Megachip the little buggers!
In todays news...
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- Horse
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Re: In todays news...
Yup. Potentially receiving a better, or more appropriate, education.Cousin Jack wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 10:59 am Some, mainly educated, people home educate their kids as a deliberate choice. Those kids are probably educated fine, although I suspect they miss out on mucking about with their mates.
And yup.A lot more kids get taken out of school by poorly educated parents, often ones who work full time. Mainly as a result of their little feral brat being constantly in deep shit at school because of their antisocial habbits. Their home education is probably not fine at all, they will grow up to produce feral brats and the cycle will repeat.
School refusers, for good reasons
School refusers because they just can't be @rsed
As a carer, one example I heard of was looking after a drug addict mother
As a carer, for a disabled parent
Or those attending illegal schools, some set up by small religious groups
So many possibilities.
But none are logged. Ironically, local authorities have a legal obligation to ensure that children are receiving appropriate education - but parents have no obligation to provide access.
Even bland can be a type of character
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Re: In todays news...
Certainly? The average female produces 100 to 120 kittens in her lifetime (and that's the lowest estimate I could find). Even if only half survive, that's 50 to 60 cats that won't be born, thus not adding to the stray population. That's 50 to 60 cats that won't be producing their own litters, or in the case of males shagging every female that your cat lady hasn't managed to neuter. That's the effect of neutering just one young female; how many has cat lady neutered?Yambo wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 9:26 amIt's more expensive and with the number of kittens being produced each year fails in its main aim.
Culling not only prevents breeding but also reduces the number of animals overall. Catch, neuter release is only effective in keeping the vets in the manner to which they have beome used to. It certainly hasn't had much effect of our local population.
Just because you're not seeing a reduction in numbers doesn't mean it's not having an effect.
- Yambo
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Re: In todays news...
A few things have attracted my interest recently which I think are worthy of comment and/or ridicule.
Let's start with water:
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4nn46rjej6o
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cneevz8278eo
Unfortunately, this doesn't beggar belief; what fine upstanding people are Conservative MPs. I wonder what odds he got on his £100 flutter, it's probably slipped his memory. But, he's apologised so it's all OK now I guess.
Sub-postmasters in Scotland who were wrongly convicted as part of the Post Office Horizon scandal have been automatically exonerated.
Emergency legislation passed by the Scottish Parliament has been given Royal Assent and came into force on Friday.
It means anyone convicted of embezzlement, fraud or theft in connection with Post Office business between 1996 and 2018 have had their convictions quashed and are eligible for compensation.[/quote]
Scots dragging their heels a bit there but better late than never.
I've been following the Horizon Inquiry quite closely and some of it has been good viewing. The Post Office is of course, wholly owned by the government so it should be no surprise that it was badly run. Paula Vennels and many others have got to be prosecuted, at the very least for perverting the course of justice. However I suspect that as soon as charges are laid there's going to be a significant increase in diagnoses of dementia and Alzheimers only for the afflicted to make miraculous recoveries when it is announced they are unfir to stand trial.
Ol' Wynn Williams, the judge in charge comes across a lot of the time as a friendly old uncle who's probably a bit senile but he's far from it. This is one of my favourite bits (there's a 5 minute video clip of just this bit of her giving evidence but I can't find it at the moment):
4.35pm: She was so close to getting through to the finish, but Sir Wyn Williams wants a final question. He asks of the briefing note to the select committee: 'You were being advised to be very precise, circumspect and guarded about what you said. You would agree?'
Vennells: 'Yes.'
Williams: 'That was the effect trying to be created by those creating that document?'
Vennells: 'It could be.'
Williams: 'Why?'
There follows a long pause where Vennells is again brought to tears. After a minute or so, she recovers herself and replies: 'I could be too trusting of people. I took the information I was given and went into a select committee. From what I know now it may be other people knew more than I did and they were trying to direct me to answer in a certain way.'
Vennells is admitting to being spectaculary incompetent or she's lying. Your choice.
Almost every day stuff comes up on the BBC that shows the UK is broken. 14 years of Tory mismanagement, incompetence and floundering and 14 years of Opposition incompetence. I haven't read the manifestos but I doubt any of them state how they're going to actually fix things.
Let's start with water:
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4nn46rjej6o
Nobody cares about the environment, the people, the law . . . Certainly not the outgoing government.BBC wrote:BBC uncovers 6,000 possible illegal sewage spills in one year
Every major English water company has reported data suggesting they’ve discharged raw sewage when the weather is dry – a practice which is potentially illegal.
BBC News has analysed spills data from nine firms, which suggests sewage may have been discharged nearly 6,000 times when it had not been raining in 2022 - including during the country’s record heatwave.
Water companies can release untreated sewage into rivers and seas when it rains to prevent it flooding homes, but such spills are illegal when it’s dry.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cneevz8278eo
also the BBC wrote:Tory candidate tells BBC election bet was 'huge error of judgement'.
Conservative candidate Craig Williams has apologised and said he made a "huge error of judgement" over betting on the date of the next general election.
Mr Williams, who was an aide to the prime minister in the last Parliament, is alleged to have placed a £100 bet on a July election three days before Rishi Sunak announced the 4 July poll.
Unfortunately, this doesn't beggar belief; what fine upstanding people are Conservative MPs. I wonder what odds he got on his £100 flutter, it's probably slipped his memory. But, he's apologised so it's all OK now I guess.
New law quashes convictions of Scottish sub-postmastersanother BBC article wrote: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4nnjrj179lo
Sub-postmasters in Scotland who were wrongly convicted as part of the Post Office Horizon scandal have been automatically exonerated.
Emergency legislation passed by the Scottish Parliament has been given Royal Assent and came into force on Friday.
It means anyone convicted of embezzlement, fraud or theft in connection with Post Office business between 1996 and 2018 have had their convictions quashed and are eligible for compensation.[/quote]
Scots dragging their heels a bit there but better late than never.
I've been following the Horizon Inquiry quite closely and some of it has been good viewing. The Post Office is of course, wholly owned by the government so it should be no surprise that it was badly run. Paula Vennels and many others have got to be prosecuted, at the very least for perverting the course of justice. However I suspect that as soon as charges are laid there's going to be a significant increase in diagnoses of dementia and Alzheimers only for the afflicted to make miraculous recoveries when it is announced they are unfir to stand trial.
Ol' Wynn Williams, the judge in charge comes across a lot of the time as a friendly old uncle who's probably a bit senile but he's far from it. This is one of my favourite bits (there's a 5 minute video clip of just this bit of her giving evidence but I can't find it at the moment):
4.35pm: She was so close to getting through to the finish, but Sir Wyn Williams wants a final question. He asks of the briefing note to the select committee: 'You were being advised to be very precise, circumspect and guarded about what you said. You would agree?'
Vennells: 'Yes.'
Williams: 'That was the effect trying to be created by those creating that document?'
Vennells: 'It could be.'
Williams: 'Why?'
There follows a long pause where Vennells is again brought to tears. After a minute or so, she recovers herself and replies: 'I could be too trusting of people. I took the information I was given and went into a select committee. From what I know now it may be other people knew more than I did and they were trying to direct me to answer in a certain way.'
Vennells is admitting to being spectaculary incompetent or she's lying. Your choice.
Almost every day stuff comes up on the BBC that shows the UK is broken. 14 years of Tory mismanagement, incompetence and floundering and 14 years of Opposition incompetence. I haven't read the manifestos but I doubt any of them state how they're going to actually fix things.
Last edited by Yambo on Fri Jun 14, 2024 10:27 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Horse
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Re: In todays news...
Re the bet.
Reported as £100 stake, to win £400 or £500. Can't remember which.
Reported as £100 stake, to win £400 or £500. Can't remember which.
Even bland can be a type of character
- DefTrap
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Re: In todays news...
I think it's slightly rich that 14 years of the electorate backing gung-ho conservative governments is being slightly twised into "this would have never happened if Labour weren't so rubbish".
I've managed to avoid most of the electioneering so far - because every time I do sit down to engage in it, it's 95% posturing, floundering, gaffes or saying how rubbish the other guy is. Infuriating.
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I can't disagree with that.
Labour have been incompetent in Opposition; there's no evidence they would/could have been any different in government.
- DefTrap
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Re: In todays news...
Corbyn as leader was a gift that kept on giving. I think most folk who would have ordinarily voted Labour just didn't know what to do.
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Re: In todays news...
Something Shapps said this week made me grimace: in this story he's quoted : https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv221jple3joYambo wrote: ↑Fri Jun 14, 2024 10:09 am
I can't disagree with that.
Labour have been incompetent in Opposition; there's no evidence they would/could have been any different in government.
Shapps: "“You want to make sure that in this next government, whoever forms it, there’s a proper system of accountability,” he said."
Two things here.
Firstly - he's all but admitting that in the current government there is no proper system of accountability (which I think we all knew anyway),
Secondly, he's also implying that the Conservatives, if the main opposition party to whatever government, have no plans to act as a proper Opposition and hold that government to account.
Both of which I find farcical and tantamount to actually standing up and declaring one's own utter incompetence.
non quod, sed quomodo
- Rockburner
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Re: In todays news...
The in-fighting within Labour is basically the Tory's trump card.
non quod, sed quomodo
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Re: In todays news...
It works, it makes Labour unpredictable, the Tories had Liz Truss but are generally more stable. Lesser of two evils.Rockburner wrote: ↑Fri Jun 14, 2024 10:19 amThe in-fighting within Labour is basically the Tory's trump card.
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Re: In todays news...
In-party factions usually cause more problems than the parties cause each other and often cause a party in power to fall. They frequently cause more self-harm when out of power than when in power. The Labour left seem to care more about ideology than actually winning and should quit and start their own party, the Conservative right seem to think the way to reduce voter drift to the further right is to copy them and become a Pound Shop Farage tribute act.Rockburner wrote: ↑Fri Jun 14, 2024 10:19 amThe in-fighting within Labour is basically the Tory's trump card.
Even the Greens seem to spend more time arguing about ideology than appealing to voters in sufficient numbers to become relevant.
Meanwhile there are more votes in the middle than either the loony left or the loony right. The Lib Dems don't seem to benefit much though. Maybe their adventure in coalition needs to fade into history because some voters have good memories.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
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Re: In todays news...
AAMOI, over the last 14 years, have you ever heard any Conservative MP say that there should be strong opposition?Rockburner wrote: ↑Fri Jun 14, 2024 10:18 am
Something Shapps said this week made me grimace: in this story he's quoted : https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv221jple3jo
Shapps: "“You want to make sure that in this next government, whoever forms it, there’s a proper system of accountability,” he said."
Even bland can be a type of character
- mangocrazy
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Re: In todays news...
In today's 'Broken News', they've dropped the vitriol of the Farage piece and gone for a sly knife in the ribs.
You're up to date.
You're up to date.
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Re: In todays news...
I don't want to make light of the offences here.
But a little play on words ...
Woman wins civil rape case against therapist.
Add a space
Woman wins civil rape case against the rapist.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cw99e1vpe58o
But a little play on words ...
Woman wins civil rape case against therapist.
Add a space
Woman wins civil rape case against the rapist.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cw99e1vpe58o
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Re: In todays news...
Can the CPS now bring criminal charges or is it all brushed under the carpet once the money changes hands?Yorick wrote: ↑Wed Jun 19, 2024 4:09 pm I don't want to make light of the offences here.
But a little play on words ...
Woman wins civil rape case against therapist.
Add a space
Woman wins civil rape case against the rapist.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cw99e1vpe58o
I know in criminal cases you can't be tried for the same thing, but this was civil, so ?
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Re: In todays news...
CPS already decided not to go through with a case based on the evidence, s'in the article
It's a different 'hurdle' to clear, civil vs. criminal. In the former you just have to prove it's likely the thing happened, in the latter it's "beyond reasonable doubt". The CPS decided they wouldn't be able to do that second thing, so they didn't charge.
"Following the High Court's ruling, a spokesperson for the CPS said: "In criminal cases we must prove beyond reasonable doubt that an individual is guilty. "Following a careful review of the evidence in this case, we concluded there was not a realistic prospect of conviction – a decision later supported by two independent reviews."
The Met Police said it was aware of the outcome of the civil case and would assess any new information that was presented in the process. It also confirmed there is currently no active police investigation in the case."
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Oh I did see they had originally decided not to. I would like to think that now they'd try again!!Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Wed Jun 19, 2024 8:58 pmCPS already decided not to go through with a case based on the evidence, s'in the article
It's a different 'hurdle' to clear, civil vs. criminal. In the former you just have to prove it's likely the thing happened, in the latter it's "beyond reasonable doubt". The CPS decided they wouldn't be able to do that second thing, so they didn't charge.
"Following the High Court's ruling, a spokesperson for the CPS said: "In criminal cases we must prove beyond reasonable doubt that an individual is guilty. "Following a careful review of the evidence in this case, we concluded there was not a realistic prospect of conviction – a decision later supported by two independent reviews."
The Met Police said it was aware of the outcome of the civil case and would assess any new information that was presented in the process. It also confirmed there is currently no active police investigation in the case."
This gives me a bit of hope -
Otherwise the guy can just carry on as before, no?The Met Police said it was aware of the outcome of the civil case and would assess any new information that was presented in the process. It also confirmed there is currently no active police investigation in the case
Life is for living. Buy the shoes. Eat the cake. Ride the bikes. Just, ride the bikes!!
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Re: In todays news...
Careful Yoz, them sharks might head over your way!
Two more popular tourist beaches have been closed in Spain over new shark sightings.
Swimmers were out of the water at San Augustin beach in Gran Canaria after a tourist photographed the tell-tale fin of a shark sticking out of the water.
Tourists at Melenara Beach on the island’s east coast were also urged to stay away from the sea after a police drone spotted a hammerhead shark.The sighting was the second one in just two days and came after the beach was deemed safe enough to reopen to the public.
https://inews.co.uk/news/world/spain-sh ... rk-3115270
Two more popular tourist beaches have been closed in Spain over new shark sightings.
Swimmers were out of the water at San Augustin beach in Gran Canaria after a tourist photographed the tell-tale fin of a shark sticking out of the water.
Tourists at Melenara Beach on the island’s east coast were also urged to stay away from the sea after a police drone spotted a hammerhead shark.The sighting was the second one in just two days and came after the beach was deemed safe enough to reopen to the public.
https://inews.co.uk/news/world/spain-sh ... rk-3115270