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I think we are at the stage where America should just invade Chagos and take them over!!

I think something like 2000 sailors lost their lives enforcing the end of Slavery too. Funny how the families of those men are never included in reparation talks.

In regards to the Albanian who cant be deported...this is just taking the absolute f88king p1ss!! Kick the c8nt out with his entitled child and be done with him and his family! We shouldn't be a f99king charity case for all the worlds criminals.

If Orange Man Bad can get South American countries to take back their illegal criminal citizens then why in f99ks name cant we send these economic migrants back to where they are coming from, France!!

At this point I just wish America would f99king invade us and take the country over!

Feb 10, 2025 at 4:44 PM | Unregistered CommenterMailman

There's an epidemic of urine larceny in the UK.

Apparently we can't deport illegal migrants to Albania because that country's chicken nuggets aren't to your liking...

The last McDonalds in Albania closed in 2002.

Albania has been gifted 15 electric Porsches (Taycans?) by British taxpayers - for use by the Albanian prison service.....

https://x.com/procurementfile

Feb 10, 2025 at 10:17 AM | Registered Commentertomo

On the topic of slavery

I knew about the Royal Navy's West Africa anti-slaver patrols in the 19th Century but I wasn't aware of the cost to the UK..

In 1833, Britain spent £20 million, or 40% of its national budget, to buy freedom for all slaves in the Empire.

The amount of money borrowed for the Slavery Abolition Act was so large that it wasn't paid off until 2015.

Which means that many living British citizens paid to end the slave trade.

A bit of context that the racebaiting leftoids drooling over beggaring us to pay "reparations" choose to completely ignore. The least our present government could do (but won't ... for reasons... ) is to remind people of this.

Some will quibble - but the same / similar arguments were about at the time - yes, we paid the owners to free the slaves and outlawed the trade - owners and capitalism bad or something... the left specialise in grievance mining...

Feb 10, 2025 at 12:23 AM | Registered Commentertomo

Mailman, tomo,
apologies for misattributing Mailman's Letby item last week to tomo. Bit of a Fawlty Towers thing.

.,
Good article, and the bit you quoted was the highlight for me too.


tomo,
The UK does seem to be a particularly serious basket case. Could be because you've already had your regime change (Benny Hill to warden Hodges) and are stuck with this mob for another four years. Canada and Australia have elections coming up and, (as an item of trivia that may have slipped by unnoticed) the USA appears to be waking up from a bad dream.


Here's an article that you might say puts the most positive spin on the COVID debacle. I.e. that the massive overreach has prepared the way for some Trumpian upheaval.

First time I've seen that point made. A different point I've seen a few times elsewhere is that four years in the wilderness allowed Trump's plans to gestate.

So one calamity prepared the people. Another calamity prepared the man. Two wrongs make a right?


Enjoyed the recent Econtalk with Daisy Christodoulou. It started with the effects of introducing video assistance for the referee in football games. The idea was to improve the accuracy of rulings, but the result was not so positive. The most graphic was stifling the spontaneous roar of the crowd when a goal is scored — the pause while the video is reviewed means no great roar, even if the goal is awarded.

The bit I liked best was how the hand-ball rule grew to 11x as many words, trying to turn the subjective definition into something that could be applied to a frame-by-frame video viewing. Reminded me of that Star Trek episode where they were in the holodeck, reproducing the table from Riker's dream. How many words would it *really* take to describe something in full detail?

There were quite a few other fun things in the talk (not all football-related). I'll be listening to it a second time.

Feb 9, 2025 at 10:57 PM | Unregistered CommenterRobert Swan

An American from Louisiana (iirc) shows the UK Labour Party up....

https://x.com/iainpdooley/status/1888272493557039427

Some 'orrible gear grinding and crashing noises coming from UK Foreign Office after somebody leaks ( to The Daily Telegraph) - Lammy's plan to compensate the Caribbean (all of it...) for slavery out of our taxes...

Really, somethings got to give - it's getting proper crazy...

Feb 8, 2025 at 5:11 PM | Registered Commentertomo

Here's something Green the EU seriously wants hushed up!!

https://x.com/BjornLomborg/status/1888175854397567313

Feb 8, 2025 at 4:52 PM | Registered Commentertomo

“When they wake up in the morning, we want them to not want to go to work because they are increasingly viewed as the villains,”

Can we borrow Russel Vought and set him to work on Whitehall ?

A Telegraph tale from the USA.

Feb 7, 2025 at 6:57 PM | Unregistered Commenter.

tomo,
I think it has become worse over time. At least there's an arguable proposition that it was just police laziness in the Evans/Christie case. But now, from the Letby Wikipedia entry:

During their investigation, Cheshire Police contacted Professor Jane Hutton, an expert in medical statistics, and signed a consultancy agreement with her. However, the Crown Prosecution Service instructed the police to drop this line of inquiry and Hutton's planned analysis never took place.
In Australia I think the charge against the prosecutor would be perverting the course of justice. I'll hazard a guess that the British equivalent charge hasn't seen much exercise.

Feb 7, 2025 at 6:06 AM | Unregistered CommenterRobert Swan

Robert

I cannot recall a time when I accepted that cases of wrongful conviction shouldn't attract the harshest sanctions on the prosecution where the prosecutors have withheld or willfully misrepresented evidence. Career ending definitely, incarceration for an equivalent time endured by the victim would be positive and in capital cases - the chop or the drop.

There's likely a Latin term for the immunity of lawyers in such matters - but not something that the actual Romans might've agreed with... I like to think.

Feb 7, 2025 at 12:35 AM | Registered Commentertomo

Mailman,
Agreed. Point was that the £200,000 would have meant far fewer people taking it further. It would still leave quite a pool of money to settle the deeply injured. The £75,000 offer meant a *lot* more people took it further. One way the money goes to the victims, the other way, it largely ends up in the pockets of lawyers.


tomo,
Abuse of medical statistics in legal cases? Say it isn't so! It feels no more than 25 years since Sally Clark was convicted on the back of some outrageous statistical ignorance.

We can be thankful the law always gets it right eventually, with occasional casualties along the way.

Sad to see that Sally Clark died from alcohol poisoning in 2007. Didn't know that.


I suppose the DOGE team has enough work ahead of it in the USA. Nice to fantasise about borrowing them to debulk Australia's bureaucracy.

Feb 7, 2025 at 12:18 AM | Unregistered CommenterRobert Swan

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