Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
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Welcome to FTN. New posters are welcome to join the conversation. You can follow us on Twitter @FlythenestHaven You are responsible for the content you post. This is a public forum. Treat it as if you are speaking in a crowded room. Site admin and Moderators are volunteers who will respond as quickly as they are able to when made aware of any complaints. Please do not post copyrighted material without the original authors permission.
- tinyclanger2
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
Rather fittingly (given the van Gough picture):
The performance allocates a galaxy.
The performance allocates a galaxy.
LET'S FACE IT I'M JUST 'KIN' SEETHIN'
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
That's all very wellPorFavor wrote:https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/201 ... a-shootingTrump: FBI 'spending too much time' on Russia inquiry and missed Florida shooter signals
The president’s attempt to use the shooting to make a political point about the Russia inquiries into the Trump campaign drew swift criticism
The US president’s attempt to use the shooting to make a political point about the FBI’s Russia inquiries into the Trump campaign drew swift criticism, including from John Kasich, the Republican governor of Ohio, who told CNN it was an “absurd statement”. (Guardian)
Republican party still responsible for Trump
- tinyclanger2
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
The more I live in the post Brexit referendum, post Trump coming to power world, the more I believe that the Salem witch trials are becoming increasingly relevant.
wikipedia wrote:The episode is one of Colonial America's most notorious cases of mass hysteria. It has been used in political rhetoric and popular literature as a vivid cautionary tale about the dangers of isolationism, religious extremism, false accusations, and lapses in due process.
LET'S FACE IT I'M JUST 'KIN' SEETHIN'
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
tinyclanger2 wrote:Depends whether we're in a neighbourly customs union or the Neighbourly Customs Union.PorFavor wrote:Cup of sugar?tinyclanger2 wrote:something to look forward to (before it's harder to borrow stuff)
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesig ... ondon-2019" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Which is it?
And don't think I haven't noticed Constance slipping into my kitchen via the back door while you're distracting me at the front.
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
gilsey wrote:https://news.sky.com/story/kier-starmer ... u-11165090" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;"We would start with viable options, staying in a customs union and a single market variant which means full participation in the single market.
"You can't sweep the customs union and the single market off the table on the one hand and also say you don't want a hard border in Northern Ireland... You can't have no hard border if you don't have alignment."
Sunday 10 December 2017
Alsohttp://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-42853018" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;The only way to avoid a hard border is for the UK to remain in the customs union, the shadow Brexit Secretary has said.
29 January 2018
What about the status quo is not an option, exactly, if we still want "easy movement"? As with Emily Thornberry above, Starmer references vague objections without spelling them out as if we all know what objections they mean, except I really don't. And if we're negotiating migration "to and from the bloc" that strongly suggests we wouldn't be part of the single market but dealing with it as an outside party.He admitted that "freedom of movement can't stay the same - the status quo is not an option", but said future migration to and from the bloc should be "negotiated".
"Fall seven times, get up eight" - Japanese proverb
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
Yep. How do we learn from this? How did that episode get resolved (or at least tempered)? What tools do we have to prevent or mitigate harm now?tinyclanger2 wrote:The more I live in the post Brexit referendum, post Trump coming to power world, the more I believe that the Salem witch trials are becoming increasingly relevant.
wikipedia wrote:The episode is one of Colonial America's most notorious cases of mass hysteria. It has been used in political rhetoric and popular literature as a vivid cautionary tale about the dangers of isolationism, religious extremism, false accusations, and lapses in due process.
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
But all those ancillary jobs exist, for example in London, on the back of the obscene wealth of the big finance companies and so on. I'm a big fan of freedom of movement as long as it is indeed a benefit to the individuals. But I reckon many of the Eastern Europeans who moved to the UK would have rather stayed at home and done good, well paid jobs there had they been available. As it happens the Eastern European economies seem to be generally on the up of late, which is great news. Wait for the Brits complaining they aren't allowed to go to Warsaw to work!Willow904 wrote:I'm not sure mass migration is particularly in big business interests, though. If it was why would they move factories to Poland etc? Eastern Europeans are mostly coming to the UK to do jobs that can't be moved to them, such as in bars and hotels, cleaning cars, building, retail and working in the NHS etc. A lot of these employers are small, independent concerns. It's not just about big business. I'm still very much with Ed Miliband on this. The focus needs to be on ensuring no worker in the UK is exploited, wherever they are from. I don't see why Serbians shouldn't be allowed the benefits of freedom of movement, just because some countries like the UK fail to protect workers and allow a black market economy to flourish. That's on us, not the EU.PaulfromYorkshire wrote:To follow on from my comment above, did anyone notice that the EU recently announced plans for the remaining non-EU Balkna states to join by 2025?
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/ ... s-brussels" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
serbia-and-montenegro-could-join-eu-in-2025-says-brussels
It's in nobody's interests, apart from big business, for there to be wholesale migration from Serbia to the rest of the EU when they join. It is time for a better version of freedom of movement iMHO.
Please don't forget that the Single Market with its four freedoms is a capitalist construct. Thatcher loved the idea didn't she? I know the EU has done a lot of good socially, but it's a Single Market not a Single Social Area.
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
If you think about the status quo as free movement the way UK's operated in the past, rather than how it could be operated under existing EU rules, there is scope for moving away from the UK's status quo without an EU rule change. Extra bureaucracy sure, but nothing compared with the border infrastructure needed for hard brexit.Willow904 wrote: What about the status quo is not an option, exactly, if we still want "easy movement"? As with Emily Thornberry above, Starmer references vague objections without spelling them out as if we all know what objections they mean, except I really don't. And if we're negotiating migration "to and from the bloc" that strongly suggests we wouldn't be part of the single market but dealing with it as an outside party.
I'm not saying that's what Starmer meant, but I don't think he's ever accidentally vague. Unlike some others in the shadow cabinet who I suspect just don't know what they're talking about.
One world, like it or not - John Martyn
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
Off topic
I've found my red pencil after fretting about its loss on and off for a couple hours
I've found my red pencil after fretting about its loss on and off for a couple hours
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
Tory Brexit is feudalism
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/b ... 79-RL1.pdf" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
All the proposed amendments to the EU withdrawal bill in the Lords.
All the proposed amendments to the EU withdrawal bill in the Lords.
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
The status quo is definitely an option - in fact, it is the only really credible option for me
The issue is though a lot of people who voted remain do not talk about staying in they talk about EEA/CU, and there is the elephant in the room of the 'vassal state' argument being paraded
There is no good answer to that because it is actually true......and this is why the Labour Party avoid talking about it!
The issue is though a lot of people who voted remain do not talk about staying in they talk about EEA/CU, and there is the elephant in the room of the 'vassal state' argument being paraded
There is no good answer to that because it is actually true......and this is why the Labour Party avoid talking about it!
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
https://www.theguardian.com/society/201 ... -999-calls" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Ambulances stuck at A&E 'unable to respond quickly to 999 calls'
Seriously ill patients having to wait for hours for paramedics to arrive, says NHS boss
Ambulances stuck at A&E 'unable to respond quickly to 999 calls'
Seriously ill patients having to wait for hours for paramedics to arrive, says NHS boss
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
Not an accident, but part and parcel of their joining the EU. And part of achieving greater equality worldwide is wealthier countries giving up a little so poorer countries can catch up. Just as West Germany had to in order to re-unify with East Germany, western Europe has experienced some significant pain in order to accommodate eastern Europe. The aim is as much about peaceful cooperation across Europe and bringing their standard of living up to ours rather than dropping ours in the west to compete with them, as could have happened far more if it was all about capitalism. The EU has been as active in protecting environmental standards and workers rights as it has been in reducing economic barriers and facilitating trade. I think it's because of this side of the EU project that those on the far right of the Tory party have fallen out of love with it. Not to mention the size of the EU means it can stand up to powerful interests in the US, Russia, China and elsewhere - interests right wingers like Rees-Mogg, Farage, Boris and Gove seem more interested in promoting than our own. In a fight between Europe and various factions of the Republican right, Putin and China plus tax dodging UK newspaper magnates, I find myself willing to overlook Brussels' faults. It's not Thatcher's single market anymore. In recent years Tories like Cameron have found themselves outvoted on things like financial transaction taxes, tax haven transparency and in future look to have to conform to EU wide protections that will limit job trial periods to 6 months as opposed to our current much longer 2 years. Such details make it hard for me to see the EU as the bogeyman in terms of social progress. Almost everyone agrees that some of the most equal, progressive socially democratic countries in the world are in Scandinavia and they have all managed to be so as members of the EU or single market. And we can too. Our problems stem from domestic government, not Brussels. You'd think a Labour Party keen to overturn neo liberalism and more recent austerity would be a lot more vocal in making this point.PaulfromYorkshire wrote:But all those ancillary jobs exist, for example in London, on the back of the obscene wealth of the big finance companies and so on. I'm a big fan of freedom of movement as long as it is indeed a benefit to the individuals. But I reckon many of the Eastern Europeans who moved to the UK would have rather stayed at home and done good, well paid jobs there had they been available. As it happens the Eastern European economies seem to be generally on the up of late, which is great news. Wait for the Brits complaining they aren't allowed to go to Warsaw to work!Willow904 wrote:I'm not sure mass migration is particularly in big business interests, though. If it was why would they move factories to Poland etc? Eastern Europeans are mostly coming to the UK to do jobs that can't be moved to them, such as in bars and hotels, cleaning cars, building, retail and working in the NHS etc. A lot of these employers are small, independent concerns. It's not just about big business. I'm still very much with Ed Miliband on this. The focus needs to be on ensuring no worker in the UK is exploited, wherever they are from. I don't see why Serbians shouldn't be allowed the benefits of freedom of movement, just because some countries like the UK fail to protect workers and allow a black market economy to flourish. That's on us, not the EU.PaulfromYorkshire wrote:To follow on from my comment above, did anyone notice that the EU recently announced plans for the remaining non-EU Balkna states to join by 2025?
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/ ... s-brussels" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
serbia-and-montenegro-could-join-eu-in-2025-says-brussels
It's in nobody's interests, apart from big business, for there to be wholesale migration from Serbia to the rest of the EU when they join. It is time for a better version of freedom of movement iMHO.
Please don't forget that the Single Market with its four freedoms is a capitalist construct. Thatcher loved the idea didn't she? I know the EU has done a lot of good socially, but it's a Single Market not a Single Social Area.
"Fall seven times, get up eight" - Japanese proverb
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
V good on nationalisation
https://amp.ft.com/content/d3b3ecfc-149 ... ssion=true" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
The real problems are not cost but producer capture (McDonnell seems to actually favour that, but what do you expect) and politicisation of prices.
Water is the best case for nationalisation, rail terrible (to the extent it isn't).
https://amp.ft.com/content/d3b3ecfc-149 ... ssion=true" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
The real problems are not cost but producer capture (McDonnell seems to actually favour that, but what do you expect) and politicisation of prices.
Water is the best case for nationalisation, rail terrible (to the extent it isn't).
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
@Willow904
Beautiful post, thanks for that
Beautiful post, thanks for that
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
SpinningHugo wrote:V good on nationalisation
https://amp.ft.com/content/d3b3ecfc-149 ... ssion=true" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
The real problems are not cost but producer capture (McDonnell seems to actually favour that, but what do you expect) and politicisation of prices.
Water is the best case for nationalisation, rail terrible (to the extent it isn't).
it is a shit article because I cannot read it - why post a link to something that is behind a paywall?
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
As JA says, great post and you know I agree.Willow904 wrote:Not an accident, but part and parcel of their joining the EU. And part of achieving greater equality worldwide is wealthier countries giving up a little so poorer countries can catch up. Just as West Germany had to in order to re-unify with East Germany, western Europe has experienced some significant pain in order to accommodate eastern Europe. The aim is as much about peaceful cooperation across Europe and bringing their standard of living up to ours rather than dropping ours in the west to compete with them, as could have happened far more if it was all about capitalism. The EU has been as active in protecting environmental standards and workers rights as it has been in reducing economic barriers and facilitating trade. I think it's because of this side of the EU project that those on the far right of the Tory party have fallen out of love with it. Not to mention the size of the EU means it can stand up to powerful interests in the US, Russia, China and elsewhere - interests right wingers like Rees-Mogg, Farage, Boris and Gove seem more interested in promoting than our own. In a fight between Europe and various factions of the Republican right, Putin and China plus tax dodging UK newspaper magnates, I find myself willing to overlook Brussels' faults. It's not Thatcher's single market anymore. In recent years Tories like Cameron have found themselves outvoted on things like financial transaction taxes, tax haven transparency and in future look to have to conform to EU wide protections that will limit job trial periods to 6 months as opposed to our current much longer 2 years. Such details make it hard for me to see the EU as the bogeyman in terms of social progress. Almost everyone agrees that some of the most equal, progressive socially democratic countries in the world are in Scandinavia and they have all managed to be so as members of the EU or single market. And we can too. Our problems stem from domestic government, not Brussels. You'd think a Labour Party keen to overturn neo liberalism and more recent austerity would be a lot more vocal in making this point.PaulfromYorkshire wrote:But all those ancillary jobs exist, for example in London, on the back of the obscene wealth of the big finance companies and so on. I'm a big fan of freedom of movement as long as it is indeed a benefit to the individuals. But I reckon many of the Eastern Europeans who moved to the UK would have rather stayed at home and done good, well paid jobs there had they been available. As it happens the Eastern European economies seem to be generally on the up of late, which is great news. Wait for the Brits complaining they aren't allowed to go to Warsaw to work!Willow904 wrote: I'm not sure mass migration is particularly in big business interests, though. If it was why would they move factories to Poland etc? Eastern Europeans are mostly coming to the UK to do jobs that can't be moved to them, such as in bars and hotels, cleaning cars, building, retail and working in the NHS etc. A lot of these employers are small, independent concerns. It's not just about big business. I'm still very much with Ed Miliband on this. The focus needs to be on ensuring no worker in the UK is exploited, wherever they are from. I don't see why Serbians shouldn't be allowed the benefits of freedom of movement, just because some countries like the UK fail to protect workers and allow a black market economy to flourish. That's on us, not the EU.
Please don't forget that the Single Market with its four freedoms is a capitalist construct. Thatcher loved the idea didn't she? I know the EU has done a lot of good socially, but it's a Single Market not a Single Social Area.
But your words that I highlight are the heart of the problem I think. My sincere hope is that the EU will seek to address some of those faults and that will allow the UK to stay in.
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
Will you be maintaining this line that each of the 27 other countries will be happy to renegotiate the EU's basic structures with the UK, which voted to leave, after March next year when we've left?PaulfromYorkshire wrote: But your words that I highlight are the heart of the problem I think. My sincere hope is that the EU will seek to address some of those faults and that will allow the UK to stay in.
When will you be accepting that the issue is whether Hard Brexit can be avoided, not whether the UK can have new terms of membership?
Or will you be saying we could negotiate re-entry on new and much improved terms?
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
SpinningHugo wrote:Will you be maintaining this line that each of the 27 other countries will be happy to renegotiate the EU's basic structures with the UK, which voted to leave, after March next year when we've left?PaulfromYorkshire wrote: But your words that I highlight are the heart of the problem I think. My sincere hope is that the EU will seek to address some of those faults and that will allow the UK to stay in.
When will you be accepting that the issue is whether Hard Brexit can be avoided, not whether the UK can have new terms of membership?
Or will you be saying we could negotiate re-entry on new and much improved terms?
1. I don't think that is what is suggested - it may be the EU will look at amending their own terms. I am not so convinced there needs to be much done here though as the rules for FoM can be implemented differently than we do. We would need to review our own internal laws though
2. That is up to the Tories who are in Government at the moment, something you seem to forget
3. That is up to future negotiation......I would doubt it but who knows
Instead of criticising everybody else why not come up with a potential solution rather than living in this world where you just sneer at everything.
- tinyclanger2
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
Your hardware omits a seven node across the performance.
(something, I would say, to bear in mind)
(something, I would say, to bear in mind)
LET'S FACE IT I'M JUST 'KIN' SEETHIN'
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
That explains everything
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
"By all means acquit Corbyn of the charge that his meetings with a Czech diplomat in the 80s make him unfit for the highest office in 2018. But don’t pretend that they are an irrelevance. Who controls the past controls the future, as all totalitarians know. But it is also true that those who insist upon understanding the past have the best chance of safeguarding both their own liberty and the prospects of progress. Be warned: the idea of “year zero” only has value to those with something to hide."
• Matthew d’Ancona is a Guardian columnist
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
I'm afraid of Tory year zero
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... erhofstadt" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Good start.May's Brexit transition demand 'would penalise EU citizens'
Unthinkable for EU to agree to PM’s key demand on citizens’ rights, says Verhofstadt
"Fall seven times, get up eight" - Japanese proverb
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
Some of the comments under d'Ancona's article are hilarious
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
Night night.
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
Goodnight, PorFavorPorFavor wrote:Night night.
Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
They won't load !citizenJA wrote:Some of the comments under d'Ancona's article are hilarious
Goodnight gourmets
- Sky'sGoneOut
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
I leave Leeds for one day and then this happens...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leeds-43104639" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
I walked along there about half an hour before completely obsessed by the fact the heel of my left boot was making an obvious squeaking/quacking noise that I was sure everybody else could hear.
Little did I realise my boot making bizarre noises wouldn't be the highlight of the day.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leeds-43104639" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
I walked along there about half an hour before completely obsessed by the fact the heel of my left boot was making an obvious squeaking/quacking noise that I was sure everybody else could hear.
Little did I realise my boot making bizarre noises wouldn't be the highlight of the day.
- Sky'sGoneOut
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Re: Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2018
Watching the video it would appear that they've tried twice to reverse into the shop and missed both times.
That's a shop front about 10 feet across if memory serves.
Perhaps it was Maureen from Driving School?
(Apologies if that joke was about 1000 years too late.)
(Or was I pandering to my audience?)
That's a shop front about 10 feet across if memory serves.
Perhaps it was Maureen from Driving School?
(Apologies if that joke was about 1000 years too late.)
(Or was I pandering to my audience?)