User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#91474
Boiler wrote: Wed Jun 25, 2025 9:39 am Sometimes I get the impression Monbiot wouldn't be happy unless we were a solely agrarian economy and lived a de-industrialised 17th century lifestyle.

WTF is "inclusive, low-impact travel" anyway? Accessible horse-drawn omnibuses?
It's a very odd phrase. You'd expect him to say public transport, but he may be anticipating a lot of people BTL pointing out that HS2 is public transport, and so are all the lines that full HS2 would relieve.

I think it would be a mistake to base climate change policy on not traveling. Any government trying to do that will get killed on "hypocrisy" grounds, fair or not.
User avatar
By Yug
#91481
Boiler wrote: Wed Jun 25, 2025 9:39 am

WTF is "inclusive, low-impact travel" anyway? Accessible horse-drawn omnibuses?
Cycle rickshaws? Seventeenth Century Dutch-style horse-drawn barge buses? (We've got rivers and canals.)

I used to have a lot of respect for Monbiot, but lately he's been reinventing himself as a crank.
User avatar
By Andy McDandy
#91482
Stuff that he enjoys, is going where he wants to go, and isn't in his way.
Tubby Isaacs liked this
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#91483
I don't get how people strongly in favour of immigration, like Monbiot, can also adopt the position that we don't need to built a load more new stuff to meet the demand.

Even without the population boom, the idea that we've somehow got the right amount of roads already is a load of nonsense. There's not to my knowledge been a population boom in Merthyr, Neath and Blaenau Gwent. but the A465 upgrade is still an excellent project. People in South Wales travel long distances for work, and lots of them will now have to spend less time doing it and probably be safer too.
The Weeping Angel liked this
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#91505
In today's entry where the Guardian resolves th housing crisis by sticking it to "neoliberalism", we're off to Portugal where housing affordability is terrible.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... rm-rentals

In other news that may not surprised you.

https://www.theportugalnews.com/news/20 ... pare/89489
According to a recent Financial Times article, Portugal has had the lowest number of new homes built per 1,000 inhabitants over the past decade compared to other developed countries. This lag in construction has been a significant factor contributing to the increasing property prices across the country.
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#91506
In today's entry where the Guardian resolves th housing crisis by sticking it to "neoliberalism", we're off to Portugal where housing affordability is terrible.

We learn
All this contradicts the neoliberal supply and demand story as the escalation of property prices is not linked to an actual demand for homes to live in and the formation of new households. Instead, what we see is that Lisbon is now on the radar of investors who use housing as a financial asset
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... rm-rentals

People wanting to buy places for reasons you don't approve of are still demand, as is people who want to rent them. That's not any sort of challenge to supply and demand. That's exactly what supply and demand is. Some of these people, shock horror are professionals. How about we stop blaming people who want to do no more than live somewhere they like? That the left does this stuff beggars belief. You're opening the door for the rabid to Right to use your own logic against poor immigrants moving to cities.

In other news that may not surprised you.

https://www.theportugalnews.com/news/20 ... pare/89489
According to a recent Financial Times article, Portugal has had the lowest number of new homes built per 1,000 inhabitants over the past decade compared to other developed countries. This lag in construction has been a significant factor contributing to the increasing property prices across the country.
The Weeping Angel liked this
User avatar
By Boiler
#91620
There is going to be some research into their effect upon the pancreas though:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4ged0r1n3wo

I'm on the tablet form of semaglutide at the maximum dose (14mg): it worked for a while (I lost ~15kg) but ultimately the real issue has shown up - I use food as a crutch when I'm in a bad place, like I have been for a few months now and I eat even when my brain is telling me I'm full up.

No-one seems willing to look into the psychological side of obesity.
Last edited by Boiler on Fri Jun 27, 2025 12:07 am, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
By The Weeping Angel
#91626
Out of thousands. It's a bit like saying hundreds of people have reported side effects of paracetamol; therefore, we should be careful with paracetamol.
User avatar
By Andy McDandy
#91630
Whoever said that it was the easiest thing in the world to turn one group of English people against another, was bang on the buck. This is very much Chris Morris's "...less educated, less middle class than me..." made flesh.
User avatar
By Boiler
#91632
The Weeping Angel wrote: Fri Jun 27, 2025 1:12 am Out of thousands. It's a bit like saying hundreds of people have reported side effects of paracetamol; therefore, we should be careful with paracetamol.
I don't know how old you are TWA (that's not meant as a dig, for the avoidance of doubt by the way), but I wonder if you remember when you could buy paracetamol over the counter in a box of 100? That stopped when it was learned that people were taking the whole box to commit suicide (a former colleague's son did just this but was found in time) as it causes catastrophic liver damage. Now you can only buy it in small quantities after the government of the day acted.

I get where you're coming from TWA, I genuinely do - this has echoes of "the vaccine" all over again and yes, there's no such thing as a medicine without side effects. I should know, I'm on seven different tablets daily and the semaglutide replaced one that had rather unpleasant side effects for me and didn't actually help either. When I was prescribed that one, the brilliant pharmacist at my local chemist was rather alarmed and made her disquiet known to me.
User avatar
By kreuzberger
#91633
Death By Paracetamol is unimaginable grim. An old client's brother in Scotland accidentally went that way and it was simply horrific.
User avatar
By Boiler
#91634
Andy McDandy wrote: Fri Jun 27, 2025 8:39 am Whoever said that it was the easiest thing in the world to turn one group of English people against another, was bang on the buck. This is very much Chris Morris's "...less educated, less middle class than me..." made flesh.
And doesn't it just? You only have to look in the paper this forum takes its name from to see a diverse range of stories about this class of drugs - more often about appearance than anything else, but. In those cases, it's seen as 'cheating' somehow.
User avatar
By Boiler
#91637
kreuzberger wrote: Fri Jun 27, 2025 9:14 am Death By Paracetamol is unimaginable grim. An old client's brother in Scotland accidentally went that way and it was simply horrific.
Agreed. I was told what the aforementioned son went through prior to his eventual recovery.
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#91642
The latest installment in a regular series- "Bad people don't get into Government with PR". PR is better, but bad people are in government all over the place under PR. And the projections for Reform now don't take into account how much tactical voting there would against Reform or (Reform-Kemi, if they do a tie up). The solution to Reform is there under FPTP too.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... gel-farage
  • 1
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
The Daily Torygraph

"if lots of people like something that […]

Labour Government 2024 - ?

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025/jun/27/lo[…]

Kemi Badenoch

Deeply serious politician of government speaks. Wh[…]

Keir Starmer

Wow. Is he getting some better advice? https://bs[…]