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Thane of Cawdor

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Posts posted by Thane of Cawdor

  1. 22 minutes ago, Sergeant Wilson said:

    I was thinking more about social security is non-contributory, a safety net if you have nothing. They could do away with that tomorrow.

    Retirement pension, in theory, is paid for and is proportionate to your contributions. We pay in to a government guaranteed scheme.

    I realise, with an aging population, present day pensioners are being paid by those currently in work, as their contributions were used a while ago.

    I think it the government reneged on contributory state pension, they'd be as well declaring the country bankrupt.

    I don't know if this is still the case, but it certainly was back in the day. I think this example is quite close to the idea of means-testing a benefit that has supposedly been earned through National Insurance contributions.

    Contribution-based JSA and pensions

    Contribution-based JSA is not means-tested as such, but the amount of JSA payable is reduced on a pound for pound basis by any regular income the claimant receives from an occupational or private pension in excess of £50 a week. At current JSA rates (£73.10 a week from April 2015), contribution-based would therefore be withdrawn completely from those with pension payments totalling £123.10 a week or more.

  2. 9 hours ago, hk blues said:

    Normal  = Breakfast - Lunch - Dinner - Supper

    Acceptable = Breakfast - Dinner - Tea - Supper 

     

    It's a class thing, and an age thing and, I think an English thing. In a moment of nostalgia, some years ago, I bought Maw Broon's Cookbook. I can confirm that Paw Broon supplies the definitive answer:

    Breakfast

    Denner [sic]

    Tea

    Supper

  3. 14 hours ago, RawB93 said:

    Love folk who offer to buy rounds.

    Unfortunately for you, you don't realise I'm not playing "rounds" and this is actually just a free drink from someone I probably wasn't even going to say hello to. 

    Enjoy your night, mate.

    Extract from John Barleycorn, by Jack London, where he realises that the etiquette of drinking involves reciprocity. In fairness to him, he is mortified.

    That was why Nelson had lingered at the bar. Having bought a drink, he had waited for me to buy one. I HAD LET HIM BUY SIX DRINKS AND NEVER ONCE OFFERED TO TREAT. And he was the great Nelson! I could feel myself blushing with shame. I sat down on the stringer-piece of the wharf and buried my face in my hands. And the heat of my shame burned up my neck and into my cheeks and forehead. I have blushed many times in my life, but never have I experienced so terrible a blush as that one.

  4. Seemingly, we've been playing fute-ball for 700 years. You'd think we might have got quite good by now.

    The world’s oldest football was discovered during an excavation project at Stirling Castle in the 1970s; it had been lodged in the rafters of the Queen’s Chamber in Stirling Castle during the reconstruction works commissioned by James V, which dates the hoofing of it to the 1540s. The ball, made from cowhide and a pig’s bladder, is prominently displayed at the Stirling Smith Art Gallery and Museum.

    https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2024/apr/09/where-tourists-seldom-tread-part-9-crewe-boston-barnstaple-stirling

     

  5. 46 minutes ago, Newbornbairn said:

    There are only three sports: bullfighting, motor-racing and mountaineering. The rest are merely games. - Hemingway

    What about shooting, Ernest? Hemingway was an avid big game-hunter. I remember a piece by Clive James where he sneaks a look round one of Hemingway's homes. James claimed that he could see on the walls the heads of every animal Hemingway had ever shot.

    Spoiler

    Except for Hemingway's

     

  6. You all seem to be overlooking the most vulnerable and vilified segment of the country. Fortunately, Jonathan took it on himself to highlight this dreadful issue, and recommend stern measures to  resolve it. 

    A Conservative MP has said anyone using the term “white privilege” should be reported to the government’s counter-terror programme, and that teachers who criticise the Conservative party should be sacked.

    Jonathan Gullis told a fringe meeting during the party’s conference in Manchester last week that anyone using the phrase should be referred to the government’s Prevent programme, which is used to track potential terrorists.

    According to a recording obtained by the Independent, he told activists: “The term white privilege – very quickly – is an extremist term, it should be reported to Prevent, because it is an extremist ideology.

    “It’s racist to actually suggest everyone who’s white somehow is riddled with privilege.”

    Gullis, who is a former member of the parliamentary education select committee, was speaking at an event organised by the Conservative Friends of Education group. He added: “I hope [using the term white privilege] will be reported, I hope that will be looked into, and any teacher who’s perpetuated it in the classroom ultimately should face a disciplinary hearing at the very least.”

    The Prevent programme was set up in 2006 to stop people from becoming terrorists or supporting terrorism, and to clamp down on radicalisation.

    During the same event, the 31-year-old MP said that teachers should be “sacked” if they criticise the Conservatives. He was elected to the Commons in 2019 for Stoke-on-Trent North.

    “The other way we can stop the cancel culture is by actually saying to the woke left lecturers and the woke left teachers – who seem to be becoming more and more apparent – is that ultimately, what’s going to happen if you are going to push your ideology in the classroom there are going to be consequences for you,” he said.

    “For some reason, if a Labour party member wants to stand up in front of the classroom and say how bad and evil the Tories are, then the headteacher has to take some kind of sympathetic view to that.

    “It’s absolutely disgusting, we need to start sacking people who are pushing their political ideology.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2021/oct/09/tory-mp-says-using-term-white-privilege-should-be-reported-as-extremism

     

     

     

  7. 1 hour ago, Scary Bear said:

    I’m seeing a few comments on Facebook just now about weather modifiction and ‘geoengineered weather’. I suspect it’s cause it’s been raining so often in Scotland.

    What’s that all about?

    Part of me wishes it was true. Then there would be a solution; kill the c***s.

    HAARP. Not the Lochee version.

  8. 42 minutes ago, Melanius Mullarkey said:

    Coisty eh? What’s he like?

      Hide contents

    A bigot.

     

    I've no idea why McCoist intervened on this issue and in this manner, but I don't think he's bigoted as we normally understand that attitude. A guy I know, slightly, played for Sunderland at the same time as McCoist, and when he moved to a club in Scotland he lodged in the McCoist family home. Guy was comparatively devout RC for a young footballer.  As far as I know, he and McCoist are still in regular social contact.

  9. The growing popularity of the term "in my wheelhouse". I think it means "within my competence, my sphere of knowledge", but it irks me more than  it should. I had assumed that the metaphor was meant to describe a Para Handy-like character demonstrating his mastery of the Vital Spark. However, it may be even more annoying; Google suggests that it may originate from baseball and refers to a pitch within the batter's reach.

  10. Republican Congressman, and former Christian Pastor, has alternative version of the Beatitudes. Speaking in Dundee, Michigan. We Dundonians take a great interest in all things Palestinian.

    Rather than provide humanitarian aid in Gaza, the US should ensure it is subjected to atomic bombing the way that “Nagasaki and Hiroshima” were at the end of the second world war.

     

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/mar/31/tim-walberg-republican-congressman-gaza

     

  11. On 23/09/2021 at 12:26, strichener said:

    As someone that lives miles from a railway station, public transport is exclusively busses here.  I used to think the same as you regarding service times but the reality is that if there was a way of making money out of earlier/later services either through passenger numbers or subsidies then the companies would be doing it.  There is no appetite from local councils to increase subsidies.

     

    1 hour ago, herovtret said:

    As someone who resides far from a railway station, relying solely on buses for public transport, I appreciate your perspective. Indeed, the financial viability of extending service hours plays a crucial role. If there were profitable opportunities—whether through increased passenger ridership or government subsidies—transport companies would likely seize them. However, it seems that local councils currently lack the appetite to enhance subsidies. 🚌💡

    Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.

  12. O'Hagan mulls over a current preoccupation of Pie & Bovril. Probably recognises this is where the zeitgeist is developed.

    Here’s a possible irony. People who are young now may not have had the initial luck their parents had, but commentators say they are going to be much better off in the end, because they will inherit everything. A recent report says they will become the “richest generation in history”. Liam Bailey, who does research for the estate agency Knight Frank, argues that the ramifications of this transfer of wealth will be enormous. I think he means the effect on rental and property markets, but it could also signal a terrifying increase, in the future, of the gulf between those who inherit and those who don’t. (I would vote for a social housing tax on property windfalls beyond a certain value, even after inheritance tax and capital gains, just to close the gap a little and reduce inequality.)

    https://www.theguardian.com/books/2024/mar/30/leaving-home-used-to-be-a-rite-of-passage-andrew-ohagan-on-family-freedom-and-a-generational-divide

  13. I think it's more appropriate to nominate individual sportsmen/women rather than participants in team sports.* I also think we should exclude people dependent on the quality of their equipment, such as jockeys and racing drivers. Niche sports such as tennis are a bit problematic, since success is often associated with a degree of privilege. Finally, no managers or coaches; could we imagine Alf Ramsey featuring in an equivalent English list?

    * I could see exceptions in cases such as George Best, Pele and Maradona.

    Andy Murray

    Chris Hoy

    David Wilkie

    Dick McTaggart

    Liz McColgan

    Katie Archibald

    Benny Lynch

    Allan Wells

    Eric Liddell

    Bobby McGregor 

  14. 13 hours ago, Bully Wee Villa said:

    She was a naturalised French citizen, you can be more than one nationality.

    I see you are continuing your anti-Polish vandetta from the German thread (Rosa Luxemburg).

    Emile Zola

    Voltaire

    Albert Camus (or is he Algerian?).

    Robespierre

    Edith Piaf

  15. 10 hours ago, DiegoDiego said:

    In Georgia, many people take a shot when they pass one of those shrines on a serpentine road, which seems very apt seeing that's probably what caused the person's death in the first place.

    I found this comment strangely ambiguous. Is the location in the USA or Eastern Europe, and does it involve firing off an in memoriam round or raising a glass to the departed? All permutations seem equally likely.

  16. Many years ago I read (or possibly saw) an interview with Tony Benn where he explained his views on inherited wealth. Tony was against it, but would leave it up to his children to decide. I don't know what Hilary and Melissa did with their inheritance, but their brother is now Viscount Stansgate.

  17. 41 minutes ago, Jacksgranda said:

    £325,000 each!! They're not even detached. Look at the size of the driveway. Two steps off the pavement and you're in the front door.

    Now that you have made me aware of your Dyscalculia, I'm afraid I can no longer trust your assessment of what constitutes a "c**t on the road".

  18. 51 minutes ago, BFTD said:

    I've been feeling generally run down for the past week and one (but only one) of my feet broke out in bruising and small open sores overnight.

    I'm gradually feeling better, and the wounds are healing, but WTF is that all about?

    Your devoutness has been partially recognised.

    Saint Padre Pio vector Saint Pio of Pietrelcina logo Pio illustration

  19. 3 hours ago, coprolite said:



    Soccer players were bred with five legs and no mouths, making after-match interviews infinitely more interesting. However, not all breeds of genetic athletes were accepted by the GAS and new rules had to be created after the 2224 World Cup, when Scotland fielded a goalkeeper who was a human oblong of flesh, measuring eight feet high by sixteen across, thereby filling the entire goal. Somehow they still failed to qualify for the second round.”

    Gonna need a wider goalie.

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