to up the game if they can

It'll ramp up considerably in the coming weeks. If we start using the Oxford Vaccine then I understand non clinicians will be trained to give it too - in which case it'll increase by orders of magnitude.

140,000 in the first week is decent going.

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4 minutes ago, kent_white said:

It'll ramp up considerably in the coming weeks. If we start using the Oxford Vaccine then I understand non clinicians will be trained to give it too - in which case it'll increase by orders of magnitude.

140,000 in the first week is decent going.

Not knocking it, I know it's hard with the Pfizer vaccine. 

Just hoping they can be getting 1million+ per week done by Jan/Feb

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46 minutes ago, Escobarp said:

Is that correct? Was he not elected as leader of the conservatives and THEN went to a general election to confirm his current term as PM and won that election by a large margin with a public vote by the people of the UK? Or is my understanding of our political system incorrect? 
 

guess it is correct how he became PM by default initially. But the people voted him in a large majority. That’s a lot of stupid people in your highly educated opinion 

Think this shows why Brexit et al are bad ideas for referendums as we all have very little idea how even the basics work - that's not a pop Esco, its just that electorial systems are arcane and not designed brilliantly - they are a mix of historic traditions and best system at the time of conception with layers and layers of changes sat on top like some sedimentary soil. Its difficult to dig out their real purpose.

Of our two main parties, the Labour leadership is determined by its members, you wanted to get rid of Corbyn, pay the subs, you have a vote. Hence why the Trade Union's can be so unhealthy for the party and Blair's most powerful move was to remove Clause 4, basically scuppering them and low and behold we got a centrist liberal democratic movement. But also why you get a 'broad church' or a 'huge tent with no-one agreeing' The Conserviatves are voted by the MPs, which allows them to be more rutheless and essentially a machine designed for power. Popularity waning? Out you go. Just read about the 10 days from Hesletine declaring he was going to run for the leadership to Thatcher leaving Number 10. Its brutal. So long, Maggie, and thanks for everything. Also the Tories aren't relying on Union subs to fund them so they don't have to bow (or govern in the name of depending on your point of view) to anyone. The flip side of that is they get themselves into real difficulties awarding big fat business contracts who those who they know or who have ties to the party - which, I'm sure anyone of any political view would believe isn't a great idea.

So you have a sprawling, ancient, and often not fit for purpose system. But it has held peace, so people generally are happy to carry on in broadly liberal, capitalist, secular democracy. State support with a strive for a meriococracy (although its not generally the case) 

We never vote for our PM - I know that people 'do', and most people can't name their MP. But we literally don't. We got rid of that chance in 1660.

And that's our system of the parties just electing leaders, asking folk to get their heads around complex economic trade systems in a binary vote was pretty bonkers for everyone. BUT its conception does go back to party leadership, because the Tories vote their leaders in, rather than the 'party' itself, they always in constant tention with their backbenchers in a way that the Labour party isn't that concerned with until recently. Let the far left shout from the sidelines, it doesn't make much difference to the Labour cabinet as they have no say of who is in or out. Not the same with the Conservatives. As we know Cameron needed to stop the swell of dissent of the backbenchers getting behind UKIP (despite UKIP being a more electoral issue for Labour) he promised it in his manifesto to get the party behind him during the election so that he won a majority. That worked, but here we are with the aftermath. An avoidable disruption caused in order to help keep powerful people in power.

And it was ever thus....

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2 minutes ago, Not in Crawley said:

Think this shows why Brexit et al are bad ideas for referendums as we all have very little idea how even the basics work - that's not a pop Esco, its just that electorial systems are arcane and not designed brilliantly - they are a mix of historic traditions and best system at the time of conception with layers and layers of changes sat on top like some sedimentary soil. Its difficult to dig out their real purpose.

Of our two main parties, the Labour leadership is determined by its members, you wanted to get rid of Corbyn, pay the subs, you have a vote. Hence why the Trade Union's can be so unhealthy for the party and Blair's most powerful move was to remove Clause 4, basically scuppering them and low and behold we got a centrist liberal democratic movement. But also why you get a 'broad church' or a 'huge tent with no-one agreeing' The Conserviatves are voted by the MPs, which allows them to be more rutheless and essentially a machine designed for power. Popularity waning? Out you go. Just read about the 10 days from Hesletine declaring he was going to run for the leadership to Thatcher leaving Number 10. Its brutal. So long, Maggie, and thanks for everything. Also the Tories aren't relying on Union subs to fund them so they don't have to bow (or govern in the name of depending on your point of view) to anyone. The flip side of that is they get themselves into real difficulties awarding big fat business contracts who those who they know or who have ties to the party - which, I'm sure anyone of any political view would believe isn't a great idea.

So you have a sprawling, ancient, and often not fit for purpose system. But it has held peace, so people generally are happy to carry on in broadly liberal, capitalist, secular democracy. State support with a strive for a meriococracy (although its not generally the case) 

We never vote for our PM - I know that people 'do', and most people can't name their MP. But we literally don't. We got rid of that chance in 1660.

And that's our system of the parties just electing leaders, asking folk to get their heads around complex economic trade systems in a binary vote was pretty bonkers for everyone. BUT its conception does go back to party leadership, because the Tories vote their leaders in, rather than the 'party' itself, they always in constant tention with their backbenchers in a way that the Labour party isn't that concerned with until recently. Let the far left shout from the sidelines, it doesn't make much difference to the Labour cabinet as they have no say of who is in or out. Not the same with the Conservatives. As we know Cameron needed to stop the swell of dissent of the backbenchers getting behind UKIP (despite UKIP being a more electoral issue for Labour) he promised it in his manifesto to get the party behind him during the election so that he won a majority. That worked, but here we are with the aftermath. An avoidable disruption caused in order to help keep powerful people in power.

And it was ever thus....

@Rudy

Is there any way you can transpose the post above onto a big pair of tits, with a framework of flaming biffa skips?

I think that might neatly summarise this site.

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9 minutes ago, Not in Crawley said:

Think this shows why Brexit et al are bad ideas for referendums as we all have very little idea how even the basics work - that's not a pop Esco, its just that electorial systems are arcane and not designed brilliantly - they are a mix of historic traditions and best system at the time of conception with layers and layers of changes sat on top like some sedimentary soil. Its difficult to dig out their real purpose.

Of our two main parties, the Labour leadership is determined by its members, you wanted to get rid of Corbyn, pay the subs, you have a vote. Hence why the Trade Union's can be so unhealthy for the party and Blair's most powerful move was to remove Clause 4, basically scuppering them and low and behold we got a centrist liberal democratic movement. But also why you get a 'broad church' or a 'huge tent with no-one agreeing' The Conserviatves are voted by the MPs, which allows them to be more rutheless and essentially a machine designed for power. Popularity waning? Out you go. Just read about the 10 days from Hesletine declaring he was going to run for the leadership to Thatcher leaving Number 10. Its brutal. So long, Maggie, and thanks for everything. Also the Tories aren't relying on Union subs to fund them so they don't have to bow (or govern in the name of depending on your point of view) to anyone. The flip side of that is they get themselves into real difficulties awarding big fat business contracts who those who they know or who have ties to the party - which, I'm sure anyone of any political view would believe isn't a great idea.

So you have a sprawling, ancient, and often not fit for purpose system. But it has held peace, so people generally are happy to carry on in broadly liberal, capitalist, secular democracy. State support with a strive for a meriococracy (although its not generally the case) 

We never vote for our PM - I know that people 'do', and most people can't name their MP. But we literally don't. We got rid of that chance in 1660.

And that's our system of the parties just electing leaders, asking folk to get their heads around complex economic trade systems in a binary vote was pretty bonkers for everyone. BUT its conception does go back to party leadership, because the Tories vote their leaders in, rather than the 'party' itself, they always in constant tention with their backbenchers in a way that the Labour party isn't that concerned with until recently. Let the far left shout from the sidelines, it doesn't make much difference to the Labour cabinet as they have no say of who is in or out. Not the same with the Conservatives. As we know Cameron needed to stop the swell of dissent of the backbenchers getting behind UKIP (despite UKIP being a more electoral issue for Labour) he promised it in his manifesto to get the party behind him during the election so that he won a majority. That worked, but here we are with the aftermath. An avoidable disruption caused in order to help keep powerful people in power.

And it was ever thus....

Point of order

The members voted Boris in, not the Conservative MPs, after it was narrowed down by MPs

 

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3 minutes ago, Spider said:

@Rudy

Is there any way you can transpose the post above onto a big pair of tits, with a framework of flaming biffa skips?

I think that might neatly summarise this site.

Bit busy at the moment will this suffice for now

 bbc19ed26b1a4503a9ef4957db7d4237.gif

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2 hours ago, Spider said:

I'm happy enough with our electoral system. It's not flawless, like.

I doubt any system would have stopped loads of floating voters from being drawn into Boris's well crafted, self-deprecating, daft Etonian slapstick but-he-must-know-what-he's-doing pastiche.

He's got another test now as Heathrow has been told it can expand. He said he'd lie down in front of the bulldozers for his constituents. But managed to miss a commons vote to try and stop it.

He's shit. And the clock is ticking.

 

I watched a load of the Thatcher stuff on BBC4 last night. She would have sorted Brexit and Covid and we'd all be arguing about pit closures by now.

One simpleton from Leigh is still arguing about the closures now at non league matches, on train journeys, in The Ale House etc.

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3 hours ago, miamiwhite said:

One simpleton from Leigh is still arguing about the closures now at non league matches, on train journeys, in The Ale House etc.

Just did my bit defending jobs at the time and fighting tory scum policy. I've still not mellowed to the mindless destruction those bastards caused and felt even to this day.

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1 minute ago, leigh white said:

Just did my bit defending jobs at the time and fighting tory scum policy. I've still not mellowed to the mindless destruction those bastards caused and felt even to this day.

You took your fucking time ..............closing words in Rita Sue and Bob Too

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