You can use this for estimating the length of speeches at weddings - just average the guesses. It's a classic where few people will know all speakers and the length of their speech, their nerves etc, but everyone knows all the relevant data
You can use this for estimating the length of speeches at weddings - just average the guesses. It's a classic where few people will know all speakers and the length of their speech, their nerves etc, but everyone knows all the relevant data
Everyone could see from TV that whatever the specific cause of the failure was, the solid rocket boosters had failed catastrophically, and they were 100% made by Thiokol. That their share price went down more indicates that traders watched TV on the day of the disaster more than any crowd wisdom.
Totally a thing - this was another pic recently in the Guardian, which is giving strong Darth Vader vibes
There's a lot to be said for naming seats after front-rank ex-pols Aussie style. A great many geographic names rub constituents up the wagon way for what they don't include, because to choose to name some areas is a choice to not name others.
It's a cheap point, but she looks like she's aiming for 'Imperial badass advisor to Darth Vader in the Andor universe' with her coat.
Sorrry-that should have read Zubov not Subov
There’s more recent research from Lynn Subov’s work suggesting adoptee suicide attempt rates are 35 times higher than the kept population. See adoptiontruth.org/adoption-and... for example or just google her work.
and so it's more that kids _were_ arseholes, and so it's the kids of the old bigots who were the arseholes and their kids have been better parents to their own kids that their parents were to them then IYSWIM
As an aside, I remember when naming our daughters, we had a backdrop idea that kids could be arseholes, because they were arseholes back in our day. But modern kids have been really nice, kind and thoughtful and are taught in environments that tend to meaningfully promote these values...
I read she gets out of bed in the morning thinking of nothing else in 2026. Curious.
Reluctant Labour voters realised there were, in fact, enough Green voters to remove this fear, and voted what they wanted to do all along in subsequent elections. It's a really tough thing for the first election where the Greens are competitive and needs bravery, but after that, Labour are cooked.
They did the same in Brighton in 2010. My wife had an argument with 'Lord' Steve Bassam on our doorstep as he bare-faced bulshitted to her about how a Green vote would let the Tories win the seat. It was a 3 way marginal, but the Tories finished third. The seat is now a solid Green majority /more
They were doing this back in Jack Straw's day - they had a piece in the Sun saying Labour had refused more asylum applications than any previous government, and one in the Guardian saying how the percentage of asylum application accepted was the highest of any government since records began.
There's a certain resistance that comes from people knowing it is true, but feeling duped if that is indeed the case, and so cleaving tighter to the fantasy that it's a calumny on the very public service-motivated Ministers we're jolly lucky to have
This is a point made time and again by @jemgilbert.bsky.social - many people hearing it think it sounds facile, or even conspiratorial, but is better understood as anthropological observation.
It reminds me that Cooley is a vapid dullard and how nice it would be e to have Anthony Barnett interviewed by someone genuinely interested and at ease with the history of the ideas of the New Left, like Andy Beckett
Was the question 'would you vote against a left authoritarian party' or are those added afterwards? If the former that Reform's voters are hostile to anything called 'liberal' (as many voters MAGA adjacent) and left _except_ when paired with authoritarian (which might explain Starmer positioning?)
In this, like in so many areas of social and political development, the US is a massive international outlier whose outlier status is something USians are often deeply unaware of.
The UK is massively less religious, and much more regulated and has a much higher level of social and financial support. Its so different to the US context in scale too. Yes we have adoption, and no, it shouldnt exist, and no its not perfect by any stretch. But it is very, very, very different.
I dont think thats the caee but equally its clear to me that the UK system is _now_ much much much better than the USA. Baby adoption just isn’t a thing here anymore and hasn’t been since the 1980s. US Adoptee twitter is (rightly) furious about what happened and continues to happen. Not same in UK
Her son is an SNL and Simpsons writer: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Max...
I wasn't named in my mother's obit, written by my brother, but was in my brother's obit written some months later by a cousin. I like the second of these, and choose not to dwell on the first because like most reunion stuff, it's complicated and understanding >>> judging
Can I be added too, please Tony?
I was once at a DCMS reception when Andy Burnham was SoS and he said something similar which resonated. He said DCMS was the department that handled all the things you’d really remember on your deathbed. He clearly loved the job
4/ I do think UK context has much in the way of difference, not least a) only 4 governments, rather than 51 b) involvement of the state in the process much more than the agencies and c) lack of payment in the process d) lack of evangelical christian motivation for many (but obv not all) adoptions
3/ This plays out on places like Reddit too, where US adoption experience is - naturally enough - numerically much more common, but you come away feeling like a these challenges faced by USians are global, when they're not. There's so much that is in common, for absolutely sure...
2/ Layered on this is the way in which Christianity is so culturally and politically influential and how saviourism is so clearly a motivating factor in so much adoptions. It does feel though that the issue faced aren't the same
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1/x As much as I do learn so much from US-based #adopteesky contributors, the more I read, the more I realise so much of the experience is horrific and really flows from the peculiarly disgusting way the US adoption system/market works
Was watching this old Saint and Greasvie which said Jimmy Greaves used to sweep the Plough Lane terraces with Eddie Reynolds back in 1958 and used to live at the corner of the ground back with his wife. youtu.be/8yn1nku7Sek @daysofspeed.bsky.social @charlietalbot.bsky.social
I squared the circle by cleaving very very hard to the notion that people were 100% products of their environment and 0% heredity and argued my corner passionately leading to legitimate suspicion from others that I wasn't quite right in the head