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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » MEMO to Mr Corbyn: Most GE2017 LAB voters think the Russian Go

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  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,599
    JackW said:

    Oxford college cancels 'cannabis themed' party amid accusations of cultural appropriation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2018/04/16/oxford-college-cancels-cannabis-themed-party-amid-accusations/

    Who was the dope who came up with that idea?
    Some weed...
  • Options
    edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,150
    tlg86 said:

    . There will be officials telling them that they risk being taken to court by non-Windrush people if they make exceptions.

    wtf
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,191

    ydoethur said:

    For my money all that shows is history is easily twisted by corrupt vested interest groups (the Columbus myth originated with Washington Irving but was seized on by Marxists in the 1960s and that is why it was so widely taught in schools, and is still espoused by Horrible Histories, based on the work of Terry Deary who is an avowed Marxist). Yet it is also quite amusing in its own way.

    This isn't meant to sound flippant, but how many people were teaching/advocating heliocentrism in the Middle Ages?
    Depends on what you mean by Heliocentrism. Quite a number were expressing doubts about the Ptolemaic theory and the suggestion the earth moved through the heavens was especially popular in the Islamic world. Quite a number of Islamic scholars e.g. Said al Sijzi came up with theories on that basis suggesting the earth moved through space. Grosseteste and Bacon in England seem to have espoused a crude form of it as well based loosely on the work of Aristarchus. So far as I am aware however Copernicus was the first to provide a plausible explained model of it, and Galileo the first to provide partial prove of it.
  • Options
    tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,189
    Peter Crouch!
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,960
    hunchman said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    hunchman said:

    RobD said:

    hunchman said:

    Very telling that not one of you can provide a satisfactory response to my questions on Syria.

    As for Chris Williamson, i hope you all know the real reason why he resigned as the Shadow Fire Minister? And no, don't go looking anywhere in the mainstream press to find out because you simply won't find it.

    Mr Williamson has a number of difficulties, not least his historic association with the UCATT trade union. Once again, follow the money.

    Is it possible to provide conspiracy theorists such as yourself with satisfactory answers? I doubt it.
    I go searching for the evidence and the truth by following the money. It's a shame that so many people don't bother and take their cues from an increasingly discredited mainstream media. It won't be me driving the cycle of lack of confidence in government over the next 3 years, with an enormous sovereign debt crisis (and related pensions crisis). It will be the likes of many PB'ers who have a totally misplaced confidence in the government right now, and one by one they'll see that this government has been lying to us all along over so many different things.
    This site is widely read. If you are genuinely on the track of a serious conspiracy, it is overwhelmingly likely that the conspirators will get wind of the fact from your postings here, identify you by hacking the site or blackmailing the admins, and kill you. By posting about your theories, you disprove them. Had you thought that through?
    People who I associate with have been threatened whilst trying to uncover this fraud. And people have been murdered such as Scott Young and Brett Kebble thank you very much. And I know people who have lost their life savings thanks to the historic Finchley Road network as well. So I have seen the very real human cost of it all. I hope those people on here who make silly flippant comments about the Finchley Road network will reflect on this post, and not be so crass and stupid going forward.

    Thank you.
    You think Brett Kebble was murdered because of this?

  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,599
    MaxPB said:

    Foxy said:

    rcs1000 said:

    hunchman said:

    Mortimer said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I'm looking forward to finding out how a family business was involved. Was first registered at Finchley Road...
    How many times do I have to tell you all that Finchley Road is the past. The action has moved on to new addresses after that all got closed down in an enormous panic at the end of February last year. And other non-Finchley Road addresses interlocked to the network got closed down too at different points last year........all verifiable by forensic companies house records. Funny that there was a massive race to slam doors shut very quickly last year if there was nothing dodgy going on don't you think?

    And thank goodness that is all in the past, although the new addresses are being chased too and hopefully will be hounded out of business too where they are engaged in fraud, theft and money laundering.
    The bit I struggle with is this:

    If I wanted to do Nefarious Shit [TM], why would I do it via company house listed entities? It's perfectly possible to set up corporate entities with limited - or non-existant - levels of public disclosure, so why use something where you have to report to Companies House? And if I was reporting to Companies House, then why not simply lie anyway: it's not like the penalties for false disclosure regarding to private companies are severe compared to those for the Nefarious Shit [TM] I was doing?
    Personally, were I to plan a world dominating conspiracy with my illuminati friends, I would choose a better HQ. Perhaps a submersible base, or a hollowed out volcano, or space station, if not the European Parliament (ever wonder why there are 2? , nudge nudge).

    A shabby North London flat, bought in the Eighties is just a bit gauche for me, Dr Evil and Ernst Blofeld.
    Yes, but have you been to that part of (((North London)))...
    You are Jeremy Corbyn and I claim my £5. :)
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    RobD said:

    Pulpstar said:

    RobD said:

    RobD said:

    RobD said:

    JackW said:

    Dr Sunil and Dr Andrea too .... :smiley:

    *ahem*
    We're talking about real doctors, not non medical doctors.

    :lol:
    It's why I typically fly under my other title....
    Professor?
    A more modest Mr. :p
    How's Cali today :D ?
    Cold and wet.
    It was lovely for the last few days.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,960
    ydoethur said:

    glw said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I mean Amber Rudd is involved in both isn't she?

    That is what always gets me about conspiracy theories (which I have read far too much about, over the years). On the one hand there are these incredibly elaborate multi-decade plots to rule the world involving a cast of thousands, but they are blown wide open by a shitty out-of-focus YouTube video, or something similar.

    One of my favourite ever conspiracy theories was the one that said that Barack Obama was simultaneously

    a) A Muslim who wanted to turn America into a Muslim state

    and

    b) Controlled and financed by the Jews/Israel
    Even that's not quite as good as Ernst Zundel, who believed the Holocaust had been faked to ensure the Nazi survivors could get on with testing UFOs from their sub-Antarctic base in peace.

    On your earlier post, Galileo is also rather a bad example. There is a detailed account of the affair and how it has been misinterpreted in James Hannam's God's Philosophers (not sure if you've ever read that - review here) but to cut to the chase, he agreed with the Inquisition that while the science was contestable to teach it as a theory and then turned around and taught it as a fact. (Also of course he was not buried in unconsecrated ground - I did enjoy one person who made that claim and then followed up, unforgettably, with an account of how moving he found a visit to Santa Croce in Florence to see Galileo's tomb!)
    That book looks rather good: I've added it to my Kindle reading list. It'll be my next non-fiction (after Rejoice, Rejoice).
  • Options
    tlg86 said:

    Peter Crouch!

    Joe Hart England's number 1?
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    stodgestodge Posts: 12,850
    Evening all :)

    Trying to catch up with the day's events at Westminster and pretty much as might have been expected.

    On topic, I don't regard the Russian Government as "evil". The Russian Government is promoting the interests of Russia which seems pretty much what it should be doing. "Evil" is a curious notion which I've been considering of late.

    I suppose the definition of evil is a moral outlook antithetical to and diametrically opposed to one's own. Individuals are capable of evil but I'm less certain that's true of Governments even when led by evil individuals. Is Russia evil now, was the USSR evil then ? The USSR wanted to impose its moral and political outlook on the rest of the world but those who believed in such an outlook wouldn't have considered themselves evil but perhaps considered us evil instead.

    So we have this notion of "evil" on the same day Theresa May throws around "moral" as justification for the Syrian airstrikes. I would contend there is plenty of justification for the strikes - legal, military, diplomatic, political but moral ? I struggle with this as well - are Governments moral in any sense ?

    If I were a Syrian civilian, would my demise from a bullet, artillery shell or barrel bomb be more moral than death by poison gas ?

    There are those who argue the only moral position is to oppose violence in all forms. That's not unreasonable if idealistic in the face of those who have no moral objection to the use of violence in the acquisition of objectives and the pursuit of policy.

    Could a moral person be evil ? Yes but their morality would be constructed on principles so far removed from mine that there could be no common ground. One tends to think of evil as a form of amorality but I'm not convinced. Many of the most evil people in history were principled and moral in their own eyes - they might even have believed what they were doing was justifiable and could justify it.
  • Options
    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited April 2018
    It's interesting how once again people seem to be divided along party lines on the Windrush issue. Most on the right believe it's basically an administrative cock-up, whereas many on the left think it has at least something to do with racism and xenophobia.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,327
    Sean_F said:

    hunchman said:

    Sean_F said:

    hunchman said:

    rcs1000 said:

    hunchman said:

    Mortimer said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I'm looking forward to finding out how a family business was involved. Was first registered at Finchley Road...
    How many times do I have to tell you all that Finchley Road is the past. The action has moved on to new addresses after that all got closed down in an enormous panic at the end of February last year. And other non-Finchley Road addresses interlocked to the network got closed down too at different points last year........all verifiable by forensic companies house records. Funny that there was a massive race to slam doors shut very quickly last year if there was nothing dodgy going on don't you think?

    And thank goodness that is all in the past, although the new addresses are being chased too and hopefully will be hounded out of business too where they are engaged in fraud, theft and money laundering.
    The bit I struggle with is this:

    If I wanted to do Nefarious Shit [TM], why would I do it via company house listed entities? It's perfectly possible to set up corporate entities with limited - or non-existant - levels of public disclosure, so why use something where you have to report to Companies House? And if I was reporting to Companies House, then why not simply lie anyway: it's not like the penalties for false disclosure regarding to private companies are severe compared to those for the Nefarious Shit [TM] I was doing?
    You

    There are a lot of 'interesting' Companies House documents - directors being under false names for starters.
    It's the respectable-seeming company directors who are actually lizards that you have to worry about.
    The fact that you always bring up this lizard and reptile David Icke nonsense says more about you than anybody else.
    I'm trying to be helpful.
    ;-)
  • Options
    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,203
    I feel that the following two quotes sum up the events of the last few days:-

    Albert Camus:

    "Mistaken ideas always end in bloodshed but in every case it is someone else's blood. That is why some of our thinkers feel free to say just about anything."

    Substitute "politicians" for "thinkers" and it sums up Corbyn et al very well.

    Or this by the late marvelous Tony Judt:

    "Totalitarianism of the Left, much like an earlier totalitarianism of the Right, was about violence and power and control, and it appealed because of these features, not in spite of them."

    No wonder people like Corbyn and McDonnell admire the IRA, Putin, Assad and similar violent despots.
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,832
    rcs1000 said:

    hunchman said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    hunchman said:

    RobD said:

    hunchman said:

    Very telling that not one of you can provide a satisfactory response to my questions on Syria.

    As for Chris Williamson, i hope you all know the real reason why he resigned as the Shadow Fire Minister? And no, don't go looking anywhere in the mainstream press to find out because you simply won't find it.

    Mr Williamson has a number of difficulties, not least his historic association with the UCATT trade union. Once again, follow the money.

    Is it possible to provide conspiracy theorists such as yourself with satisfactory answers? I doubt it.
    I go searching for the evidence and the truth by following the money. It's a shame that so many people don't bother and take their cues from an increasingly discredited mainstream media. It won't be me driving the cycle of lack of confidence in government over the next 3 years, with an enormous sovereign debt crisis (and related pensions crisis). It will be the likes of many PB'ers who have a totally misplaced confidence in the government right now, and one by one they'll see that this government has been lying to us all along over so many different things.
    This site is widely read. If you are genuinely on the track of a serious conspiracy, it is overwhelmingly likely that the conspirators will get wind of the fact from your postings here, identify you by hacking the site or blackmailing the admins, and kill you. By posting about your theories, you disprove them. Had you thought that through?
    People who I associate with have been threatened whilst trying to uncover this fraud. And people have been murdered such as Scott Young and Brett Kebble thank you very much. And I know people who have lost their life savings thanks to the historic Finchley Road network as well. So I have seen the very real human cost of it all. I hope those people on here who make silly flippant comments about the Finchley Road network will reflect on this post, and not be so crass and stupid going forward.

    Thank you.
    You think Brett Kebble was murdered because of this?

    He was killed by aliens.
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    glw said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I mean Amber Rudd is involved in both isn't she?

    That is what always gets me about conspiracy theories (which I have read far too much about, over the years). On the one hand there are these incredibly elaborate multi-decade plots to rule the world involving a cast of thousands, but they are blown wide open by a shitty out-of-focus YouTube video, or something similar.

    One of my favourite ever conspiracy theories was the one that said that Barack Obama was simultaneously

    a) A Muslim who wanted to turn America into a Muslim state

    and

    b) Controlled and financed by the Jews/Israel
    That one’s easy:

    Radical Islam is controlled and directed by the Jewish Illuminati Lizards because it allows them to justify the repressive actions necessary to protect the hub of their operations in Israel.

    Or something...
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,327
    stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    Trying to catch up with the day's events at Westminster and pretty much as might have been expected.

    On topic, I don't regard the Russian Government as "evil". The Russian Government is promoting the interests of Russia which seems pretty much what it should be doing. "Evil" is a curious notion which I've been considering of late.

    I suppose the definition of evil is a moral outlook antithetical to and diametrically opposed to one's own. Individuals are capable of evil but I'm less certain that's true of Governments even when led by evil individuals. Is Russia evil now, was the USSR evil then ? The USSR wanted to impose its moral and political outlook on the rest of the world but those who believed in such an outlook wouldn't have considered themselves evil but perhaps considered us evil instead.

    So we have this notion of "evil" on the same day Theresa May throws around "moral" as justification for the Syrian airstrikes. I would contend there is plenty of justification for the strikes - legal, military, diplomatic, political but moral ? I struggle with this as well - are Governments moral in any sense ?

    If I were a Syrian civilian, would my demise from a bullet, artillery shell or barrel bomb be more moral than death by poison gas ?

    There are those who argue the only moral position is to oppose violence in all forms. That's not unreasonable if idealistic in the face of those who have no moral objection to the use of violence in the acquisition of objectives and the pursuit of policy.

    Could a moral person be evil ? Yes but their morality would be constructed on principles so far removed from mine that there could be no common ground. One tends to think of evil as a form of amorality but I'm not convinced. Many of the most evil people in history were principled and moral in their own eyes - they might even have believed what they were doing was justifiable and could justify it.

    I certainly think the Russian Government is evil.

    Quite aside from its rampant corruption, exploitation of ordinary Russians and aggression, it routinely murders its critics in horrific ways.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,191
    Ishmael_Z said:

    I love the introduction to the second edition of Origin of Species, where he lists I think 10 or 15 people who had put forward the theory of natural selection in relatively recent publications, but I don't know of any examples from "long before” Darwin. What did you have in mind?

    Your starting point should be Anaximander (d 546 BC) who was the first to put forward an idea that bears a resemblance to the modern theory of evolution although it differs in crucial respects.

    Jean Baptiste Lamarck (d. 1829) is also important in developing the theories of how characteristics chance over time, a soft theory of evolution it's sometimes called.

    There are many others but those are the two most important ones. Their theories were flawed in crucial ways - and still more flawed in that they couldn't prove them, which Darwin could - but they were out there all right.

    With that I am off to bed. Happy researching!
  • Options
    That was some finish by Andy Carroll.
  • Options
    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    Oxford college cancels 'cannabis themed' party amid accusations of cultural appropriation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2018/04/16/oxford-college-cancels-cannabis-themed-party-amid-accusations/

    Cultural appropriation ffs, what do they think the central purpose of a university is? They need to burn down the Pitt Rivers and the Ashmolean just for starters, and shut down classics and modern languages and all schools of history. And physics must stop with Rutherford, because everything later is stolen from the Swiss Jews. Actually even Rutherford (and Newton) are stolen from the primitive fen folk.
  • Options
    tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,189

    That was some finish by Andy Carroll.

    If he is genuinely fit, he should be considered for the World Cup.

    Joe Hart, on the other hand, should be available to do some more Head and Shoulders commercials.
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    hunchman said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I mean Amber Rudd is involved in both isn't she?

    TSE you're quite right to say how incompetent the government are over Windrush.....but when you've got the likes of Amber Rudd and Caroline Nokes overseeing it then it shouldn't be a surprise to anyone.

    As for Finchley Road, it wasn't the government that oversaw the vast Finchley Road network, it was people with links to the government who then co-opted MPs and members of the House of Lords as non-executive directors taking a cut for themselves whilst being tied to a massive fraud, theft and money laundering network, and hence those politicians became compromised. Again, all verifiable with a forensic examination of Companies House records.

    They don't call the City of London the global centre of money laundering for nothing.
    How do you know they’re not faking the Companies House records to send you down a rabbit hole?
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,327
    Foxy said:

    I love Matthew Parris even more.

    He described Enoch Powell/The Rivers of Blood speech as a stupid person's idea of someone clever.

    To be fair, there’s little doubt that Enoch Powell was cleverer than Matthew Paris, even if he didn’t always get it right.
    Even very clever people are capable of being morally stupid. Indeed it is often their Achilles heel. They are more clever, so believe themselves to be superior, and the rot starts there.
    Unless you are Matthew Paris, who is the exception to the rule and always right.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,660
    AndyJS said:

    It's interesting how once again people seem to be divided along party lines on the Windrush issue. Most on the right believe it's basically an administrative cock-up, whereas many on the left think it has at least something to do with racism and xenophobia.

    It's a direct consequence (possibly unintended) of the immigration changes this government has made in recent years.

    https://www.freemovement.org.uk/why-caribbean-commonwealth-citizens-are-being-denied-immigration-status/
  • Options
    tlg86 said:

    That was some finish by Andy Carroll.

    If he is genuinely fit, he should be considered for the World Cup.

    Joe Hart, on the other hand, should be available to do some more Head and Shoulders commercials.
    I've got a soft spot for Peter Crouch.

    Agree about Joe Hart.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,960
    MaxPB said:

    rcs1000 said:

    hunchman said:

    Mortimer said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I'm looking forward to finding out how a family business was involved. Was first registered at Finchley Road...
    How many times do I have to tell you all that Finchley Road is the past. The action has moved on to new addresses after that all got closed down in an enormous panic at the end of February last year. And other non-Finchley Road addresses interlocked to the network got closed down too at different points last year........all verifiable by forensic companies house records. Funny that there was a massive race to slam doors shut very quickly last year if there was nothing dodgy going on don't you think?

    And thank goodness that is all in the past, although the new addresses are being chased too and hopefully will be hounded out of business too where they are engaged in fraud, theft and money laundering.
    The bit I struggle with is this:

    If I wanted to do Nefarious Shit [TM], why would I do it via company house listed entities? It's perfectly possible to set up corporate entities with limited - or non-existant - levels of public disclosure, so why use something where you have to report to Companies House? And if I was reporting to Companies House, then why not simply lie anyway: it's not like the penalties for false disclosure regarding to private companies are severe compared to those for the Nefarious Shit [TM] I was doing?
    As I said, so very smart to pull off their Nefarious Shit™, but stupid enough to bungle some of the basic stuff and get caught by YouTube warriors.
    I tried using sup tags for my TM, but they didn't work :(

    What did you use?
  • Options
    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    Foxy said:

    I love Matthew Parris even more.

    He described Enoch Powell/The Rivers of Blood speech as a stupid person's idea of someone clever.

    To be fair, there’s little doubt that Enoch Powell was cleverer than Matthew Paris, even if he didn’t always get it right.
    Even very clever people are capable of being morally stupid. Indeed it is often their Achilles heel. They are more clever, so believe themselves to be superior, and the rot starts there.
    Unless you are Matthew Paris, who is the exception to the rule and always right.
    Except about tide tables.
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Ishmael_Z said:

    ydoethur said:

    glw said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I mean Amber Rudd is involved in both isn't she?

    That is what always gets me about conspiracy theories (which I have read far too much about, over the years). On the one hand there are these incredibly elaborate multi-decade plots to rule the world involving a cast of thousands, but they are blown wide open by a shitty out-of-focus YouTube video, or something similar.

    One of my favourite ever conspiracy theories was the one that said that Barack Obama was simultaneously

    a) A Muslim who wanted to turn America into a Muslim state

    and

    b) Controlled and financed by the Jews/Israel
    Even that's not quite as good as Ernst Zundel, who believed the Holocaust had been faked to ensure the Nazi survivors could get on with testing UFOs from their sub-Antarctic base in peace.

    On your earlier post, Galileo is also rather a bad example. There is a detailed account of the affair and how it has been misinterpreted in James Hannam's God's Philosophers (not sure if you've ever read that - review here) but to cut to the chase, he agreed with the Inquisition that while the science was contestable to teach it as a theory and then turned around and taught it as a fact. (Also of course he was not buried in unconsecrated ground - I did enjoy one person who made that claim and then followed up, unforgettably, with an account of how moving he found a visit to Santa Croce in Florence to see Galileo's tomb!)
    OK but what people think happened to Galileo, actually happened to Giordano Bruno.
    Wasn’t he is the West wing?
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    Scott_P said:

    twitter.com/GuidoFawkes/status/985983671734685696

    Trump emboldened the far right and conspiracy theory nutters, corbyn has emboldened the far left and conspiracy theory nutters.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,660
    tlg86 said:

    That was some finish by Andy Carroll.

    If he is genuinely fit, he should be considered for the World Cup.

    Joe Hart, on the other hand, should be available to do some more Head and Shoulders commercials.
    If Carroll is included in the England squad, I'll change my mind and support Big_G's suggestion of a boycott!
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,607
    rcs1000 said:

    MaxPB said:

    rcs1000 said:

    hunchman said:

    Mortimer said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I'm looking forward to finding out how a family business was involved. Was first registered at Finchley Road...
    How many times do I have to tell you all that Finchley Road is the past. The action has moved on to new addresses after that all got closed down in an enormous panic at the end of February last year. And other non-Finchley Road addresses interlocked to the network got closed down too at different points last year........all verifiable by forensic companies house records. Funny that there was a massive race to slam doors shut very quickly last year if there was nothing dodgy going on don't you think?

    And thank goodness that is all in the past, although the new addresses are being chased too and hopefully will be hounded out of business too where they are engaged in fraud, theft and money laundering.
    The bit I struggle with is this:

    If I wanted to do Nefarious Shit [TM], why would I do it via company house listed entities? It's perfectly possible to set up corporate entities with limited - or non-existant - levels of public disclosure, so why use something where you have to report to Companies House? And if I was reporting to Companies House, then why not simply lie anyway: it's not like the penalties for false disclosure regarding to private companies are severe compared to those for the Nefarious Shit [TM] I was doing?
    As I said, so very smart to pull off their Nefarious Shit™, but stupid enough to bungle some of the basic stuff and get caught by YouTube warriors.
    I tried using sup tags for my TM, but they didn't work :(

    What did you use?
    Gboard for Android!
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,557
    Ishmael_Z said:

    Oxford college cancels 'cannabis themed' party amid accusations of cultural appropriation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2018/04/16/oxford-college-cancels-cannabis-themed-party-amid-accusations/

    Cultural appropriation ffs, what do they think the central purpose of a university is? They need to burn down the Pitt Rivers and the Ashmolean just for starters...
    How very dare you.
    Those are two of my favourite museums.

  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,557
    Charles said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    ydoethur said:

    glw said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I mean Amber Rudd is involved in both isn't she?

    That is what always gets me about conspiracy theories (which I have read far too much about, over the years). On the one hand there are these incredibly elaborate multi-decade plots to rule the world involving a cast of thousands, but they are blown wide open by a shitty out-of-focus YouTube video, or something similar.

    One of my favourite ever conspiracy theories was the one that said that Barack Obama was simultaneously

    a) A Muslim who wanted to turn America into a Muslim state

    and

    b) Controlled and financed by the Jews/Israel
    Even that's not quite as good as Ernst Zundel, who believed the Holocaust had been faked to ensure the Nazi survivors could get on with testing UFOs from their sub-Antarctic base in peace.

    On your earlier post, Galileo is also rather a bad example. There is a detailed account of the affair and how it has been misinterpreted in James Hannam's God's Philosophers (not sure if you've ever read that - review here) but to cut to the chase, he agreed with the Inquisition that while the science was contestable to teach it as a theory and then turned around and taught it as a fact. (Also of course he was not buried in unconsecrated ground - I did enjoy one person who made that claim and then followed up, unforgettably, with an account of how moving he found a visit to Santa Croce in Florence to see Galileo's tomb!)
    OK but what people think happened to Galileo, actually happened to Giordano Bruno.
    Wasn’t he is the West wing?
    Il Clugno Clunkione, surely ?
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,246
    edited April 2018
    The Immigration Act 2016 was avowedly and expressly designed to create a hostile environment for illegal immigrants. According to the government's website it was intended to:
    •introduce new sanctions on illegal workers and rogue employers
    •provide better co-ordination of regulators that enforce workers’ rights
    •prevent illegal migrants in the UK from accessing housing, driving licences and bank accounts
    •introduce new measures to make it easier to enforce immigration laws and remove illegal migrants
    So in short those who could not document their right to be here could not work, could not get housing, could not get a bank account and could not get a driving licence.

    This policy, driven by Mrs May whilst Home Secretary, was designed to achieve Dave's slightly daft and optimistic "tens of thousands" pledge. It has inevitably caught up an endless supply of people who have been here for a very long time, many of whom have difficulty in explaining the legal basis on which they came here in the first place and cannot prove continuous occupation.

    The Windrush situation is just the latest manifestation of this deeply illiberal piece of legislation of which we should be properly ashamed. It is a vicious alternative to the correct approach which was to deal with the backlogs that paralyse our immigration system by widespread and comprehensive amnesties combined with much more rigorous enforcement going forward.

    The government really deserves all the flack it is going to get for this.
  • Options
    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    Nigelb said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    Oxford college cancels 'cannabis themed' party amid accusations of cultural appropriation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2018/04/16/oxford-college-cancels-cannabis-themed-party-amid-accusations/

    Cultural appropriation ffs, what do they think the central purpose of a university is? They need to burn down the Pitt Rivers and the Ashmolean just for starters...
    How very dare you.
    Those are two of my favourite museums.

    Yes mine too, but if you were opposed to cultural appropriation, how could you sleep at night while they still stood?
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,660
    MaxPB said:

    rcs1000 said:

    MaxPB said:

    rcs1000 said:

    hunchman said:

    Mortimer said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I'm looking forward to finding out how a family business was involved. Was first registered at Finchley Road...
    How many times do I have to tell you all that Finchley Road is the past. The action has moved on to new addresses after that all got closed down in an enormous panic at the end of February last year. And other non-Finchley Road addresses interlocked to the network got closed down too at different points last year........all verifiable by forensic companies house records. Funny that there was a massive race to slam doors shut very quickly last year if there was nothing dodgy going on don't you think?

    And thank goodness that is all in the past, although the new addresses are being chased too and hopefully will be hounded out of business too where they are engaged in fraud, theft and money laundering.
    The bit I struggle with is this:

    If I wanted to do Nefarious Shit [TM], why would I do it via company house listed entities? It's perfectly possible to set up corporate entities with limited - or non-existant - levels of public disclosure, so why use something where you have to report to Companies House? And if I was reporting to Companies House, then why not simply lie anyway: it's not like the penalties for false disclosure regarding to private companies are severe compared to those for the Nefarious Shit [TM] I was doing?
    As I said, so very smart to pull off their Nefarious Shit™, but stupid enough to bungle some of the basic stuff and get caught by YouTube warriors.
    I tried using sup tags for my TM, but they didn't work :(

    What did you use?
    Gboard for Android!
    My Macbook annoyingly turns Tessa's intitials into a ™ every time :disappointed:
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,557
    Ishmael_Z said:

    Nigelb said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    Oxford college cancels 'cannabis themed' party amid accusations of cultural appropriation

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2018/04/16/oxford-college-cancels-cannabis-themed-party-amid-accusations/

    Cultural appropriation ffs, what do they think the central purpose of a university is? They need to burn down the Pitt Rivers and the Ashmolean just for starters...
    How very dare you.
    Those are two of my favourite museums.

    Yes mine too, but if you were opposed to cultural appropriation, how could you sleep at night while they still stood?
    I’d find the strength, somehow.

  • Options
    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited April 2018
    Ishmael_Z said:

    ydoethur said:

    I would have also focussed on the Scopes Monkey trial.

    Inherit The Wind and To Kill A Mockingbird are the movies/books that got me hooked on the law at a young age.

    The strange thing about many of the old science vs religion tropes is that many of them actually originated in the late nineteenth/early twentieth century, which was meant to be the high point of scientific endeavour.

    For example, how many flat-earthers were there in the Middle Ages? None, so far as can be judged. As befitted students of Aristotle, they thought the world was spherical and from the work of Eratosthenes gave them a fair idea of its size. The gorgeous irony of Columbus is he was wrong and everyone else was right. They said it was too far to sail Westward to Japan and China, he disagreed. He was wrong and would have died if he hadn't landed in Central America. But there were flat earthers in the late nineteenth century - Paul Kruger is the most famous example I can think of, but doubtless there were others. Bear in mind, his was at a time when the world trade routes relied on planets being spherical, and therefore flew in the face of all sanity. Kruger is said to have once told a mariner he couldn't have sailed around the world because the world was flat!

    For my money all that shows is history is easily twisted by corrupt vested interest groups (the Columbus myth originated with Washington Irving but was seized on by Marxists in the 1960s and that is why it was so widely taught in schools, and is still espoused by Horrible Histories, based on the work of Terry Deary who is an avowed Marxist). Yet it is also quite amusing in its own way.
    I love the introduction to the second edition of Origin of Species, where he lists I think 10 or 15 people who had put forward the theory of natural selection in relatively recent publications, but I don't know of any examples from "long before” Darwin. What did you have in mind?
    Charles Darwin's grandfather Erasmus Darwin came up with some ideas on evolution in the 18th century although his work is not very well known.
  • Options

    tlg86 said:

    That was some finish by Andy Carroll.

    If he is genuinely fit, he should be considered for the World Cup.

    Joe Hart, on the other hand, should be available to do some more Head and Shoulders commercials.
    If Carroll is included in the England squad, I'll change my mind and support Big_G's suggestion of a boycott!
    Dont tell Foxy

    And on Windrush - utterly dreadful and Amber Rudd will be lucky to keep her job. I am ashamed that we could be even thinking of these deportations
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,660
    DavidL said:

    The Immigration Act 2016 was avowedly and expressly designed to create a hostile environment for illegal immigrants. According to the government's website it was intended to:
    •introduce new sanctions on illegal workers and rogue employers
    •provide better co-ordination of regulators that enforce workers’ rights
    •prevent illegal migrants in the UK from accessing housing, driving licences and bank accounts
    •introduce new measures to make it easier to enforce immigration laws and remove illegal migrants
    So in short those who could not document their right to be here could not work, could not get housing, could not get a bank account and could not get a driving licence.

    This policy, driven by Mrs May whilst Home Secretary, was designed to achieve Dave's slightly daft and optimistic "tens of thousands" pledge. It has inevitably caught up an endless supply of people who have been here for a very long time, many of whom have difficulty in explaining the legal basis on which they came here in the first place and cannot prove continuous occupation.

    The Windrush situation is just the latest manifestation of this deeply illiberal piece of legislation of which we should be properly ashamed. It is a vicious alternative to the correct approach which was to deal with the backlogs that paralyse our immigration system by widespread and comprehensive amnesties combined with much more rigorous enforcement going forward.

    The government really deserves all the flack it is going to get for this.

    Well said!
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,557
    edited April 2018
    DavidL said:

    The Immigration Act 2016 was avowedly and expressly designed to create a hostile environment for illegal immigrants. According to the government's website it was intended to:
    •introduce new sanctions on illegal workers and rogue employers
    •provide better co-ordination of regulators that enforce workers’ rights
    •prevent illegal migrants in the UK from accessing housing, driving licences and bank accounts
    •introduce new measures to make it easier to enforce immigration laws and remove illegal migrants
    So in short those who could not document their right to be here could not work, could not get housing, could not get a bank account and could not get a driving licence.

    This policy, driven by Mrs May whilst Home Secretary, was designed to achieve Dave's slightly daft and optimistic "tens of thousands" pledge. It has inevitably caught up an endless supply of people who have been here for a very long time, many of whom have difficulty in explaining the legal basis on which they came here in the first place and cannot prove continuous occupation.

    The Windrush situation is just the latest manifestation of this deeply illiberal piece of legislation of which we should be properly ashamed. It is a vicious alternative to the correct approach which was to deal with the backlogs that paralyse our immigration system by widespread and comprehensive amnesties combined with much more rigorous enforcement going forward.

    The government really deserves all the flack it is going to get for this.

    Agreed.
    Those blaming the bureaucrats are passing the buck.

    (Not that said bureaucrats are utterly without blame...)
  • Options
    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395

    AndyJS said:

    It's interesting how once again people seem to be divided along party lines on the Windrush issue. Most on the right believe it's basically an administrative cock-up, whereas many on the left think it has at least something to do with racism and xenophobia.

    It's a direct consequence (possibly unintended) of the immigration changes this government has made in recent years.

    https://www.freemovement.org.uk/why-caribbean-commonwealth-citizens-are-being-denied-immigration-status/
    Yes although those changes were mainly brought in to deal with new migrants, not people who came here many decades ago.
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,557
    AndyJS said:

    AndyJS said:

    It's interesting how once again people seem to be divided along party lines on the Windrush issue. Most on the right believe it's basically an administrative cock-up, whereas many on the left think it has at least something to do with racism and xenophobia.

    It's a direct consequence (possibly unintended) of the immigration changes this government has made in recent years.

    https://www.freemovement.org.uk/why-caribbean-commonwealth-citizens-are-being-denied-immigration-status/
    Yes although those changes were mainly brought in to deal with new migrants, not people who came here many decades ago.
    If it’s an unintended consequence, then both ministers and their advisers have been deeply stupid for some time.

  • Options
    stodgestodge Posts: 12,850


    I certainly think the Russian Government is evil.

    Quite aside from its rampant corruption, exploitation of ordinary Russians and aggression, it routinely murders its critics in horrific ways.

    Define "corruption" - it doesn't equate to evil per se. We've had corruption here, so has America, so indeed have most countries and in many parts of the world it's endemic. It's how things are done - we don't approve of it but it's not evil in and of itself.

    "Exploitation of ordinary Russians" - there are those who consider capitalism exploitative. What does exploitation mean - excessive taxation might be considered exploitation.

    "Aggression" - arguably Russia has been expansionist since Peter the Great. Has it been evil for over 300 years ? Was it evil when it drove back the Nazis ?

    "Murders its critics" - I agree it's distasteful and abhorrent but the Russians are far from alone in that. I do agree accepting and being open to criticism is a strength and virtue of a civilised society but plenty aren't. Are they all evil ?

    I accept the Russian way of doing things as antithetical to how we purport to operate but throwing words like "evil" around doesn't help. It's part and parcel of a tactic of demonisation we saw in the Cold War. We are being taught again to see the Russians as monsters, bereft of humanity, determined on the single goal of our subjugation.

    It was absurd then, it's absurd now.

  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,269
    Ishmael_Z said:

    ydoethur said:

    glw said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I mean Amber Rudd is involved in both isn't she?

    That is what always gets me about conspiracy theories (which I have read far too much about, over the years). On the one hand there are these incredibly elaborate multi-decade plots to rule the world involving a cast of thousands, but they are blown wide open by a shitty out-of-focus YouTube video, or something similar.

    One of my favourite ever conspiracy theories was the one that said that Barack Obama was simultaneously

    a) A Muslim who wanted to turn America into a Muslim state

    and

    b) Controlled and financed by the Jews/Israel
    Even that's not quite as good as Ernst Zundel, who believed the Holocaust had been faked to ensure the Nazi survivors could get on with testing UFOs from their sub-Antarctic base in peace.

    On your earlier post, Galileo is also rather a bad example. There is a detailed account of the affair and how it has been misinterpreted in James Hannam's God's Philosophers (not sure if you've ever read that - review here) but to cut to the chase, he agreed with the Inquisition that while the science was contestable to teach it as a theory and then turned around and taught it as a fact. (Also of course he was not buried in unconsecrated ground - I did enjoy one person who made that claim and then followed up, unforgettably, with an account of how moving he found a visit to Santa Croce in Florence to see Galileo's tomb!)
    OK but what people think happened to Galileo, actually happened to Giordano Bruno.
    Ah, The Awakener!
  • Options
    MarkHopkinsMarkHopkins Posts: 5,584
    DavidL said:

    The Immigration Act 2016 was avowedly and expressly designed to create a hostile environment for illegal immigrants. According to the government's website it was intended to:
    •introduce new sanctions on illegal workers and rogue employers
    •provide better co-ordination of regulators that enforce workers’ rights
    •prevent illegal migrants in the UK from accessing housing, driving licences and bank accounts
    •introduce new measures to make it easier to enforce immigration laws and remove illegal migrants
    So in short those who could not document their right to be here could not work, could not get housing, could not get a bank account and could not get a driving licence.

    This policy, driven by Mrs May whilst Home Secretary, was designed to achieve Dave's slightly daft and optimistic "tens of thousands" pledge. It has inevitably caught up an endless supply of people who have been here for a very long time, many of whom have difficulty in explaining the legal basis on which they came here in the first place and cannot prove continuous occupation.

    The Windrush situation is just the latest manifestation of this deeply illiberal piece of legislation of which we should be properly ashamed. It is a vicious alternative to the correct approach which was to deal with the backlogs that paralyse our immigration system by widespread and comprehensive amnesties combined with much more rigorous enforcement going forward.

    The government really deserves all the flack it is going to get for this.


    TMay as home secretary was way too illiberal and authoritarian for my liking.

  • Options
    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    Nigelb said:

    AndyJS said:

    AndyJS said:

    It's interesting how once again people seem to be divided along party lines on the Windrush issue. Most on the right believe it's basically an administrative cock-up, whereas many on the left think it has at least something to do with racism and xenophobia.

    It's a direct consequence (possibly unintended) of the immigration changes this government has made in recent years.

    https://www.freemovement.org.uk/why-caribbean-commonwealth-citizens-are-being-denied-immigration-status/
    Yes although those changes were mainly brought in to deal with new migrants, not people who came here many decades ago.
    If it’s an unintended consequence, then both ministers and their advisers have been deeply stupid for some time.

    In previous times common sense would have prevailed and the changes wouldn't have been used to target the Windrush generation, but these days things like this have to be applied in a rigid technocratic way that doesn't leave any room for discretion.
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,832
    DavidL said:

    The Immigration Act 2016 was avowedly and expressly designed to create a hostile environment for illegal immigrants. According to the government's website it was intended to:
    •introduce new sanctions on illegal workers and rogue employers
    •provide better co-ordination of regulators that enforce workers’ rights
    •prevent illegal migrants in the UK from accessing housing, driving licences and bank accounts
    •introduce new measures to make it easier to enforce immigration laws and remove illegal migrants
    So in short those who could not document their right to be here could not work, could not get housing, could not get a bank account and could not get a driving licence.

    This policy, driven by Mrs May whilst Home Secretary, was designed to achieve Dave's slightly daft and optimistic "tens of thousands" pledge. It has inevitably caught up an endless supply of people who have been here for a very long time, many of whom have difficulty in explaining the legal basis on which they came here in the first place and cannot prove continuous occupation.

    The Windrush situation is just the latest manifestation of this deeply illiberal piece of legislation of which we should be properly ashamed. It is a vicious alternative to the correct approach which was to deal with the backlogs that paralyse our immigration system by widespread and comprehensive amnesties combined with much more rigorous enforcement going forward.

    The government really deserves all the flack it is going to get for this.

    Widespread and comprehensive amnesties now simply result in widespread and comprehensive amnesties in future.
  • Options
    tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,189
    Nigelb said:

    AndyJS said:

    AndyJS said:

    It's interesting how once again people seem to be divided along party lines on the Windrush issue. Most on the right believe it's basically an administrative cock-up, whereas many on the left think it has at least something to do with racism and xenophobia.

    It's a direct consequence (possibly unintended) of the immigration changes this government has made in recent years.

    https://www.freemovement.org.uk/why-caribbean-commonwealth-citizens-are-being-denied-immigration-status/
    Yes although those changes were mainly brought in to deal with new migrants, not people who came here many decades ago.
    If it’s an unintended consequence, then both ministers and their advisers have been deeply stupid for some time.

    That's what annoys me about this most. It should not have needed the Guardian to run a number of stories for this to be sorted out.
  • Options
    YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382
    stodge said:


    I certainly think the Russian Government is evil.

    Quite aside from its rampant corruption, exploitation of ordinary Russians and aggression, it routinely murders its critics in horrific ways.

    Define "corruption" - it doesn't equate to evil per se. We've had corruption here, so has America, so indeed have most countries and in many parts of the world it's endemic. It's how things are done - we don't approve of it but it's not evil in and of itself.

    "Exploitation of ordinary Russians" - there are those who consider capitalism exploitative. What does exploitation mean - excessive taxation might be considered exploitation.

    "Aggression" - arguably Russia has been expansionist since Peter the Great. Has it been evil for over 300 years ? Was it evil when it drove back the Nazis ?

    "Murders its critics" - I agree it's distasteful and abhorrent but the Russians are far from alone in that. I do agree accepting and being open to criticism is a strength and virtue of a civilised society but plenty aren't. Are they all evil ?

    I accept the Russian way of doing things as antithetical to how we purport to operate but throwing words like "evil" around doesn't help. It's part and parcel of a tactic of demonisation we saw in the Cold War. We are being taught again to see the Russians as monsters, bereft of humanity, determined on the single goal of our subjugation.

    It was absurd then, it's absurd now.

    Excellent Post .
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,056

    tlg86 said:

    That was some finish by Andy Carroll.

    If he is genuinely fit, he should be considered for the World Cup.

    Joe Hart, on the other hand, should be available to do some more Head and Shoulders commercials.
    I've got a soft spot for Peter Crouch.

    Agree about Joe Hart.
    I can hardly believe that first pic isn't photoshopped..

    https://twitter.com/Glenn_Kitson/status/985778426937331712
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,246
    Sean_F said:

    DavidL said:

    The Immigration Act 2016 was avowedly and expressly designed to create a hostile environment for illegal immigrants. According to the government's website it was intended to:
    •introduce new sanctions on illegal workers and rogue employers
    •provide better co-ordination of regulators that enforce workers’ rights
    •prevent illegal migrants in the UK from accessing housing, driving licences and bank accounts
    •introduce new measures to make it easier to enforce immigration laws and remove illegal migrants
    So in short those who could not document their right to be here could not work, could not get housing, could not get a bank account and could not get a driving licence.

    This policy, driven by Mrs May whilst Home Secretary, was designed to achieve Dave's slightly daft and optimistic "tens of thousands" pledge. It has inevitably caught up an endless supply of people who have been here for a very long time, many of whom have difficulty in explaining the legal basis on which they came here in the first place and cannot prove continuous occupation.

    The Windrush situation is just the latest manifestation of this deeply illiberal piece of legislation of which we should be properly ashamed. It is a vicious alternative to the correct approach which was to deal with the backlogs that paralyse our immigration system by widespread and comprehensive amnesties combined with much more rigorous enforcement going forward.

    The government really deserves all the flack it is going to get for this.

    Widespread and comprehensive amnesties now simply result in widespread and comprehensive amnesties in future.
    That is always a risk which is why you need to have more rigorous enforcement going forward. Too often people have behaved as if amnesties solve the problem. They really don't. In fact I agree that they can aggravate it by creating a greater pull factor. But our immigration system broke down decades ago, simply overwhelmed by the numbers. We need a clean slate. And the legislation is a disgrace.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285

    tlg86 said:

    That was some finish by Andy Carroll.

    If he is genuinely fit, he should be considered for the World Cup.

    Joe Hart, on the other hand, should be available to do some more Head and Shoulders commercials.
    I've got a soft spot for Peter Crouch.

    Agree about Joe Hart.
    I can hardly believe that first pic isn't photoshopped..

    https://twitter.com/Glenn_Kitson/status/985778426937331712
    Given all the millions he makes as a footballer, can he not afford to have custom made clubs?
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,832
    stodge said:


    I certainly think the Russian Government is evil.

    Quite aside from its rampant corruption, exploitation of ordinary Russians and aggression, it routinely murders its critics in horrific ways.

    Define "corruption" - it doesn't equate to evil per se. We've had corruption here, so has America, so indeed have most countries and in many parts of the world it's endemic. It's how things are done - we don't approve of it but it's not evil in and of itself.

    "Exploitation of ordinary Russians" - there are those who consider capitalism exploitative. What does exploitation mean - excessive taxation might be considered exploitation.

    "Aggression" - arguably Russia has been expansionist since Peter the Great. Has it been evil for over 300 years ? Was it evil when it drove back the Nazis ?

    "Murders its critics" - I agree it's distasteful and abhorrent but the Russians are far from alone in that. I do agree accepting and being open to criticism is a strength and virtue of a civilised society but plenty aren't. Are they all evil ?

    I accept the Russian way of doing things as antithetical to how we purport to operate but throwing words like "evil" around doesn't help. It's part and parcel of a tactic of demonisation we saw in the Cold War. We are being taught again to see the Russians as monsters, bereft of humanity, determined on the single goal of our subjugation.

    It was absurd then, it's absurd now.

    It's fair to describe Russian government as evil. It does not follow that most Russians are evil.
  • Options
    Theresa May has come through this strengthened - Corbyn weakened

    But the big question is where is McDonnell - haven't seen him for weeks and didnt even see him in the HOC today
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    Michael Cohen's mystery third client is Sean Hannity

    https://edition.cnn.com/2018/04/16/politics/michael-cohen-hearing/index.html
  • Options

    tlg86 said:

    That was some finish by Andy Carroll.

    If he is genuinely fit, he should be considered for the World Cup.

    Joe Hart, on the other hand, should be available to do some more Head and Shoulders commercials.
    I've got a soft spot for Peter Crouch.

    Agree about Joe Hart.
    I can hardly believe that first pic isn't photoshopped..

    https://twitter.com/Glenn_Kitson/status/985778426937331712
    My friend is 6ft 8, I've seen him play golf, it does look familiar.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited April 2018

    Theresa May has come through this strengthened - Corbyn weakened

    But the big question is where is McDonnell - haven't seen him for weeks and didnt even see him in the HOC today

    He ain't stupid....he doesn't want to be tarred with the conspiracy theory nutters. It is what makes him far more dangerous.
  • Options
    YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382

    Theresa May has come through this strengthened - Corbyn weakened

    But the big question is where is McDonnell - haven't seen him for weeks and didnt even see him in the HOC today

    May had a good day , tarnished by windrush ,which led all the bulletens on the main news.
  • Options
    MarkHopkinsMarkHopkins Posts: 5,584
    Yorkcity said:

    Theresa May has come through this strengthened - Corbyn weakened

    But the big question is where is McDonnell - haven't seen him for weeks and didnt even see him in the HOC today

    May had a good day , tarnished by windrush ,which led all the bulletens on the main news.

    Let me guess... BBC?

  • Options
    nielhnielh Posts: 1,307
    DavidL said:

    The Immigration Act 2016 was avowedly and expressly designed to create a hostile environment for illegal immigrants. According to the government's website it was intended to:
    •introduce new sanctions on illegal workers and rogue employers
    •provide better co-ordination of regulators that enforce workers’ rights
    •prevent illegal migrants in the UK from accessing housing, driving licences and bank accounts
    •introduce new measures to make it easier to enforce immigration laws and remove illegal migrants
    So in short those who could not document their right to be here could not work, could not get housing, could not get a bank account and could not get a driving licence.

    This policy, driven by Mrs May whilst Home Secretary, was designed to achieve Dave's slightly daft and optimistic "tens of thousands" pledge. It has inevitably caught up an endless supply of people who have been here for a very long time, many of whom have difficulty in explaining the legal basis on which they came here in the first place and cannot prove continuous occupation.

    The Windrush situation is just the latest manifestation of this deeply illiberal piece of legislation of which we should be properly ashamed. It is a vicious alternative to the correct approach which was to deal with the backlogs that paralyse our immigration system by widespread and comprehensive amnesties combined with much more rigorous enforcement going forward.

    The government really deserves all the flack it is going to get for this.

    Good post. I think Windrush is actually going to be the tip of the Iceberg.
  • Options
    steve_garnersteve_garner Posts: 1,019
    Yorkcity said:

    Theresa May has come through this strengthened - Corbyn weakened

    But the big question is where is McDonnell - haven't seen him for weeks and didnt even see him in the HOC today

    May had a good day , tarnished by windrush ,which led all the bulletens on the main news.
    The BBC News report on the Syria debate managed to avoid mentioning that Corbyn received very little support from his own MPs.
  • Options
    YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382

    Yorkcity said:

    Theresa May has come through this strengthened - Corbyn weakened

    But the big question is where is McDonnell - haven't seen him for weeks and didnt even see him in the HOC today

    May had a good day , tarnished by windrush ,which led all the bulletens on the main news.

    Let me guess... BBC?

    BBC , Itv , and Ch 4 .
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,725
    Charles said:

    hunchman said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I mean Amber Rudd is involved in both isn't she?

    TSE you're quite right to say how incompetent the government are over Windrush.....but when you've got the likes of Amber Rudd and Caroline Nokes overseeing it then it shouldn't be a surprise to anyone.

    As for Finchley Road, it wasn't the government that oversaw the vast Finchley Road network, it was people with links to the government who then co-opted MPs and members of the House of Lords as non-executive directors taking a cut for themselves whilst being tied to a massive fraud, theft and money laundering network, and hence those politicians became compromised. Again, all verifiable with a forensic examination of Companies House records.

    They don't call the City of London the global centre of money laundering for nothing.
    How do you know they’re not faking the Companies House records to send you down a rabbit hole?
    Mind blown over here.
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,725

    Yorkcity said:

    Theresa May has come through this strengthened - Corbyn weakened

    But the big question is where is McDonnell - haven't seen him for weeks and didnt even see him in the HOC today

    May had a good day , tarnished by windrush ,which led all the bulletens on the main news.
    The BBC News report on the Syria debate managed to avoid mentioning that Corbyn received very little support from his own MPs.
    Well, in fairness that he lacks support among his MPs isn't exactly breaking news :)
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,960
    stodge said:

    Trying to catch up with the day's events at Westminster and pretty much as might have been expected.

    On topic, I don't regard the Russian Government as "evil". The Russian Government is promoting the interests of Russia which seems pretty much what it should be doing. "Evil" is a curious notion which I've been considering of late.

    I'm sorry, but is that true?

    1. It's clear where the priorities of a government lie, where the principals enrich themselves to the tune of perhaps $50bn

    2. The glory of Russia and the good of the Russian people are two separate things. I think Mr Putin, after concentrating on his primary goal (remaining in power) and his secondary goal (enriching himself), is concerned only with the nebulous glory of Russia. Countries where the government is focused on the wellbeing of the population (Switzerland, Canada and Australia all spring to mind) should be the ones who should be lauded.
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    Yorkcity said:

    Theresa May has come through this strengthened - Corbyn weakened

    But the big question is where is McDonnell - haven't seen him for weeks and didnt even see him in the HOC today

    May had a good day , tarnished by windrush ,which led all the bulletens on the main news.
    Didn't lead on Sky just now - Syria debate was first item

    But I have said all day how I condemn the Windrush scandal and even think Amber Rudd is on shaky ground
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,960
    MaxPB said:

    rcs1000 said:

    MaxPB said:

    rcs1000 said:

    hunchman said:

    Mortimer said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I'm looking forward to finding out how a family business was involved. Was first registered at Finchley Road...
    How many times do I have to tell you all that Finchley Road is the past. The action has moved on to new addresses after that all got closed down in an enormous panic at the end of February last year. And other non-Finchley Road addresses interlocked to the network got closed down too at different points last year........all verifiable by forensic companies house records. Funny that there was a massive race to slam doors shut very quickly last year if there was nothing dodgy going on don't you think?

    And thank goodness that is all in the past, although the new addresses are being chased too and hopefully will be hounded out of business too where they are engaged in fraud, theft and money laundering.
    The bit I struggle with is this:

    If I wanted to do Nefarious Shit [TM], why would I do it via company house listed entities? It's perfectly possible to set up corporate entities with limited - or non-existant - levels of public disclosure, so why use something where you have to report to Companies House? And if I was reporting to Companies House, then why not simply lie anyway: it's not like the penalties for false disclosure regarding to private companies are severe compared to those for the Nefarious Shit [TM] I was doing?
    As I said, so very smart to pull off their Nefarious Shit™, but stupid enough to bungle some of the basic stuff and get caught by YouTube warriors.
    I tried using sup tags for my TM, but they didn't work :(

    What did you use?
    Gboard for Android!
    Ah ha, you pasted the Unicode. Let me see™ if this works...
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    YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382
    edited April 2018
    kle4 said:

    Yorkcity said:

    Theresa May has come through this strengthened - Corbyn weakened

    But the big question is where is McDonnell - haven't seen him for weeks and didnt even see him in the HOC today

    May had a good day , tarnished by windrush ,which led all the bulletens on the main news.
    The BBC News report on the Syria debate managed to avoid mentioning that Corbyn received very little support from his own MPs.
    Well, in fairness that he lacks support among his MPs isn't exactly breaking news :)
    True , that is nearly 3 years old .Even the great Tony had his rebellious MPs.However it did not matter with 179 Maj..Nevertheless the MSM at the time always gave people like Ken Livingstone a voice.How times change.
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    A key figure in the campaign to take Britain out of the EU has privately acknowledged that they deliberately used “outrageous” and “provocative” tactics to keep immigration at the top of the referendum debate.

    Speaking to an academic researcher, Andy Wigmore appeared to compare the process to the “very clever” propaganda techniques of the Nazis.

    Mr Wigmore was communications director for the Leave.EU campaign fronted by then Ukip leader Nigel Farage and funded by millionaire Arron Banks.

    His comments were described as “particularly concerning” by Damian Collins, the chairman of the House of Commons Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee, which is conducting an inquiry into the phenomenon of “fake news”.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/pa/article-5622291/Leave-campaign-deliberately-stoked-outrage-Brexit-campaign.html
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    Yorkcity said:

    Theresa May has come through this strengthened - Corbyn weakened

    But the big question is where is McDonnell - haven't seen him for weeks and didnt even see him in the HOC today

    May had a good day , tarnished by windrush ,which led all the bulletens on the main news.
    Didn't lead on Sky just now - Syria debate was first item

    But I have said all day how I condemn the Windrush scandal and even think Amber Rudd is on shaky ground
    Faisal Islam (yes Faisal) said that the thing to take from today's debates was that TM did well but more important is that she has retained the executive power on this if she ever needed it
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,557

    Michael Cohen's mystery third client is Sean Hannity

    https://edition.cnn.com/2018/04/16/politics/michael-cohen-hearing/index.html

    Cohen was trying to prevent disclosure of that on the grounds it might be embarrassing for his client...
    Would that be for Trump, or Hannity ?
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    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    @stodge seems to be cool with a foreign government using chemical weapons in sleepy English towns.

    It's another remarkable example of the bizarre moral and logical somersaults some people engage in to apologise for Corbyn.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,960
    Sean_F said:

    DavidL said:

    The Immigration Act 2016 was avowedly and expressly designed to create a hostile environment for illegal immigrants. According to the government's website it was intended to:
    •introduce new sanctions on illegal workers and rogue employers
    •provide better co-ordination of regulators that enforce workers’ rights
    •prevent illegal migrants in the UK from accessing housing, driving licences and bank accounts
    •introduce new measures to make it easier to enforce immigration laws and remove illegal migrants
    So in short those who could not document their right to be here could not work, could not get housing, could not get a bank account and could not get a driving licence.

    This policy, driven by Mrs May whilst Home Secretary, was designed to achieve Dave's slightly daft and optimistic "tens of thousands" pledge. It has inevitably caught up an endless supply of people who have been here for a very long time, many of whom have difficulty in explaining the legal basis on which they came here in the first place and cannot prove continuous occupation.

    The Windrush situation is just the latest manifestation of this deeply illiberal piece of legislation of which we should be properly ashamed. It is a vicious alternative to the correct approach which was to deal with the backlogs that paralyse our immigration system by widespread and comprehensive amnesties combined with much more rigorous enforcement going forward.

    The government really deserves all the flack it is going to get for this.

    Widespread and comprehensive amnesties now simply result in widespread and comprehensive amnesties in future.
    My view is that immigration law - like drug and prostitution law - is the wrong way around.

    If you want to stop drug use, criminalise the users.
    If you want to stop prostitution, criminalise the johns.
    If you want to stop illegal immigration, criminalise employing illegal immigrants.

    Illegal immigrants come here because there is a large black market, where there are no checks on status. If you come and wash up in a kitchen in Brick Lane, and are paid in cash, no one knows if you are supposed to be here or not. And all too often fines are derisory.

    We should follow the Swiss model of cracking down hard on the employers of illegal immigrants. Give illegal immigrants amnesty for reporting their employers. It would soon stop firms and individuals from employing people without proper documentation. And if you can no longer work in the UK, then far fewer people will attempt to come here illegally.
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    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    DavidL said:

    ...
    So in short those who could not document their right to be here could not work, could not get housing, could not get a bank account and could not get a driving licence...

    But they couldn't get work before that Act came into force either. And probably not benefits (or, if they could, government policy hasn't been joined up since 2006, which admittedly would not be a surprise).

    So there's something very odd about this.
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    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    rcs1000 said:


    We should follow the Swiss model of cracking down hard on the employers of illegal immigrants. Give illegal immigrants amnesty for reporting their employers. It would soon stop firms and individuals from employing people without proper documentation. And if you can no longer work in the UK, then far fewer people will attempt to come here illegally.

    That is exactly what the government has done.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,960
    rcs1000 said:

    Sean_F said:

    Widespread and comprehensive amnesties now simply result in widespread and comprehensive amnesties in future.

    My view is that immigration law - like drug and prostitution law - is the wrong way around.

    If you want to stop drug use, criminalise the users.
    If you want to stop prostitution, criminalise the johns.
    If you want to stop illegal immigration, criminalise employing illegal immigrants.

    Illegal immigrants come here because there is a large black market, where there are no checks on status. If you come and wash up in a kitchen in Brick Lane, and are paid in cash, no one knows if you are supposed to be here or not. And all too often fines are derisory.

    We should follow the Swiss model of cracking down hard on the employers of illegal immigrants. Give illegal immigrants amnesty for reporting their employers. It would soon stop firms and individuals from employing people without proper documentation. And if you can no longer work in the UK, then far fewer people will attempt to come here illegally.
    Replying to myself:

    This is also what is so disingenuous about Trump's border wall. The US has almost *no* penalties for people who employ workers illegally, because all too many political donors benefit from it - whether its their maid, the construction workers on a Trump building, or the people picking crops in California.

    Illegal immigrants come to the US because there is demand for their labour. Criminalise employing people illegally, and that demand will drop.
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    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    ydoethur said:

    I would have also focussed on the Scopes Monkey trial.

    Inherit The Wind and To Kill A Mockingbird are the movies/books that got me hooked on the law at a young age.

    The strange thing about many of the old science vs religion tropes is that many of them actually originated in the late nineteenth/early twentieth century, which was meant to be the high point of scientific endeavour.

    For example, how many flat-earthers were there in the Middle Ages? None, so far as can be judged. As befitted students of Aristotle, they thought the world was spherical and from the work of Eratosthenes gave them a fair idea of its size. The gorgeous irony of Columbus is he was wrong and everyone else was right. They said it was too far to sail Westward to Japan and China, he disagreed. He was wrong and would have died if he hadn't landed in Central America. But there were flat earthers in the late nineteenth century - Paul Kruger is the most famous example I can think of, but doubtless there were others. Bear in mind, his was at a time when the world trade routes relied on planets being spherical, and therefore flew in the face of all sanity. Kruger is said to have once told a mariner he couldn't have sailed around the world because the world was flat!

    Similarly, on evolution, it was actually quite a widespread theory long before Darwin. Again, it was a Greek idea in rather crude form. His own uncle espoused it. What Darwin did was provide evidence for it. Bizarrely the bitterest attacks on him came not from theologians but from other scientists (how many people know that Samuel Wilberforce was a distinguished mathematician and a senior Fellow of the Royal Society)? But it also pushed more people towards biblical literalism, as did the pseudo-scholarly Draper-White conflict thesis (actually based mostly on Protestant polemics). Of course, you always had the odd idiot like James Ussher, but they achieve fame precisely because they were actually quite rare. There are far more six day creationists around now than there have ever been.

    For my money all that shows is history is easily twisted by corrupt vested interest groups (the Columbus myth originated with Washington Irving but was seized on by Marxists in the 1960s and that is why it was so widely taught in schools, and is still espoused by Horrible Histories, based on the work of Terry Deary who is an avowed Marxist). Yet it is also quite amusing in its own way.
    Maybe it's not so strange when you consider that that was the time when mass literacy first came about.
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    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,203
    One thing I am curious about re the Windrush story is this: wouldn’t at least some of these people have had British passports? And why wouldn’t that document have been sufficient proof of their citizenship?

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    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,599

    tlg86 said:

    That was some finish by Andy Carroll.

    If he is genuinely fit, he should be considered for the World Cup.

    Joe Hart, on the other hand, should be available to do some more Head and Shoulders commercials.
    If Carroll is included in the England squad, I'll change my mind and support Big_G's suggestion of a boycott!
    Dont tell Foxy

    And on Windrush - utterly dreadful and Amber Rudd will be lucky to keep her job. I am ashamed that we could be even thinking of these deportations
    I am no fan of taking crocked players, having seen a bit too much of it in past England squads, but if we are going to build a system centered on Kane, we do need a back up for that role. Vardy is a very different style of striker. If he stays fit (!!) then he should be up for consideration.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,960

    rcs1000 said:


    We should follow the Swiss model of cracking down hard on the employers of illegal immigrants. Give illegal immigrants amnesty for reporting their employers. It would soon stop firms and individuals from employing people without proper documentation. And if you can no longer work in the UK, then far fewer people will attempt to come here illegally.

    That is exactly what the government has done.
    Yet, the local car wash in Hampstead is still entirely staffed by Albanians. Who - I presume - came here on tourist visas and did not return.
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    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    Cyclefree said:

    One thing I am curious about re the Windrush story is this: wouldn’t at least some of these people have had British passports? And why wouldn’t that document have been sufficient proof of their citizenship?

    Apparently many of them don't have British passports. I think that was because the places in the Caribbean they came from were still effectively part of the UK so they wouldn't have needed them to move to the UK.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,960
    Cyclefree said:

    One thing I am curious about re the Windrush story is this: wouldn’t at least some of these people have had British passports? And why wouldn’t that document have been sufficient proof of their citizenship?

    I suspect those people, who simply used "references" to get passports will be fine.
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    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    rcs1000 said:

    rcs1000 said:


    We should follow the Swiss model of cracking down hard on the employers of illegal immigrants. Give illegal immigrants amnesty for reporting their employers. It would soon stop firms and individuals from employing people without proper documentation. And if you can no longer work in the UK, then far fewer people will attempt to come here illegally.

    That is exactly what the government has done.
    Yet, the local car wash in Hampstead is still entirely staffed by Albanians. Who - I presume - came here on tourist visas and did not return.
    The employer can get up to 5 years in jail and an unlimited fine.

    How much more draconian do you want it to be?
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    Debate still going on with shouty Corbyn winding up to silence and TM has just rose to conclude the debate to a huge cheer. She has been answering questions since 4.00 pm . That takes some stamina
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,960

    rcs1000 said:

    rcs1000 said:


    We should follow the Swiss model of cracking down hard on the employers of illegal immigrants. Give illegal immigrants amnesty for reporting their employers. It would soon stop firms and individuals from employing people without proper documentation. And if you can no longer work in the UK, then far fewer people will attempt to come here illegally.

    That is exactly what the government has done.
    Yet, the local car wash in Hampstead is still entirely staffed by Albanians. Who - I presume - came here on tourist visas and did not return.
    The employer can get up to 5 years in jail and an unlimited fine.

    How much more draconian do you want it to be?
    Sounds perfectly reasonable. How many employers have gone to prison?
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    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,599
    AndyJS said:

    Cyclefree said:

    One thing I am curious about re the Windrush story is this: wouldn’t at least some of these people have had British passports? And why wouldn’t that document have been sufficient proof of their citizenship?

    Apparently many of them don't have British passports. I think that was because the places in the Caribbean they came from were still effectively part of the UK so they wouldn't have needed them to move to the UK.
    Also, many travelled as dependents on parents passports, as indeed happened into the 1980s.
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    Foxy said:

    tlg86 said:

    That was some finish by Andy Carroll.

    If he is genuinely fit, he should be considered for the World Cup.

    Joe Hart, on the other hand, should be available to do some more Head and Shoulders commercials.
    If Carroll is included in the England squad, I'll change my mind and support Big_G's suggestion of a boycott!
    Dont tell Foxy

    And on Windrush - utterly dreadful and Amber Rudd will be lucky to keep her job. I am ashamed that we could be even thinking of these deportations
    I am no fan of taking crocked players, having seen a bit too much of it in past England squads, but if we are going to build a system centered on Kane, we do need a back up for that role. Vardy is a very different style of striker. If he stays fit (!!) then he should be up for consideration.
    Agreed
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,725

    Debate still going on with shouty Corbyn winding up to silence and TM has just rose to conclude the debate to a huge cheer. She has been answering questions since 4.00 pm . That takes some stamina

    Seriously, they've still been going all this time? Jesus. Longest meeting I've done was around six hours, and all I had to do was take notes, and it was still knackering.
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    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    AndyJS said:

    Cyclefree said:

    One thing I am curious about re the Windrush story is this: wouldn’t at least some of these people have had British passports? And why wouldn’t that document have been sufficient proof of their citizenship?

    Apparently many of them don't have British passports. I think that was because the places in the Caribbean they came from were still effectively part of the UK so they wouldn't have needed them to move to the UK.
    I think the point here is that successive British governments, over 50 years, have been extremely sloppy about who has the right to live and work here. It's blown up now because the current government is trying to be less sloppy, but I don't see why the process can't be made dramatically simpler. Again who's got a record of National Insurance payments shouldn't need to do anything, for a starter.
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    alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    Cyclefree said:

    One thing I am curious about re the Windrush story is this: wouldn’t at least some of these people have had British passports? And why wouldn’t that document have been sufficient proof of their citizenship?

    The obvious answer is that there is a bit of a misrepresentation in perception that EVERY member of the Windrush generation is facing deportation. When the reality is presumably that there is are a proportion of the Windrush generation who lack documentary evidence relating to their arrival in the country and have inadvertently been caught up in the application of legislation that was never intended to apply to them. Whereas it is, presumably, intended in part to apply to those who might try to claim to be part of the Windrush generation if it helps their chances of securing residency status.
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    kle4 said:

    Debate still going on with shouty Corbyn winding up to silence and TM has just rose to conclude the debate to a huge cheer. She has been answering questions since 4.00 pm . That takes some stamina

    Seriously, they've still been going all this time? Jesus. Longest meeting I've done was around six hours, and all I had to do was take notes, and it was still knackering.
    I am watching Theresa live on Parliament channel now.
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    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,073
    rcs1000 said:

    rcs1000 said:


    We should follow the Swiss model of cracking down hard on the employers of illegal immigrants. Give illegal immigrants amnesty for reporting their employers. It would soon stop firms and individuals from employing people without proper documentation. And if you can no longer work in the UK, then far fewer people will attempt to come here illegally.

    That is exactly what the government has done.
    Yet, the local car wash in Hampstead is still entirely staffed by Albanians. Who - I presume - came here on tourist visas and did not return.
    Aside from the illegal immigration issue I wonder how many employment and tax laws are being broken at that car wash.
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    (((Dan Hodges))) - @DPJHodges: Theresa May took apart Corbyn’s arguments earlier in the day. So he decided he’d have another go. Shes currently taking him apart a second time. Not entirely sure what he thinks he’s doing.
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    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,660
    Cyclefree said:

    One thing I am curious about re the Windrush story is this: wouldn’t at least some of these people have had British passports? And why wouldn’t that document have been sufficient proof of their citizenship?

    This explains it well...

    https://www.freemovement.org.uk/why-caribbean-commonwealth-citizens-are-being-denied-immigration-status/
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    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited April 2018

    AndyJS said:

    Cyclefree said:

    One thing I am curious about re the Windrush story is this: wouldn’t at least some of these people have had British passports? And why wouldn’t that document have been sufficient proof of their citizenship?

    Apparently many of them don't have British passports. I think that was because the places in the Caribbean they came from were still effectively part of the UK so they wouldn't have needed them to move to the UK.
    I think the point here is that successive British governments, over 50 years, have been extremely sloppy about who has the right to live and work here. It's blown up now because the current government is trying to be less sloppy, but I don't see why the process can't be made dramatically simpler. Again who's got a record of National Insurance payments shouldn't need to do anything, for a starter.
    An obvious solution would be to only apply the legislation to anyone who came here less than say 20 years ago.
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,725

    kle4 said:

    Debate still going on with shouty Corbyn winding up to silence and TM has just rose to conclude the debate to a huge cheer. She has been answering questions since 4.00 pm . That takes some stamina

    Seriously, they've still been going all this time? Jesus. Longest meeting I've done was around six hours, and all I had to do was take notes, and it was still knackering.
    I am watching Theresa live on Parliament channel now.
    I know there are very different systems, but I do like that, occasionally, our PMs have to get stuck in to some lengthy, difficult back and forth on the floor of a legislative chamber like anyone else.
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    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,203
    rcs1000 said:

    ydoethur said:

    glw said:

    How come the government that can oversee that vast conspiracy at Finchley Road which only PBers are aware of can make a complete Horlicks over the Windrush generation?

    I mean Amber Rudd is involved in both isn't she?

    That is what always gets me about conspiracy theories (which I have read far too much about, over the years). On the one hand there are these incredibly elaborate multi-decade plots to rule the world involving a cast of thousands, but they are blown wide open by a shitty out-of-focus YouTube video, or something similar.

    One of my favourite ever conspiracy theories was the one that said that Barack Obama was simultaneously

    a) A Muslim who wanted to turn America into a Muslim state

    and

    b) Controlled and financed by the Jews/Israel
    Even that's not quite as good as Ernst Zundel, who believed the Holocaust had been faked to ensure the Nazi survivors could get on with testing UFOs from their sub-Antarctic base in peace.

    On your earlier post, Galileo is also rather a bad example. There is a detailed account of the affair and how it has been misinterpreted in James Hannam's God's Philosophers (not sure if you've ever read that - review here) but to cut to the chase, he agreed with the Inquisition that while the science was contestable to teach it as a theory and then turned around and taught it as a fact. (Also of course he was not buried in unconsecrated ground - I did enjoy one person who made that claim and then followed up, unforgettably, with an account of how moving he found a visit to Santa Croce in Florence to see Galileo's tomb!)
    That book looks rather good: I've added it to my Kindle reading list. It'll be my next non-fiction (after Rejoice, Rejoice).
    It is a very good book.

This discussion has been closed.