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That's parked up at that dogging site on the hill near Douglas?? !!!!
With a Lexus and an Alan Partridge outfit, you can't go wrong!
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That's parked up at that dogging site on the hill near Douglas?? !!!!
Meanwhile, chief Blair stooge and general flip-flopper Keir Starmer, freshly de-lubed from his Macron visit, struggling to find a pitch to sell the electorate as he outlines Britain's re-entry into the EU, and then being heard to say he'd honour Brussels' wishes as per the original agreement ?
It does appear as though he's intent on botching the easiest open goal this century, graciously handing the Tories some much-needed leverage going into next year. Could this man possibly conduct a breathtaking turnaround and snatch defeat from the jaws of victory?.....

I think they're heading to Long dong for a rejoin jamboree, oh look he's wearing one of those commie caps so beloved of corbyn, I wonder if there is an ideology connection somewhere
View attachment 187317
Whilst not everyone is going to ride on a train with an EU flag to a rejoin march, and indeed, neither would the numbers below translate directly to the same result in a fresh referendum (which I think will probably happen within the next ten years), the fact remains that those people on the train are now on the majority side of public opinion in the UK. (And let's remember that the original referendum wasn't exactly a slam dunk, with its very narrow 52/48 result.)
The whole point of a democracy is that it's allowed to change its mind.
View attachment 187334

Well that' s the thing - should it be a x % should it be % wise, at the end of the day it went ahead, whether you liked it or not. To argue if currently 75% now would renege now is neither there nor there - though i get the point being made.I think I read in the telegraph a proposal that any future referendum, to reverse brexit, should have a threshold rather than simple first past the post, to prevent a hokey cokey situation. Going back in on a 51 to 49 percentage would not be satisfactory.
What we have today is the natural order of things [minus the NI internal border] for a democratic country, the decisions are made and voted on here. Therefore passing some of these powers and billions of £ annually to the EU should require a clear majority of around 25%, then the issue would be finished.
We went from 'material benefits' to 'not as bad as you think', in a hair breath. If, as a advocate of Brexit, you can't take that into account there is no hope for you, but sure, carry on regardless.Devolved governance is the way in which in should work - unfortunately it never turns out that way, if ever: you have national policy that filters/drip feeds into the devolved administrations via 'ring fenced' monies.If europe was polled and only 50% liked the EU, I would class that as a failure, because it's meant to be in every country's benefit, and it costs billions of tax to run what amounts to an extra layer of bureaucracy/govt.
In terms of popularity, 7 out of 10 would be a good ballpark for clear endorsement across europe [an average] that's a healthy mandate for any political rule.
All things being equal we save £200 million every week being out, that's a lot of exports required to make that up, 800 million company profit = 200 m from a rate of 25% corporation tax if my maths are correct. [EU to UK Tourism might increase as well]
Really there shouldn't be another referendum for a few decades; if scotand had gained independence by 1% there would not be another vote 15 yrs later to rejoin the UK. Because ultimately the locals would view self governance as the natural state of things, for better or worse.
Devolved governance is the way in which in should work - unfortunately it never turns out that way, if ever: you have national policy that filters/drip feeds into the devolved administrations via 'ring fenced' monies.
Tbh Mack i'm not quite sure, as are the economists as to the 'saving' of X amounts per year - i've listened to about 10 so-called respected economists and there's a range of saving X, to costing Y. Therein lies the problem, even the experts don't even agree.
Depending upon the zeitgeist, here in Scotland (given the nationalistic movement is, despite which Unionists think (and Scotland will vote for Independence as it's become a bigger than the SNP, in the next vote IMO), there is a real possibility of another one in under 2 decades. There's the problem as you've said; you end up in this: well the mood has changed, lets ask the public again....end up in this weird world of referendums every 5-10 years? That's pretty mad.
TBH mate i've lost track of the calculations - there's been plus and minus's either side of each, it's almost like neither really knowI thought there was a rough consensus that the net cost of EU membership was around £10 billion for the uk when we left, so in order for the EU membership to be worthwhile on a pure financial cost basis, increased export trade to the EU would have to cover it.
So those exports would need to raise an extra £40 billion in profit [not simply revenue] which equates to the 10 billion tax proceeds [corporation tax @25%] for the govt to pay the EU membership fee.
I welcome any alternative calculations or way the fee would be covered.
I have seen a report that our trade with the EU has gone up by 20% even though we've left, however I suspect that might have something to do with the energy market and the ukraine war/sanctions on russian energy. But those sanctions might stay for a long time.
It wouldn't bother me if Scotland was given a bit more devolved power [now that we have gone down this route due to new labour bringing it in] so they could set their own tax rates, as long as the larger union remained. There is more connecting us than divides us, brits should stick together.


You wouldn't want even a mild shock like this after a vindaloo the night before![]()

Not exactly related to the thread, but interested in monsieur Chopley's take:
A supermarket chain which has served the Isle of Man for more than 50 years has been bought by Tesco.
The retail giant said it would rebrand all nine of the island's Shoprite stores over the next nine months.
Shoprite is one of the island's major employers and currently sell a mix of Sainsbury's products and fresh produce from local business Robinson's.
"Whilst any announcements that result in job reductions are never welcome, I am heartened by the commitment from Tesco to retain the majority of staff in the immediate term and invest heavily in the existing store network over the next 12 months," he added.
I guess we'll have to wait and see what occurs, I wouldn't really say Shoprite are a beloved national institution and rumours have been abound for a while that something was going to happen (a lot of the Sainsbury's lines they'd previously sold had mysteriously disappeared from the shelves over the last month or so....).
Personally I prefer Shoprite to Tesco, not least because Shoprite has generous wide aisles and less of a frantic feel to it, but I guess when there's more than one Tesco to choose from that problem might subside. (Currently there's only one Tesco on the island, in Douglas.)
Tesco have been denied planning permission multiple times on a couple of sites, so their purchase of Shoprite is probably more to do with the buildings/land and existing site use designation than particularly wanting to buy all nine branches as an ongoing concern.
Everyone here seems to think some stores will be closing, Shoprite have two branches in Ramsey, for example, and Ramsey isn't exactly a big place. Also Tesco have already said Shoprite head office jobs will be lost.
Finally, Shoprite were good on selling quite a lot of local produce, more so than Tesco, so it remains to be seen what happens in that regard.
Here are the two Shoprites in Ramsey, for example, you can walk from one to the other in just a few minutes.
View attachment 187951
Just an outside view, but I think it adds to the charm to have different shops owned by different organisations, and especially if they sold local produce where possible.
I suppose there are extra transport costs bringing products across from the mainland, so you have to expect a bit of a monopoly in return and enable some economy of scale.
On a side query Chopley, are you paying the same kind of prices for electricity and gas as the uk cap?
[Think mine is currently 36p per kwh of leccy as a reference and 11p for gas kwh]
Sorry mack I meant to reply to this earlier in the week but because I'm old and rubbish, I forgot.
We're currently paying 30p per kwh, it was a lot less than that not too long ago, and the government stepped in with support to keep the prices down once it all kicked off in Ukraine, but the price rises have been getting passed on of late. We're quite a leccy-heavy household so we have seen it in steadily increasing bills.
There's no competition/market over here, you just get your leccy off the Manx Utilities Authority and that's that. It's not technically nationalised in the strictest sense of the word as it's run as a Statutory Board of government, but it also isn't allowed to make a profit either and there are no shareholders and no one really 'owns' it, except, ultimately, well, the government.
It's a fairly non-controversial arrangement and there's no particular agitation for it to be changed. I think folks over here have seen how utilities privatisation has ultimately panned out in the UK, and decided we'll just keep things as they are, thanks very much. (MUA also do water and sewage over here. Oh yes and some gas and telecomms stuff as well, undersea cables and suchlike)
View attachment 188097

I prefer the sound of that I must admit, as long as the utility board is sensible. There is hardly any competition here in the uk, I think British Gas are an energy producer but most of the others just resellers adding on a markup for their admin/marketing costs and shareholder's profit, so effectively the 'market' is an added cost to the end user, for energy that comes down the same pipe work.
My standing charges work out at about £300 a year and used to be zero a few years back, how much further can it go up
When 'Bulb', a private company set up by 2 young entrepreneurs, went bust it apparently cost the uk govt 6.5 billion, surely at some point they're going to need to restructure the energy market.
I have a 12-month deal with Shell electric at 27.3p per kwh and gas at 7.7p. So not too far away. Mind you, in the sunny mild south not once has the automatic gas heating sparked up this autumn - yet! When it's cloudy it's mild and cold it's sunny which heats the house up during the day, possibly why it hasn't come on yet. It's always the same, once the house gradually loses its stored heat in the walls etc. from the summer and early autumn it will come on, but the first few cold days are 'free' if you like due to the ambient temperature of the building.Sorry mack I meant to reply to this earlier in the week but because I'm old and rubbish, I forgot.
We're currently paying 30p per kwh, it was a lot less than that not too long ago, and the government stepped in with support to keep the prices down once it all kicked off in Ukraine, but the price rises have been getting passed on of late. We're quite a leccy-heavy household so we have seen it in steadily increasing bills.
There's no competition/market over here, you just get your leccy off the Manx Utilities Authority and that's that. It's not technically nationalised in the strictest sense of the word as it's run as a Statutory Board of government, but it also isn't allowed to make a profit either and there are no shareholders and no one really 'owns' it, except, ultimately, well, the government.
It's a fairly non-controversial arrangement and there's no particular agitation for it to be changed. I think folks over here have seen how utilities privatisation has ultimately panned out in the UK, and decided we'll just keep things as they are, thanks very much. (MUA also do water and sewage over here. Oh yes and some gas and telecomms stuff as well, undersea cables and suchlike)
View attachment 188097
I don't think anyone gives a shit any more mate.Not a good night for the Tories, with two crushing defeats. Yes they're only by-elections yada yada all that stuff but for reference, a government has never lost a seat as safe as Tamworth to the primary opposition before. Ever. (i.e. Not a protest vote for the Lib Dems, but a vote for the party that can realistically form a government, in this case Labour.)
Rather amusingly in one of the seats the fringe right wing parties (including Reform UK) took enough votes off the Tories to see Labour past the finishing post.
There'll be a general election by January 2025 at the latest, I simply do not see any way for Sunak to turn it around from here. There isn't enough time for an economic recovery and nowhere for it to come from anyway, as the UK continues to slowly bleed out from the endless puncture of Johnson's disastrous Brexit deal. Add in all the other factors that ail the UK at the moment, all of which are a result of thirteen years of ruinous Tory rule (there's no one else to blame), and we could be looking at an electoral wipeout 1997-style.
For my money, you can draw a straight line from Cameron's ill-fated decision to call a referendum on EU membership, right to where the Conservative Party is now. There was never any honesty around Brexit, they just doubled down on lies, time and time again, which culminated in the elevation of Johnson, the most unfit Prime Minister the country has ever seen, to the highest office in the land - and the biggest lie of all, his 'Oven Ready Brexit Deal', which cast the UK into an economic abyss from which it is yet to escape.
The bigger problem we have now is the utterly devastated condition the Tories will leave the UK in when they are finally ejected from office. Labour will have an awful lot of work to do. I hope Starmer comes out swinging.
Spoken like a true politicianfringe right wing parties
I read somewhere that in these two amazing by-election victories, labour increased their votes in the hundreds, yet the tory vote was down by many thousands.
So one can only conclude there is no real, grassroot appetite for labour, it's just stay at home tories [and who can blame them] handing a victory to starmer, he can't believe his luck - like 6 diamonds have lined up on bonanza!
Well the Tories will shortly be entering their 14th year of uninterrupted power, so if the lack of enthusiasm for politics, politicians, and the UK political system's overall ability to inspire people to enthusiastically cast their votes can be laid at anyone's door, it's theirs. Opposition parties can only do so much from the sidelines.
Moreover Labour's room for manoeuvre is limited, anything they announce has to pass the 'Daily Mail' test, whereby the UK's favourite insane right-wing hate-rag will set upon anything it can even remotely try to score some points off. This is the same paper that told us all Liz Truss was just the breath of fresh air the UK needed to really get things moving again.
On that note, fortunately all the disgusting culture wars stuff has clearly failed, turns out what people actually care about is the state of the economy, the NHS, their jobs, the UK's rivers and seas, its infrastructure, and all that actual important stuff. Despite the Tories' best efforts, they just can't make people all frothed up about women with penises and woke virtue-signalling teabags or whatever other bollocks it is they're banging on about at the moment.
Starmer needs to win an election first and get Labour into power, from there, we can judge them on their record.
Are you sure about the tories fighting the culture war?
I will be happy if Starmer does all those basics, will be interesting to hear his plan to improve the economy, local labour councils haven't shown any special ability in this dept, birmingham city actually going bankrupt.
The tories seem to have lost who they are, apart from the cronyism/fill your boots philosophy.
View attachment 188484
They're still doing the culture war thing (they have nothing else left), but it's not gaining them any electoral traction whatsoever, the polling on this is very clear, outside of the rather more..... ahem..... loony end of their support base, it's a vote loser, more moderate/centrist Tories hate it, let alone those who'd be minded to vote Lib Dem or Labour. (So yes, if those Tories stay home on polling day, it matters.)
As for councils going bankrupt, it's happened irrespective of political party across the country, and is a result of the crippling austerity years and starvation of local bodies up and down the UK of cash over the last thirteen years.
The blob decides these things, but the chickens are coming home to roost for the mess liberals [and also arch thatcherite/blair economic policy with crony capitalism] have made.
"Rishi Sunak has said he believes that 100 per cent of women do not have penises. The prime minister has put himself at odds with Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer by declaring that 100 per cent of women do not have male genitals.
By contrast, Sir Keir earlier this month suggested that as many as one in every thousand women has a penis."
Anyone this bonkers is fully capable of stupid decisions and poor judgement elsewhere.
It's good to see us finally get an answer for such taxing questions that have puzzled our most brilliant minds since the dawn of time. Glad we can put this one to bed now. The future of mankind is looking bright.100 per cent of women do not have penises
But this is literally, exactly what I'm talking about mack. You're going on about the 'blob' (what is that again, exactly? Is it the same thing as the tofu-eating wokerati?) and Starmer's line on women with penises when the results on this are in, nowhere near enough people give a single flying hamster turd about it for it to be any kind of vote winner whatsoever, indeed it's having exactly the opposite effect.
On one level I kind of get it, the Tories have no record to stand on, anyone with a functioning brain can see that they've trashed the UK over the last thirteen years and left it in a diminished, weakened and poorer state than when they came into office. They don't even have the economy to point to as a sort of 'Well at least we're on top of that, whatever the cost' - because they've fucked that as well. (And yes, the disastrous Tory Brexit has to shoulder a lot of the blame there.)
Against that backdrop I guess they're going to have to find something to lash out at and try to blame for the UK's ills that doesn't involve any sort of self-reflection, and therefore the women with penises and desperate brown people in boats fit the bill in that regard - but it clearly isn't working.
It makes the government look exactly what it is, weak, ineffective, and desperately scrabbling around for anything, anyone to blame for its own multiple, manifest failures. Distracted by trivia whilst the country burns - and the UK population has patently had enough.
It's good to see us finally get an answer for such taxing questions that have puzzled our most brilliant minds since the dawn of time. Glad we can put this one to bed now. The future of mankind is looking bright.
Yes, in comparison to the bigger daily issues families and people face, they couldn't give a flying wotsit about the meaning or debate of those quotes. I disagree on the boat landers, they do care and want it resolved, if not eventually there will be a strong populist reaction that the liberals and media class won't like.
Labour cannot hide from this issue if they win office. If marine le pen or her successor was to win in france, maybe she'd sort it out their end.
Cameron didn't make Brexit, the electorate did. Just sayin'One thing I will say is Sunak's played a blinder by waiting until Farage has fucked off to the jungle for a month before getting rid of Braverman.
As for bringing back Cameron, whilst never exactly my favourite politician (thanks for Brexit, Dave!), he almost looks like a political titan when compared to the current shower of incompetents, and he'll appeal to more liberal/centrist blue wall Tories who were repulsed by Braverman.
Also, Sunak has been making more agreeable noises in the direction of the EU recently, and Cameron was always a Remainer, of course.
We are very much at the point now where you could argue the government is illegitimate, so far removed is it from what got elected in 2019, and yet it can limp on for just over another year.... (I think we're on our seventh Home Secretary in this administration now?)

Re the 2019 election - they're so far away from what they fought for then - places like the NE (Durham) voted Tory, under the broad brush conservatism, of the hope of economic revival. And now they'll swing back because that never materialised and instead we have this angry, horrible rhetoric of a Party. Ironically, of all the PM's since then (10?) Johnson was the one who understood broad stroke Conservatism (albeit, couldn't implement it) better than all of them. -Rishi was probably plugging it all into a spreadsheet.One thing I will say is Sunak's played a blinder by waiting until Farage has fucked off to the jungle for a month before getting rid of Braverman.
As for bringing back Cameron, whilst never exactly my favourite politician (thanks for Brexit, Dave!), he almost looks like a political titan when compared to the current shower of incompetents, and he'll appeal to more liberal/centrist blue wall Tories who were repulsed by Braverman.
Also, Sunak has been making more agreeable noises in the direction of the EU recently, and Cameron was always a Remainer, of course.
We are very much at the point now where you could argue the government is illegitimate, so far removed is it from what got elected in 2019, and yet it can limp on for just over another year.... (I think we're on our seventh Home Secretary in this administration now?)
(hello, Red George?)- another fruitcake who's trying to caricature the 'working-class'.Crikey, Sunak's only gone and sacked Braverman and made DAVID CAMERON Foreign Secretary!![]()

