Youtube comments of Alan hat (@alanhat5252).
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â @tracysauvage1351 if Gaza is lost what else follows?
The rest of Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Iran, where next? Libya went years ago along with democracy in USA, UK, Germany, France, Italy, Greece & who knows how many other places.
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37:13 you mention "the subjugated masses" but just leave it there.
In origin they were mainly serfs, a peculiar category of property who evolved through several steps into the working class of today (they didn't have a vote till 1918, barely a century ago, just outside living memory). Many of the institutions of power, notably Eton, Harrow & their ilk, haven't forgotten this, haven't forgotten that the working class are a resource to be used (& abused) on a par with gold, oil, cattle or racehorses. The working classes exist to support the rich & have no other function on this Earth. Stepping on them like ants is a non-issue, more will grow.
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No, the lifespan of an EV is not reduced.
The batteries is probably what you're talking about, they don't suddenly switch off or implode after 3 years like a phone battery, they slowly lose capacity. They're reckoned to be at 80% capacity after 25 years normal driving & then can be sold as a Tesla Powerwall or similar, by which time a massively improved battery technology will be being made. Several alternatives are close to or in small-scale manufacture right now, including ones that don't use #ConflictMinerals or Rare Earths & the big Chinese manufacturers are leading the way, they don't want to miss out on the Next Big Thing.
The body, suspension, steering & all of that is the same as any other car, it won't wear out quicker.
Don't forget, we had electric cars before we had petrol ones & the motors, control gear & all that side of it have been in constant development (in other uses) for much longer than we've had petrol engines.
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 @sophiagrace7008 sorry, that's not entirely correct. At the end of each utility, usually around a decade, yes they were horrendously expensive & badly run, but that was Gov't policy in order to ready the public for privatization. Prior to that run-down the utilities worked quietly & efficiently in the background, almost always for less cost to the public purse. We see this currently with the NHS as it's in the final stages before breakup & sale.
Obviously there were exceptions, Bazelgette's sewerage network in London was hugely expensive & had great fanfare but it achieved it's objective, it rid London of cholera & it disappeared into the background quickly enough. Pickfords was nationalized & privatized with no fanfare whatsoever, the same with the National Grid & the trunk road network, but privatized sewerage has been in the news for months, Pickfords canal operations collapsed & it's road haulage bought out, the National Grid has had more controversy since privatization & the trunk roads are in a parlous state.
And whatever happened to BRS? While nationalized they gave us the Scammel Scarab which led to our current articulated lorries - supermarkets re-stocked from a single 26 ton delivery rather than dozens of lorries, this made the large supermarkets feasible.
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 @kennethexton3181 have you seen an exponential curve on a graph? It creeps up slowly for most of the graph then suddenly goes wild. That's where we are right now -- on the 'suddenly goes wild' bit. Politicians have had the opportunity from 1912 when the first people noticed what was going on, & certainly from the '70s when large numbers of scientists (& the Royal family) started speaking up about it, to slow the graph right down but politicians ignored it (& took backhanders from oil companies) & now we're in a situation where we've got to make massive changes or the whole of civilization dies, people have already started dying, 'only' tens of thousands at the moment but it will soon be millions. And no, the predictions are not hyperbolic, what we're being told about is the gentle side of the range of probabilities agreed by a 90% consensus of climate scientists. UK newspapers & Government are trying to hide it from us but it's all too real.
When the glaciers melt sea level rises 20 metres, that's over half way up that "London Eye" Ferris wheel in London, it's also 50% of the world's population made homeless, every port in the world sunk which means half (50%) of the UK's food doesn't arrive. And it's started, glaciers are melting off the Alps & Himalayas, off Greenland & Antarctica. As the permafrost melts from northern Scandinavia, Russia, Siberia, Alaska & northern Canada it is boiling off 100,000 years-worth of methane from rotting vegetation & it's 80 times stronger as a greenhouse gas than COâ so the climate warms even faster & it's something we cannot control. That's started too. COâ is the main thing we can control but we're mostly doing nothing. Wind farms across the country & world, solar panels on every roof & electric cars will help but it's not the total solution.
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What utter nonsense!
The only "impediment" to renewables is political will, the technology is already good enough & getting better (& cheaper) all the time.
Germany, Portugal & Denmark have been powered by 100% renewables in summer for several years now & they're gradually getting winter covered too, France, Spain & Germany have solar power plants in the Sahara that continue to produce power well into the night using heat stored during the day.
And then there's tidal, wave, geothermal, hydro & all the others that have been around for decades, some over a century!
The first power generated in England, possibly in Europe, was hydro & it's still running today. France & Iceland have been using geothermal for decades.
A nuclear power plant lasts 30 to 40 years & then it's got to be disposed of & we still don't have a sensible way of doing that! And they're vastly expensive, Hinckley-C is the single most expensive project in the entirety of human history, it's going to cost hundreds of billions, the tidal lagoon on the other side of the river, producing similar amounts of electricity if the politicians ever let it be built (the locals want it), is projected to cost around 4 million & is expected to last at least a century.
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 @brynleytalbot778 Prof Ferguson is probably right, he's got the resources to check these things, but letting the virus run rampant as the Government was going to do would have crushed the NHS & killed, according to Prof Ferguson's figures, a quarter of a million people achieving herd immunity across the whole country.
But we also have to look at more recent figures & see that the virus is mutating into more dangerous forms, Prof Ferguson's initial estimate was based on the Wuhan strain of the virus which kills less than 1% but what actually arrived here was a European strain which kills just under 3% (so three quarters of a million dead) & then we bred our own strain which kills even more, so maybe a million dead & just as important is #LongCovid which gets ten times as many people &, if left to run, would have brought down maybe ten million people which is literally half the workforce. Bearing in mind that it takes around 3 to 4 medical staff per patient, even if we were to employ every child (including toddlers) & every retired person there aren't enough people in the country to deal with the sick & we can't import people because we've exported our virus right round the world so every other country has problems of it's own & can't spare the staff.
This is why we had to do something about it.
Wuhan showed us how to do it, very simply shut every door till the virus runs it's course but without spreading.
It worked.
78 days later they were clear.
Because we only ever had extremely partial lockdowns here we're more than 78 WEEKS into this & still not sure the end is in sight.
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â @peteratkinson922 đ˘
It's a distraction â while you're looking at that you're not looking at the corruption in politics, you're not looking at the increasing numbers of millionaires & billionaires whose money comes from the very poorest & now the middle incomes, you're not looking at the increasing numbers of food banks, you're not looking at the NHS being sold off piece by piece, you're not looking at the NHS staff moving abroad because they can't afford to live here any more, ever increasing taxes paying for ever fewer potholes being fixed, streetlamps being taken out because Councils can't afford the electricity any more, Councils going bankrupt, unswept streets, sewage on all the beaches & rivers.
The list of things being covered up by this "immigrants" rhetoric is endless. It's not even real, we've only had laws about immigration since 1973, there was no law for the 4000 years before that. đ˘
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 @boxtradums0073 the problems you're talking about re: nationalized industries aren't problems of nationalized industries, they're problems of politics.
Yes, there were bloated payrolls at times but that was because that's what the Government of the day wanted, it wanted to keep the Dole queues short. It worked too & didn't harm the economy & improved public finances because all of it works on the circulation of money, the Taxman chips off a few percent as it flows by. Having huge amounts of money in very few hands means most of it isn't circulating past the Taxman to be syphoned into the Public Purse, indeed much of it is squirreled away in the Cayman Islands.
Nowadays we're seeing huge distortions in corporate structure, the NHS is a good example, it's mostly private enterprise now but the funding structure means that there's well over 100,000 front-line medical staff absent but the layers of management are absolutely ridiculous. When it was set up the Ministry of Health ran a small Inspectorate to check nothing was getting out of line & the Ministry's main jobs were rubber-stamping invoices & commissioning infrastructure. The next layer was Regional Health Boards doing mostly policy work ensuring even coverage & administering GPs. Then there were hospitals, the management of which was a Matron (or Senior Male Nurse) & a small accounts office. Doctors & practitioners were hired in by Matron. Matrons were nurses who had worked their way up through the ranks. Political meddling, particularly since 1979, has totally corrupted this simplicity & the expense is phenomenal.
Pickfords was an excellent example of nationalization, Government barely meddled at all, they were nationalized for the duration of WWII because they controlled most of the traffic on the canals & traffic priorities needed at least oversight. Nationalization also meant that sunken boats & bombed canals were dealt with more quickly because the Army could assist without consulting banks.
The obvious solution is to establish nationalized companies as Crown Commissions & the legislation around them made to prevent political meddling. Probably the best example is the Crown Estate (the source of funding for the Monarchy), it's been running just fine for centuries & to this day still provides day-to-day funding for the Monarchy (despite 86% of it going to Government)
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 @indricotherium4802 "The term "Third World" arose during the Cold War and it was used to define countries that remained non-aligned with either NATO or the Warsaw Pact. The United States, Canada, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Western European nations and their allies represented the "First World", while the Soviet Union, China, Cuba, North Korea, Vietnam and their allies represented the "Second World". This terminology provided a way of broadly categorizing the nations of the Earth into three groups based on political divisions. Due to the complex history of evolving meanings and contexts, there is no clear or agreed-upon definition of the Third World. Strictly speaking, "Third World" was a political, rather than an economic, grouping. Because many Third World countries were economically poor and non-industrialized, it became a stereotype to refer to developing countries as "third world countries". Some countries in the Eastern Bloc, such as Cuba, were often regarded as "Third World"." â Wikipedia
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"what can one say?"
One can describe the context.
A century & a half of armed invasion, military occupation & apartheid of a peaceful farming country with the backing of the British Empire, the League of Nations, western European "democracies", the United Nations & USA with very intermittent support from Arab countries, the shards of the Ottoman Empire, most consistently Lebanon, Syria, Iran &, before it was destroyed, Libya.
One can describe the English Parliament's involvement, both past & present, Zionist infiltration from 1750, Zionist capture of the 3 main political parties, exclusion of the other 3 nations & of the electorate, Starmer's current censorship of Palestinian support.
There is so much one can say!
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 @danemlive "simplistic" yes, capitalism itself is not the problem, the problem is Neoliberal capitalism.
Capitalism absolutely requires close regulation in order to function, regulation is an integral part of capitalism, & Neoliberalism removes that regulation.
Time & again we have seen the results of improper or inadequate regulation, the South Sea Bubble, various financial crashes, flour bulked with toxic materials, bee-killing herbicides, an endless list, but every time regulation has improved the situation.
Neoliberalism aims to destroy that delicate balance, Neoliberalism is the problem that's stopping us resolving the climate problem & we in democracies have the power (our only power) to select governments which will oppose Neoliberalism. (In many countries the best choice is currently the Green Party).
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 @SupGaillac conventional power station has heater, boiler, turbine, gearbox, generator. (Heater can be coal, oil, gas, nuclear, geothermal etc.)
Wind generator has heater, boiler, turbine (3 big blades), gearbox, generator.
Solar has heater, boiler, turbine, gearbox, generator.
Spot the differences?
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 @derektoyne2729 you obviously haven't read the Green's policies, they're a democratic party so all the policies are "what people want" (obviously after rational discussion with all the facts presented), the policies are remarkably similar to Corbyn's.
Heat pumps & electric cars are here to stay, there is consensus across Parliament. Vote Tory, Labour, LibDem, Green, SNP, Plaid, whoever, you will get heat pumps & electric cars.
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As factchecks go that was absolutely useless!
The first & last thing you have to look at is what the House of Lords does & if you're not bothering with that you're simply not doing a factcheck!
Read through the debates & Committees in Hansard or watch them on https://parliamentlive.tv see them making sense THEN start worrying about who is there & how they got there.
You gloss over the appointed Peers as if they're not there when in fact they're 7/8 of the Chamber & most are appointed on merit -- they're there to bring expertise to debates. Less than 1/8 of the Chamber are hereditary, 92 to be exact, yet you choose to spend almost your entire show on them, you spend huge amounts of time talking about their elections without talking about their elections, you read out their statements without once acknowledging these statements are a nonsense -- these people know each other, they know their qualities & their families, they too are elected on merit, they're chosen from 810 Peers of the Realm as having the most to offer the country.
This SHOW is pure populist drivel, something I would expect from Nigel Farage or the BBC.
We expect better, far better, from Channel 4!
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First there's White Papers (Government statements of policy) then there's Green Papers (consultation documents on a topic) which are sometimes debated &/or voted on, sometimes these lead to a Bill (draft of a new law) being written.
Every Bill goes through 3 stages in each House, each with a vote whether it should proceed & with thinking time (usually months) between each stage â 1) the Bill is published & announced, 2) there's a general debate where any interested MP has their say, proposes Amendments etc 3) it goes to a Committee formed for that Bill where the serious work is done, correcting mistakes, checking it's legal etc, the Committee makes a Report which goes back the House then it goes to the other House for the same 3 stages. If the Lords make Amendments the Commons vote on them which can lead to ping-pong (particular points going back & forth between the Houses). Once all of that is settled it goes to the King for a signature & then it's Law.
A Bill can be introduced by Government, Opposition or an individual Member (but Government gets by far the biggest portion of the timetable, some years the whole timetable) & can be introduced in either House.
If there's a genuine panic the whole process can be done in a day but usually it's months, sometimes the whole of a Parliament. If it's not signed off at the end of a Parliament it has to start again from scratch though there is a procedure to carry it over to the next Parliament.
Whipping (done for each vote) - 1-line, a party clarifies its position to its MPs, 2-line, a party instructs its MPs how to vote, 3-line, there will be retribution if an MP votes the wrong way. A Free Vote is where there is no Whip.
If you have an opinion you can write to your MP or to any Lord, MPs represent a geographic area, Lords represent expertise (or at least interest) in one or more topics. If you don't use proper etiquette writing to Lords your letter may get binned, if you write to an MP other than your own your letter may get binned. Some MPs don't bother replying. (If your MP doesn't reply you should pick a better one at the next Election).
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 @craign2565 it's not, at heart, about left or right, it's about class.
The Torys are the Cavaliers who supported the King in the Civil Wars, they're the barons who drew their power from the King. This has changed over the years as the source of power has changed & it's transitioning at the moment from big business to hedgefunds & think-tanks.
Labour on the other hand are only just over a century old & derive their power from Trades Unions & their ability to bring the country to a halt, they're working class.
Starmer's wing are extremists within the wider party & they've forgotten their power base, they're relying on Israel's influence within politics & Press & they're relying on the Party's Central Office who are also under Israel's whip. They're poaching votes from the Torys. Again there's a transition going on, the membership are deciding whether to re-centre the political wing or abandon it & start a new party.
Obviously it's not that simple but that's an overview of the undercurrents.
From this I hope you can see that both parties have space for both right-wing & left-wing views.
Beyond that FPTP narrows the choice to 2 even though the field is much wider, people vote for perceived authority or comradeship. On the Tory side the only competition in England (where most voters are) is Farage's party (whatever it's called this week, Reform I think) which is why the Torys have shifted to poach Farage's votes.
On Labour's side there's the LibDems, Greens, Communists Women's Party & dozens of others all taking votes from each other so Torys win most elections even though they're the least representative of all the parties.
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@Maajid Nawaz, there's a couple of things you seem to have missed, the first is that Shameema Begum didn't go to Syria to be a terrorist, she didn't even go to marry a terrorist, she went to join a Utopia, the marriage was just a precondition she thought she could evade or discard later & terrorism wasn't part of the picture. Obviously, & any adult can see this, she was consistently lied to but, being a child, she believed what she was told. She had zero interest in terrorism, it just wasn't in her calculations. We saw something similar with Israel from the 1930s till at least the 1967 War, the propaganda directed at European Jews described an empty country waiting to be filled, the reality was very very different. (You could extrapolate from this into Brexit & all sorts of other things, propaganda & lies simply don't match reality no matter how much you believe).
The other thing I particularly picked up on was your mention of Guantanamo & your assertion that it started something, it didn't, it was just continuing something that started decades or centuries earlier, an example is concentration camps, something invented by the British during the Boer War & itself just an expansion of much older practices. Even the media coverage was there over the Boer camps, Guantanamo started nothing.
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You neglect that we have allowed ourselves to be controlled by con merchants & bullies, the connotations of this define our society & the materials it uses.
Let's start with some fundamentals;
It's easy to declare ownership over & defend a mine so it's an obvious resource for a bullying mindset, less obvious for a cooperative mindset.
Anyone can make charcoal - chop a tree into small pieces, wait a few months for most of the water to evaporate, bury it then set fire to it - hey presto - charcoal, an excellent material for a collective mindset (there is skill to it but that's the principle). Coke, similarly, is part-burnt coal & was a requirement for producing steel. Coal is an easily-owned resource because it's mined so iron & steel are more suited to a controlling mindset.
Fossil fuels are compost.
Compressed & baked compost.
It's not necessary to mine it, just that mines are easy to claim ownership over & defend. For most current purposes it doesn't need to be compressed or baked either. (Yes you can blend grass clippings, sawdust & kitchen waste to use as the feedstock for an existing oil refinery, it naturally gives off methane while it's in the queue waiting to be processed).
In the "Western World" we have been conned into ridiculing & ostracising the intelligent & the lateral thinkers so they band together ready to be corralled & controlled by con merchants.
Copper can be & is alloyed with a wide range of metals other than tin, nickel for instance produces a material harder & tougher than a tin alloy & is magnetic, a copper-zinc alloy gives brass. Several of these bronzes are harder & more durable than iron or mild steel.
Several aluminium alloys are superior to steel in many applications (Maybach's innovation to get internal combustion engines working in cars was an aluminium alloy piston). Iron & steel were not necessary precursors to the industrial age but the technologies required to produce them were, like mines, easy to claim ownership over & defend & promote so the richest & most controlling men in the world became richer by selling us something we didn't strictly need.
I hope you can see that Western civilization is built on domination & control, on promoting the individual over the collective, over the planet, & we are now reaping the reward of destroying the planet that sustains our very existence.
Building the next society in the mould of the current one is neither necessary nor clever.
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 @Chris-xl6pd the 2 party system started during the Civil Wars 400 years ago, the 2 partys were Torys & Whigs, both are still in Parliament.
Torys kept their name & are currently in Government but the Whigs didn't become Labour, they became the Liberals, then the LibDems.
Labour are a new party, just over 100 years old, actually a coalition of several parties, mostly Labour & Cooperative, & from their ranks another party formed 30 years ago, New Labour, who are currently in Opposition.
At the next election another completely separate party stands a chance, they already have 3 people in Parliament & lots in Local Government, the Green Party of England & Wales (Scotland already has lots of Greens)
So you can see new parties do come through sometimes & perhaps now is the time for the next one?
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â @robertreynolds580 Russia invaded countries in 1918, '21, '24, '29, '38, '39, '40, '42, '44, '45, '50, '53, '56, '60, '67, '68, '69, '75, '77, '79, '90, '92, 2008, '14, '15, '16 & '22, why single out that one?
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And yet here we are, invasions of Ukraine & Palestine, situations in Afghanistan, Yemen, Mali, Venezuela, Colombia, Cuba & a dozen more, all with horrendous breaches of International Law, often by the biggest players, USA, Russia, EU members.
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âââ @sparta2795 500 years of peace throughout Arabia, North Africa & parts of Europe ended during WW1 with the Ottoman Empire being broken up by the League of Nations (the direct precursor to the UN) & France & Britain being given mandates to control the region. France was given TĂźrkiye, Syria, Lebanon & much of North Africa, Britain was given Palestine, Iraq, Kuwait, the Arabian Peninsula & the rest of North Africa.
Boundaries of nations were drawn & redrawn several times & kingdoms established, moved, replaced & deleted at the whim of Britain & France, this phase eventually settled down in the 1930s with France retaining direct control of Morocco, Algeria & Tunisia & Britain of Palestine. From 1920 Britain began shipping Zionists into Palestine which, with their requirement for exclusive access to an already-populated country, obviously caused friction which we see continuing today.
Your argument falls completely flat because the Arabian countries know that most were created within living memory by Britain & France & there is very little any of these countries could do if Britain, France or now USA decided to rearrange the borders or rulers yet again. The exception is Iran which has retained its borders & rulership throughout this period apart from on 2 occasions, the 1953 Coup which installed a pro-British Shah & the 1979 Revolution which overthrew him (though France managed to sneak in the Ayatollahs).
Also, Israel has the only nuclear weapons in the region (& the terrorist inclinations to use them)(Russian nuclear weapons in TĂźrkiye were removed in 1962 as a result of the Cuba Missile Crisis), are the world leader in cyber-warfare (which they have demonstrated by destroying civil nuclear facilities in Iran) & have, until very recently, the most advanced military which they demonstrate continuously, including by bombing nuclear power stations in Syria, Iraq & Iran.
No, Arabia does not have the power to overthrow Israel.
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I'm 25:00 minutes in & you've mentioned several layers to this but there's one layer you're not talking about, possibly because it's the most lunatic one, but many of the countries allying with Ăzrerl were staunchly Puritan, USA with its Founding Fathers & carrying on through the current Evangelists, England having a Puritan Parliament when they took sovereignty in the early 1600s, Germany, France & others all Puritan for a while. The thing that makes the Puritans really stand out is 100 million current American Evangelists & their "Armageddon & Rapture" mythology which started in England & Scotland (they were different countries at the time) in the 1580s, a supposed prophecy that ethnic cleansing across the Holy Lands & replacement with Jews would trigger "the Second Coming of Jesus" at the beginning of Armageddon which terminates in "The Rapture".
The Jewish National Fund (founded 1901) was & still is heavily financed by American Evangelists, it owns 13% of Ăzrael & has planted millions of trees, built dams, bridges, roads etc...
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â @william_marshal because it's a fictional black hole as explained clearly in the video.
A Government run by Corbyn, Milliband, Brown, Harman, Beckett, Smith, Kinnock, Foot, Callaghan or any of their predecessors would have taken one or more of the suggestions in the video & just dealt with it. Without Austerity (& the resulting AusterityDeaths).
The Green's or LibDems too wouldn't be pratting about like Stoma/Reeves, they have a country to run, it would be best if they just ran it.
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 @bipolarminddroppings MPs salaries have doubled since 1997, they weren't paid at all before 1911.
The idea in 1911 was that anyone could afford to become an MP, prior to that it was people "of independent means".
If we pay them too much we get people, as others have said, who are just there for the money. It's bad enough at the moment with so many (mostly Torys) "supplementing their income" with backhanders.
Prior experience? Hmm, some of the best politicians went straight to Parliament from real-world jobs & most of the worst have been local Councillors.
The only thing that has ever worked is calling them all "Honourable" & hoping they live up to it. Sometimes they do though the idea isn't working well right now.
Parliament has been on roughly the same arrangements since the 1688 Bill of Rights with tweaks here & there & the corruption is something they've been trying to solve throughout that time.
At the moment the Lords are doing better though that hasn't always been the case, they're appointed by Committee. They're paid ÂŁ300 on days when they turn up, many claim half & many claim none.
2 examples, Lord Bird & Lord Bilimoria, both contribute valuable insights to debates & Committees, one is the founder of The Big Issue, I think he's on a State Pension, the other is the founder of Cobra Beer & is very rich. I'm pretty sure neither served in local government or in the Commons. The point is they're both very useful.
Hereditary Peers are different, there's around 750 of them but only 92 sit at any one time, they run elections among themselves as seats become vacant & they select the most decent & most useful.
It's all about honour & trust, something the general public don't seem to consider at elections.
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You've missed a couple of points or I misheard,
1) the relationship with the unions was antagonistic & combative, 'us & them', much as we're seeing with RMT/train companies/Government today whereas Japanese union relations were & are cooperative, unions actually sit on design teams because their viewpoint is appreciated & unions will often go to management with suggestions for improvements to company or products.
British unions know very little of what's going on till it's foisted on them & at that point their options are either to let it ride or to fight, often involving strikes. Unions are blamed for failures of both management & Government.
2) Sir Alec Issigonis seems to have been the only designer trusted by both management & Government, he designed the Morris Minor, BMC Mini, BL 1100, 1800 & Maxi without much interference but everyone else seems to have had a fight. The Sherpa is enlightening, BL decided their J4 & JU vans were seriously outdated & they needed a competitor for Ford's Transit so they did the initial work & determined it would take ÂŁ4million to get the first one off the production line. The next step was to approach the owners, the Government, for the cash. Government agreed Sherpa was needed & they stumped up cash -- ÂŁ1million, a quarter of what was needed, so Sherpa was built from the parts bin starting with the JU chassis & axles, J4 rear body, Marina engine & various other parts robbed from around the factory. It worked incredibly well considering but obviously not a patch on the Transit.
The billions Government spent was on social engineering not on vehicle engineering.
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China obviously did something right, something like 6,500 deaths last time I looked & if you multiply that out by population the UK would have something like 800 deaths not 155,000.
Given that UK had 3 to 4 months warning & China had zero it definitely looks like China fared rather better.
There were some notable differences in approach, building 4 large hospitals in 10 days & fully staffing them before the paint had dried was probably quite helpful & compares well with the UK's hiring of sports halls, sending the Army in to fit them out & then not staffing them...
They also chucked every possible medication in, including the Cuban ones, compares to the UK's approach of rigorous testing before rolling out treatments which were often in short supply.
China, like most of Asia, has seen devastating things like this before & it's normal for most people to wear masks from the moment they leave home till they get back, no trails of discarded masks outside every shop, whenever a disease emerges. The Chinese government specifically did not say that masks are useless, unlike the UK government.
Then there's the lockdowns, nobody in the UK had their doors nailed shut by the Police as happened in China, UK citizens went shopping as normal (apart from long queues outside spreading germs) in a lot of places although some shops were closed.
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 @unconventionalideas5683 are you really that stupid or are you trolling? The Gaza Strip is the most densely populated area on Earth, EVERYTHING is in urban areas!
Israel too puts it's military facilities in urban areas, as does the UK, there's barracks on Whitehall, in Colchester, York, all the old towns & ports, even some military airfields.
It's not possible that Israel wants its hostages back, they've already bombed a known 10% of them & the escaping convoy they bombed yesterday, killing 70 people, was very likely to have contained hostages. Plus the kibbutz where burned bodies were found was fired on by an Israeli tank (causing the burns) & before you whine this evidence is from a survivor.
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ââ @sarahbarton2089 "The initiative was founded by:[9]
JosĂŠ MarĂa Aznar, former Prime Minister of Spain
George Weigel, Senior Fellow Ethics and Public Policy Center
Robert Agostinelli, founder of Rhone Group
Alejandro Toledo, former President of Peru
VĂĄclav Havel, former President of Czech Republic
Marcello Pera, former President of the Italian Senate
David Trimble, former First Minister of Northern Ireland and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize
Andrew Roberts, historian
John R. Bolton, U.S. Ambassador
Carlos Bustelo, former Spanish Minister of Industry
Fiamma Nirenstein, Vice President of the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the Italian Chamber of Deputies
George Weidenfeld, publisher and member of the House of Lords" â Wikipedia, "Friends of Israel Initiative".
Wikipedia is obviously not a fully authoritative source but is often a useful guide.
Middle East Monitor has a list but I didn't find it quickly.
There's nothing immediately obvious on FII's "Founder Members" page on their website either.
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 @chesterdonnelly1212 yet more Tory propaganda!
Stop it!
Blair's Labour took the 40.4% National Debt down to 29% of GDP but thought that was too low so took it back up to 37% (spending on health, education, and social security), then the entire world crashed in 2007 & it went up to 57.8%. It was recovering strongly when the Torys took over in 2010 & they took the National Debt to 118.3% of GDP as of January last year.
Blair's Labour were paying nurses, building houses, building schools & hospitals, wages went up, personal debt went down, all the stuff we want.
What have the Torys done? More foodbanks than McDonald's, hundreds of ÂŁBillions to their mates & killed half a million or more people with their policies!
Seriously, who knows what they're doing with the economy?
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8:14 you should heed your own advice! Your anti-Corbyn bias is colouring your judgement yet again.
Labour members maintained the 2:1 preference for EC/EU membership shared by the whole country from 1958 till the end of 2015, maintained it till beyond polling day. The Labour membership, all half a million, voted 2:1 against Brexit.
Corbyn addressed more of the general population than any other Labour Member, including yourself, with a nuanced but clear message "Yes the EU needs reform but in the past they've done this, this & this good things, they're currently doing this, this & this good things & in the future they intend doing this, this & this good things so on balance we should stay in."
You may be confused by the reporting around Corbyn's events which was equally consistent, 1) the Media did soundbite interviews with people entering & leaving the events but mostly broadcast those with anti-Corbyn messages (nothing from inside the events) & 2) kept repeating the lie that Corbyn was doing nothing, sometimes extending this to claim he had gone on holiday.
#CheckYourBias.
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â @gracechoumane7658 you should take your history back to the First Aliyah of the 1880s & '90s when they were indeed buying land & property before the thefts & murders began, back to the Balfour Declaration during WW1 essentially declaring Britain's involvement & backing, back to the ships arriving in Jaffa in Gaza from 1920, back to the founding of the 3 terrorist groups Haganah, Irgun & Lehi, back to the bombing of the King David Hotel which destroyed most of the British paperwork, back to those 3 terrorist groups, just like ISIS, declaring their caliphate nation, back to those terrorist groups changing their names, Haganah became IDF, Lehi became Likud & Irgun later joined Likud.
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In cyberspace we're looking towards multiple levels of hassle, here on YT & many other places we've been seeing bot farms & disinformation for decades (around Brexit was widely discussed but it hasn't stopped) which could get much worse, then there's the same thing happening but in secure locations like inside company networks, NHS, Parliament etc. Hacking to steal or distort important data is another possibility (hospital records, bank accounts, tax records etc) & there's attacks on hardware, the Stuxnet Worm (ĂsraelĂ not Russian, actually blew up nuclear hardware) being probably the most famous which already happen fairly frequently & are sometimes successful (the NHS is particularly vulnerable because Windows XP is still widely used because of lack of budget).
Anywhere computers (including smartphones, tablets, wifi cameras, some fridges etc etc) or the internet are even peripherally involved are weakspots...
Yes, taking down the National Grid is possible. Not easy or likely but possible, same with opening dams, opening or sealing electric gates, re-timing traffic lights, endless possibilities...
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"The Elbit Hermes 450 is an Ăsraeli medium-sized multi-payload unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) designed for tactical long endurance missions. It has an endurance of over 20 hours, with a primary mission of reconnaissance, surveillance and communications relay. Payload options include electro-optical/infrared sensors, communications and electronic intelligence, synthetic-aperture radar/ground-moving target indication, electronic warfare, and hyperspectral sensors." "The Hermes 450 is a medium-sized UAV with a cylindrical shaped fuselage, high straight wings and a V-tail. It is autonomous from take off to landing, with an auto pilot capable of take off and landing. It can be controlled completely from a ground station.[1]
In 2008, Elbit announced that a new R902(W)Â Wankel engine, weighing about 40 kilograms (88Â lb) and developing 70 brake horsepower (52Â kW) using electronic fuel control, would be used in the Hermes 450.[2]
It has the option of carrying four Rafael Spike missiles.[3]" â Wikipedia
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Thermobaric weapons have at least a 50-year history (CBU-55, USA-Vietnam, 1971) with the largest of each generation being known as "the largest non-niclear bomb".
USA's current largest, GBU-43/B "MOAB", & other sizes were used extensively in Afghanistan, Gulf War etc, Russia also used fuel-air bombs in Afghanistan although I don't believe their largest, FOAB (4x MOAB), has been used in combat.
Small ones on RPGs are used by Gazan forces against the IDF when they take over an apartment, MEE frequently reports on them.
Russia & Ukraine both use them, as do Syria, Britain & many others.
I believe they were inspired by flour mill explosions which have been happening for millennia. (The Beirut port Ammonium Nitrate explosion a couple of years ago was related).
Very large explosions of any type vapourise bodies at the epicentre, you're overblowing this aspect of the story.
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Take a look at the history of protest in the UK, it usually takes several people dying before Government even considers looking at the request presented particularly, as here, if Government has whipped up a media-storm against it.
Do you consider dying as inconvenient?
The deaths of David Amess & Jo Cox, despite being by solo perpetrators, seem to have worked, the Government has lurched towards far-right extremism. The deaths of Ian Gow, Anthony Berry & Airey Neave worked after 20 years or so when the Belfast Agreement was made. I don't know enough about Irish politics to know whether the death of Robert Bradford made any difference.
The Suffragettes suffered many deaths, tried twice to blow up the Home Secretary's house & pretty much brought the country to a standstill a couple of times before anything was even discussed in Parliament.
A decade & more of strikes through the 1970s & '80s didn't achieve much despite several national halts, garbage uncollected in the streets for months, bodies going unburied & various 'inconveniences', indeed Thatcher brought in a raft of anti-union legislation but then nobody quite died (many came close, notably during the cavalry charges at Orgreave).
So, either several MPs or many many citizens die before anything changes and you think one road being blocked for less time than it takes to clear up a car crash to be some sort of existential threat to the nation? Get a f*king grip!
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 @fisf.2148 "Mohammad Ramiz Bakr, 11, Ahed Atef Bakr and Zakariya Ahed Bakr, both 10, and Ismail Mahmoud Bakr, nine, were killed when they were hit by explosive rounds. Three of them died as they sought to flee the beach after the first child was killed.
Three other people were injured in the attack: Hamad Bakr, 13, was hit by shrapnel in his chest; his cousin Motasem, 11, injured in his head and legs, and Mohammad Abu Watfah, 21, who was hit by shrapnel in his stomach." -- The Guardian (a well-known English newspaper)
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 @rjjcms1 it's very difficult to know what would have happened if Corbyn had won the 2017 election, it would have depended how the various power balances played out.
By 2019 if he had won he would have "met with an accident", the factors were that frantic to be rid of him.
Al Jazeera's "The Lobby" is instructive & covers parts of one aspect of what was going on, more of which is covered in the Forde Report & especially the report Forde was investigating.
Another faction was MI5/6 who had a 'secret' base in Scotland ostensibly countering Russian propaganda but actually producing propaganda against Corbyn.
The Press, obviously, were against him because he would have re-established Leveson which would have curtailed their wilder flights of fancy, at least for a while.
But, if he had beaten the various forces ranged against him, he would have restored the PPE stocks from the Blair/Brown Government that Cameron/Clegg carefully left to rot, restored the Blair/Brown Pandemic Preparedness Plan which was built on their experience of the four pandemics they dealt with (including the original SARS-1), the Oxford vaccine for it would probably have been manufactured by the State-run generic medicines factory & been on the path to rescuing the NHS & the GP & Local Authority run Test'n'trace system. Our experience of SARS-2 (Covid-19) would probably have been similar to our experience of the much more virulent SARS-1 (nobody noticed it) & we certainly wouldn't be exporting it around the world as we are now. The NHS & Ambulance Service wouldn't be on the point of collapse, Social Care would probably be back within the NHS, administrative overheads would be descending from the current 30%+ back towards single digits.
And then there's all the other things, Pay Review Bodies would have averted this summer's strikes, we wouldn't be reneging on deals with the EU, indeed we would still be in the Single Market, forestalling the Northern Ireland Protocol & the Customs arrangements that are gridlocking the M20 & half of Kent.
The rescue package Corbyn & McDonnell put together was very comprehensive & we may even have been approaching the 1945-1979 contentment levels that so few of us remember.
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 @sarahp007 Bird deaths caused by humans
CAUSE OF BIRD DEATH | ALL BIRDS | CONTRIBUTION TO TOTAL HUMAN-RELATED BIRD DEATHS
1 Cats (feral) 79,600,000 1 in 2.3
2 Cats (domestic) 54,880,000 1 in 3.4
3 Power line collisions 16,810,000 1 in 11.1
4 Buildings (houses) 16,390,000 1 in 11.4
5 Road vehicle collisions 9,814,000 1 in 19
6 Harvest (game birds) 2,817,000 1 in 66.2
7 Buildings (low, mid & high rise) 1,317,130 1 in 141.5
8 Commercial forestry 887,835 1 in 210
9 Power electrocutions 184,300 1 in 1,011.6
10 Agriculture (haying & mowing) 135,400 1 in 1,376.9
11 Communication tower collisions 101,500 1 in 1,836.7
12 Wind energy collisions 13,060 1 in 14,275
13 All other 3,479,328 1 in 53.6
14 Total 186,429,553 100
Annual human-related causes of avian deaths, Canada. Adapted from Table 3, Avian Conservation and Ecology 8(2): 11.
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 @stephenwilson9480 read your balot paper, there are always more than 2 parties on there.
Better still, do your duty as a citizen of a democracy & find all the information available about every candidate, their record in Parliament & Councils, their party & its policies & attitudes, their chances of winning the vote, attend hustings & ask questions, then make an informed decision that isn't based on Tory propaganda repeated by newspapers.
I expect you'll end up voting Green or maybe Labour, in some seats LibDem, though there are 3, maybe 4, Torys worth your consideration
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Lithium batteries: yes they're cr@p but...
Mining is mining, iron, copper, aluminium, the minerals for concrete & glass, limestone for roads, most of the materials you see around you came out of huge holes in the ground one way or another, very little is made from crops. Cotton & wood are notable exceptions.
Lithium car batteries are guaranteed 10 years & tend to last 25 if the rest of the car lasts that long, after which they're not recycled they're reused, they go into domestic & utility-scale battery banks. It's only after they've done another 10 to 25 years that they're recycled & yes, many are recycled. It's all new tech so none of this is 100% but they are getting there.
And the current generation of lithium car batteries don't use cobalt (or a couple of other dodgy minerals).
Also, the next battery tech (sodium) is in small-scale production & will be going full-scale & taking over from lithium in the next few years.
Sodium is a toxic & flammable metal, expect hype, it's also half of sodium chloride, salt, what gives seawater it's characteristic taste, you'll die without it in your diet.
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 @paullegend6798 your final point, corruption.
We have law for that, we have Misconduct In Public Office, it's Common Law not Legislation so it's loosely defined & we can privately bring cases to Court, the punishment is life imprisonment plus a lifetime ban from holding Public Office. Basically, if our barrister can convince a Jury it's misconduct then that's the judgement, it is misconduct & gets punished.
(It was tried recently against Boris Johnson for lying but the case foundered on a corrupt Judge, Judge Supperstone who was an employee of Johnson's. Supperstone was legally required to declare the connection & step aside, he didn't.)
It's the King's job to root out corrupt Ministers but since 1688 he's been so disempowered he can't do it easily if at all.
Your solution of using the Police won't work because they're a branch of Government, they're proving that pretty much every day at the moment. (Blair was reported to every Police station in the country for war crimes in Iraq, nothing happened).
The Green Party are suggesting Citizens Assemblies & I think this would work though we would have to vote the Green Party into power & at the moment too many people are believing the propaganda that there are only 2 Parties.
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â @elbmw regarding the situation in Ukraine you are regurgitating propaganda rather than quoting established facts.
USSR/Russia invaded countries in 1918, '21, '24, '29, '38, '39, '40, '42, '44, '45, '50, '53, '56, '60, '67, '68, '69, '75, '77, '79, '90, '92, 2008, '14, '15, '16 & '22, it's something they do & it's unrelated to NATO apart from some of these countries have (since repelling their invasions) become members of NATO to prevent it happening again.
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 @the.parks.of.no.return you may wish to check your sources.
It seems several things went wrong that day but the most critical was the damage following striking the debris, debris that was not a lie, was very real & was lying on the runway.
I found this on Heritage Concorde website but Wikipedia & several other knowledgeable websites state the same details gleaned from the accident investigation report
"Account of the accident
Post-accident investigation revealed that the aircraft was at or over the maximum takeoff weight for ambient temperature and other conditions, and 810 kilograms (1,790 lb) over the maximum structural weight.
As it left the gate, it was loaded such that the centre of gravity was excessively far aft.
Fuel transfer during taxiing may have overfilled the number five wing tank.
A twelve-inch spacer that normally keeps the left main landing gear in alignment had not been replaced after recent maintenance; however, the French Bureau for Accident Investigation concluded that this did not contribute to the accident.
The wind at the airport was light and variable that day, and was reported to the cockpit crew as an eight knot tail wind as they lined up on runway 26R.
Over an hour delayed, the crew proceeded with the tailwind takeoff rather than taking the time to taxi to the other end of the runway to make the takeoff into a headwind, as is normally done.
Five minutes before the Concorde, a Continental Airlines DC-10 departing for Newark, New Jersey, had lost a titanium alloy strip (part of the engine cowl, identified as a wear strip), 435 millimetres (17.1 in) long, 29 to 34 millimetres (1.1 to 1.3 in) wide and about 1.4 millimetres (0.055 in) thick, during takeoff from the same runway. French authorities acknowledged that a required runway inspection was not completed after the Continental takeoff, as was protocol for Concorde takeoff preparation.
During the Concorde's subsequent takeoff run this piece of debris, still lying on the runway, cut a tyre, rupturing it. A large chunk of tyre debris (4.5 kilograms or 9.9 pounds) struck the underside of the aircraft's wing at an estimated speed of 140 metres per second (310 mph).
Although it did not directly puncture any of the fuel tanks, it sent out a pressure shockwave that ruptured the number five fuel tank at the weakest point, just above the undercarriage. Leaking fuel gushing out from the bottom of the wing was most likely ignited by an electric arc in the landing gear bay or through contact with severed electrical cables. At the point of ignition, engines one and two both surged and lost all power, but engine one slowly recovered over the next few seconds. A large plume of flame developed; the Flight Engineer then shut down engine two, in response to a fire warning and the Captain's command.
Air traffic controller Gilles Logelin noticed the flames before the Concorde was airborne, however with only 2 km of runway remaining and travelling at a speed of 328 km/h, its only option was to take off. The Concorde would have needed at least 3 km of runway to abort safely.
Having passed V1 speed, the crew continued the takeoff, but the plane did not gain enough airspeed with the three remaining engines, because the severed electrical cables prevented the retraction of the undercarriage. The aircraft was unable to climb or accelerate, maintaining a speed of 200 knots (370 km/h; 230 mph) at an altitude of 60 metres (200 ft). The fire caused damage to the port wing, which began to disintegrateâmelted by the extremely high temperatures. Engine number one surged again, but this time failed to recover. Due to the asymmetric thrust, the starboard wing lifted, banking the aircraft to over 100 degrees. The crew reduced the power on engines three and four in an attempt to level the aircraft, but with falling airspeed they lost control and the aircraft stalled, crashing into the HĂ´telissimo Les Relais Bleus Hotel near the airport."
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Russia invaded countries in 1918, '21, '24, '29, '38, '39, '40, '42, '44, '45, '50, '53, '56, '60, '67, '68, '69, '75, '77, '79, '90, '92, 2008, '14, '15, '16 & '22
At the moment Zelenskyy is holding them in one country & once that's concluded either way they'll just carry on with their routine. They currently have good relationships with Africa, the Middle East & Asia, the agreement after the Cuba Missile Crisis still stands & rules the Americas off limits. That leaves Europe & Britain is the only isolated country. I'm all for leaving Zelenskyy in place.
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5:23 "cost us a penny per day" â actually no they don't.
In fact it's the other way round.
After the Civil Wars & the Restoration of the Monarchy but with Parliament sovereign, part of how Parliament was swinging it's weight around was to attempt to bankrupt the Monarchy. The Monarchy responded to this by setting up a Trust Fund in 1707 & this is what's been paying for the Royal Family ever since.
Not Parliament.
Not the State.
Not taxpayers.
A Trust Fund called the Crown Estate.
Tony Blair involved himself in this & in amongst getting the Royals to pay tax into their own Treasury so Blair could syphon it out he also cut down their take from their own trust fund so now, instead of 100% of the revenues the Royal Family now receive 11% (eleven percent), 75% goes to the Treasury to be used by Government & the other 14%, temporarily, is being used to rebuild Buck House (which belongs to the State so should be repaired from State funds).
So no, the Royal Family does not cost us anything at all, in fact they pay us.
Lazy, lazy journalism.
This is all in Wikipedia, it's in Hansard, it's in the records of the Crown Estate, it's in the damned newspapers FFS!
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