European Elections 07:41 - Nov 23 with 6606 views | Dr_Winston | The rise of Geert Wilders, Marine Le Pen and the AFD in Germany (not forgetting the Italians) should be of no surprise to anyone who has actually been paying attention over the last couple of decades. Perhaps the single biggest reason I voted for Brexit (other than the democratic shortage at the heart of the EU Governing process) was my belief that the whole thing would come crashing down within a couple of decades and that we'd be better off out before that happened. Seen little since to change my mind. | |
| Pain or damage don't end the world. Or despair, or f*cking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man... and give some back. |
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European Elections on 08:47 - Nov 28 with 843 views | Kilkennyjack |
European Elections on 09:11 - Nov 27 by felixstowe_jack | Post war peace in Europe has been due to NATO nothing to do with EU. UK trade with the EU and the World has increased since we left. Do at least TRY to get your facts right. Democracy lives in Europe even if you don't believe people are allowed to vote differently to you. |
Well, well, well ….. | |
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European Elections on 08:57 - Nov 28 with 827 views | controversial_jack |
European Elections on 08:32 - Nov 28 by felixstowe_jack | Why disband an organisation that has kept the peace in Europe since the last World War. If only the United Nations was as successful. |
There have been countless conflicts since ww2, admittedly not so many in Europe, the Balkans aside, but NATO isn't just about Europe | | | |
European Elections on 10:29 - Nov 28 with 815 views | Joesus_Of_Narbereth |
European Elections on 08:47 - Nov 28 by Kilkennyjack | Well, well, well ….. |
Perhaps his crystal ball is cracked. Or maybe he’s got a few cards missing from his tarot deck. Because the Bank of England and these other economy “experts” seem to be about as adept at predicting the future as Mystic Meg was. They are akin to these nutters who stand on street corners holding a sign that says “the end of the world is nigh”. | |
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European Elections on 13:19 - Nov 28 with 775 views | Kilkennyjack |
European Elections on 10:29 - Nov 28 by Joesus_Of_Narbereth | Perhaps his crystal ball is cracked. Or maybe he’s got a few cards missing from his tarot deck. Because the Bank of England and these other economy “experts” seem to be about as adept at predicting the future as Mystic Meg was. They are akin to these nutters who stand on street corners holding a sign that says “the end of the world is nigh”. |
Johnson had no plan for Brexit. Yes I will take my chances with the experts, thanks. Its sort of why, say …. surgeons are … well, you know …. experts. Far more likely to be able to deliver successful operations than say Brian from down the pub who sneers at experts … | |
| Beware of the Risen People
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European Elections on 13:27 - Nov 28 with 774 views | felixstowe_jack |
European Elections on 08:57 - Nov 28 by controversial_jack | There have been countless conflicts since ww2, admittedly not so many in Europe, the Balkans aside, but NATO isn't just about Europe |
Yes the Balkans was a mishmash of disparate states as part of the Yugoslavian communist state held together by Tito. Once he died it was never going to work. | |
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European Elections on 13:29 - Nov 28 with 772 views | felixstowe_jack |
European Elections on 08:47 - Nov 28 by Kilkennyjack | Well, well, well ….. |
The man who told us we were in recession a year ago, then he said we would enter a recession in the first part of this year. Not sure when he last got a forecast right. | |
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European Elections on 13:38 - Nov 28 with 769 views | onehunglow | We should not have left. We did We won’t get back Live on | |
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European Elections on 14:00 - Nov 28 with 763 views | Joesus_Of_Narbereth |
European Elections on 13:19 - Nov 28 by Kilkennyjack | Johnson had no plan for Brexit. Yes I will take my chances with the experts, thanks. Its sort of why, say …. surgeons are … well, you know …. experts. Far more likely to be able to deliver successful operations than say Brian from down the pub who sneers at experts … |
A surgeon deals with the facts at the time. He or she does not perform a liver transplant based on a forecast that someone may need one in ten years time. Predicting the future in any way is an absolute waste of time. Even meteorologists with all their satellites and weather stations and prediction models and their data very rarely get a simple weather forecast correct. And certainly not more than a few days. | |
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European Elections on 17:53 - Nov 28 with 734 views | SullutaCreturned |
European Elections on 13:19 - Nov 28 by Kilkennyjack | Johnson had no plan for Brexit. Yes I will take my chances with the experts, thanks. Its sort of why, say …. surgeons are … well, you know …. experts. Far more likely to be able to deliver successful operations than say Brian from down the pub who sneers at experts … |
Well surgeons have a guarateed set of circumstances, economists don't have it quite so easy. Experts generally have trouble predicting the future, look at the weather, we have experts studying the situation but they can't guarantee anything beyond 24 hours. Not all experts are equal. | | | |
European Elections on 19:37 - Nov 28 with 715 views | Flashberryjack |
European Elections on 17:53 - Nov 28 by SullutaCreturned | Well surgeons have a guarateed set of circumstances, economists don't have it quite so easy. Experts generally have trouble predicting the future, look at the weather, we have experts studying the situation but they can't guarantee anything beyond 24 hours. Not all experts are equal. |
But they can predict what the weather will be in thirty years time. | |
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European Elections on 19:47 - Nov 28 with 712 views | Gwyn737 |
European Elections on 19:37 - Nov 28 by Flashberryjack | But they can predict what the weather will be in thirty years time. |
Not weather; climate. | | | |
European Elections on 21:20 - Nov 28 with 695 views | Flashberryjack |
European Elections on 19:47 - Nov 28 by Gwyn737 | Not weather; climate. |
Same horse, different jockey. | |
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European Elections on 21:29 - Nov 28 with 687 views | Gwyn737 |
European Elections on 21:20 - Nov 28 by Flashberryjack | Same horse, different jockey. |
No, they’re not. | | | |
European Elections on 23:47 - Nov 28 with 667 views | Boundy |
European Elections on 21:29 - Nov 28 by Gwyn737 | No, they’re not. |
I thought climate and weather only differed due time one is short term the other long | |
| "In a free society, the State is the servant of the people—not the master." |
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European Elections on 00:52 - Nov 29 with 662 views | Kilkennyjack |
European Elections on 17:53 - Nov 28 by SullutaCreturned | Well surgeons have a guarateed set of circumstances, economists don't have it quite so easy. Experts generally have trouble predicting the future, look at the weather, we have experts studying the situation but they can't guarantee anything beyond 24 hours. Not all experts are equal. |
Not really. Every patient and condition is slightly different. Therefore their years of training and proven expertise allows them to exercise judgement to ensure the best possible outcomes. They have the skilks needed. The tools needed. Brian from down the pub just has a big gob and hates to acknowledge experts. Brian is 57 and still lives with his mum. | |
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European Elections on 07:03 - Nov 29 with 651 views | Gwyn737 |
European Elections on 23:47 - Nov 28 by Boundy | I thought climate and weather only differed due time one is short term the other long |
Pretty much but it’s an important distinction. Climate can also be used to describe conditions over a large area whereas weather in that context is more localised. | | | |
European Elections on 08:07 - Nov 29 with 646 views | Scotia |
European Elections on 07:03 - Nov 29 by Gwyn737 | Pretty much but it’s an important distinction. Climate can also be used to describe conditions over a large area whereas weather in that context is more localised. |
Yes Gwyn. And another important distinction in the climate change discussion, and in very simple terms climate effects weather rather than vice versa. That's the problem. | | | |
European Elections on 09:45 - Nov 29 with 625 views | controversial_jack |
European Elections on 19:47 - Nov 28 by Gwyn737 | Not weather; climate. |
No they can't predictions so far have been wildly inaccurate [Post edited 29 Nov 2023 9:46]
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European Elections on 10:01 - Nov 29 with 621 views | Scotia |
European Elections on 09:45 - Nov 29 by controversial_jack | No they can't predictions so far have been wildly inaccurate [Post edited 29 Nov 2023 9:46]
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Have they? | | | |
European Elections on 10:32 - Nov 29 with 612 views | Joesus_Of_Narbereth |
European Elections on 00:52 - Nov 29 by Kilkennyjack | Not really. Every patient and condition is slightly different. Therefore their years of training and proven expertise allows them to exercise judgement to ensure the best possible outcomes. They have the skilks needed. The tools needed. Brian from down the pub just has a big gob and hates to acknowledge experts. Brian is 57 and still lives with his mum. |
Experts can legitimately comment on things as they were or are, but the sort of vaticination you referred to in your post is not worth listening to. Don’t you understand that nobody can accurately predict the future? Especially with the huge number of variables involved. Anything could happen, | |
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European Elections on 10:35 - Nov 29 with 612 views | AnotherJohn | It seemed to me that the first of the 2023 Reith lectures by Ben Ansell, broadcast this morning, was partly a reaction to "populist" election results. Ansell criticised "majoritarianism", arguing that election or referendum results should not be allowed to over-rule other foundations of liberal democracy. In his view institutions such as the courts, NGOs and the media should be able to check or even block controversial policies supported by national electorates, which he argued depend on attitudes/opinions that change in unpredictable ways over time. I wondered if the title of his talk should have been "ode to juridification", as the courts and international law were what he really had in mind. Conspiracy theorists would probably say that this is exactly the mechanism that "liberal elites" prefer to use to mitigate the effects of unwelcome election results. No doubt Prof Ansell has higher ideals and sees the power of established institutions as a way of preserving liberal democracy. I don't doubt that it went down very well in North Oxford. However, what I think people like Ansell don't get is that there is nothing that undermines faith in democracy as quickly as the perception among voters that nothing will change however they vote. | | | |
European Elections on 11:53 - Nov 29 with 588 views | felixstowe_jack |
European Elections on 00:52 - Nov 29 by Kilkennyjack | Not really. Every patient and condition is slightly different. Therefore their years of training and proven expertise allows them to exercise judgement to ensure the best possible outcomes. They have the skilks needed. The tools needed. Brian from down the pub just has a big gob and hates to acknowledge experts. Brian is 57 and still lives with his mum. |
Which is why they are wrong so often and second options are vital. It is amazing that since doctors and Surgeons have been on strikes deaths in hospitals have fallen . | |
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European Elections on 14:42 - Nov 29 with 576 views | Gwyn737 |
European Elections on 10:35 - Nov 29 by AnotherJohn | It seemed to me that the first of the 2023 Reith lectures by Ben Ansell, broadcast this morning, was partly a reaction to "populist" election results. Ansell criticised "majoritarianism", arguing that election or referendum results should not be allowed to over-rule other foundations of liberal democracy. In his view institutions such as the courts, NGOs and the media should be able to check or even block controversial policies supported by national electorates, which he argued depend on attitudes/opinions that change in unpredictable ways over time. I wondered if the title of his talk should have been "ode to juridification", as the courts and international law were what he really had in mind. Conspiracy theorists would probably say that this is exactly the mechanism that "liberal elites" prefer to use to mitigate the effects of unwelcome election results. No doubt Prof Ansell has higher ideals and sees the power of established institutions as a way of preserving liberal democracy. I don't doubt that it went down very well in North Oxford. However, what I think people like Ansell don't get is that there is nothing that undermines faith in democracy as quickly as the perception among voters that nothing will change however they vote. |
'...there is nothing that undermines faith in democracy as quickly as the perception among voters that nothing will change however they vote.' You should pin that sentence. It's perfect. | | | |
European Elections on 16:32 - Nov 29 with 566 views | SullutaCreturned |
European Elections on 00:52 - Nov 29 by Kilkennyjack | Not really. Every patient and condition is slightly different. Therefore their years of training and proven expertise allows them to exercise judgement to ensure the best possible outcomes. They have the skilks needed. The tools needed. Brian from down the pub just has a big gob and hates to acknowledge experts. Brian is 57 and still lives with his mum. |
A surgeon only operates on ONE patient, one set of circumstances at a time. An economist has to look at the Uk situation then look at the bigger picture, he has to go global to jusge how the UK might do. When the surgeon is operating on his patient he doesn't keep looking to see what the rest of the hospital is doing unless something happens to affect the job right in front of him. Now I hadn't realised your real name was Brian, I do apologise. | | | |
European Elections on 17:20 - Nov 29 with 545 views | AnotherJohn |
European Elections on 16:32 - Nov 29 by SullutaCreturned | A surgeon only operates on ONE patient, one set of circumstances at a time. An economist has to look at the Uk situation then look at the bigger picture, he has to go global to jusge how the UK might do. When the surgeon is operating on his patient he doesn't keep looking to see what the rest of the hospital is doing unless something happens to affect the job right in front of him. Now I hadn't realised your real name was Brian, I do apologise. |
Unmasked as Brian the "Emperor of the Irish"? https://www.tcd.ie/library/exhibitions/boru/emperor.php#:~:text=Brian%20Boru%20( | | | |
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