Bongo Heracles
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Technically illegal to ride on public land
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Post by Bongo Heracles on Oct 17, 2024 8:28:15 GMT
We have found sicks days have dropped considerably since Covid. Everybody has a laptop now, so if somebody has a cold or feels a bit under the weather they will tend to just log on from home and still work. Its gone up at our place. I couldn't speak to exactly why but, yeah, I had barely if any days off when we went fully remote. Unless my brain wasn't working, I dialled in. Now they have forced us back in two days a week, I've got a pretty hard rule that if I wouldn't feel well enough to come into the office, I don't feel well enough to work full stop and have started taking time off even on my remote days.
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Post by manfromdelmonte on Oct 17, 2024 8:34:48 GMT
It's not entirely altruistic for the rich to believe in a strong state. It gives them a healthy, educated workforce. Reliable and efficient infrastructure. While defence and the rule of law serve to protect their wealth.
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Post by Bill in the rain on Oct 17, 2024 8:41:12 GMT
Tell that to Musk, Trump, Dyson, etc.. though.
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mcmonkeyplc
Junior Member
General Martok Qapla!
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Post by mcmonkeyplc on Oct 17, 2024 8:44:12 GMT
It's the difference between greedy twats and rich people that actually have the power to think beyond what's in front of them.
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Post by gamingdave on Oct 17, 2024 9:04:42 GMT
If "the rule of law" means that everyone in society will be held to the same standards, that's great. If it means people they don't like will be prosecuted, whilst the rich and powerful skate off scott free, then that's shit. If they want to show their commitment to fairness, honesty and the rule of law, start by prosecuting the bosses of Thames and Anglia Water for their years of negligence. And I think we can add United Utilities to that list for this alone. I'm not against private companies being involved in the delivery of provide public services as a blanket rule, but without competent regulators it's bound to end in substandard services and profits for the private companies and their shareholders. I think it's clear Ofwat aren't fit for purpose - it seems they do have powers but not the capacity (or is it will?) to ever enact them. Similarly Ofgem and Ofcom seem to be in need of some serious attention.
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rftp
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Post by rftp on Oct 17, 2024 9:17:03 GMT
Yeah, that could happily just say "the water companies".
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Post by anthonyuk on Oct 17, 2024 11:04:26 GMT
Admittedly I spend alot of time in the Lake District, but the revelation that United Utilities have been pumping shit into Windermere for years, for what I can only imagine is a cost cutting measure makes my blood boil.
Complaints at the time of all the green algae painted as some kind of mystery or even natural phenomenon when it was clear all along what they were doing.
Actively destroying the ecosystem and water of one of the most incredible parts of the country for the sake of profits is as criminal as it gets. As mentioned above they should absolutely focus on holding them to account. At the very least, it would be something the general public would massively support.
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otto
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Post by otto on Oct 17, 2024 11:08:42 GMT
and by holding them to account we mean putting their Board in a public pillory to be hosed down with Windermere slurry
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Post by Dougs on Oct 17, 2024 11:36:36 GMT
and by holding them to account we mean putting their Board in a public pillory to be hosed down with Windermere slurry Or given top jobs at the Environment Agency!
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minimatt
Junior Member
hyper mediocrity
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Post by minimatt on Oct 17, 2024 12:12:14 GMT
i don't see the point in creating criminal offences if nobody is actually going to explore criminal charges
a fine levied against a company, a fine which is ultimately paid by its customers is clearly no deterrent, so somebody had the foresight to write this into criminal law but not a single person appears to be facing criminal sanctions
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rftp
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Post by rftp on Oct 17, 2024 12:21:16 GMT
Yes, but won't somebody think of the investors? Please...
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Post by Jambowayoh on Oct 17, 2024 12:25:51 GMT
Yes, but won't somebody think of the investors? Please... Tbf they're definitely trickling something down on us...doesn't taste like wealth though.
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Post by Whizzo on Oct 17, 2024 12:33:31 GMT
Sod pillories, take a tactic from Pinochet and throw them out of a helicopter above the lake, can even do it from a survivable distance if you're feeling charitable.
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rftp
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Post by rftp on Oct 17, 2024 12:43:45 GMT
That's less than 200ft.
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Post by Trowel 🏴 on Oct 17, 2024 15:41:54 GMT
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Post by Whizzo on Oct 17, 2024 15:45:42 GMT
Her posts were a crime but not a breach of Xitter's policies...
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mcmonkeyplc
Junior Member
General Martok Qapla!
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Post by mcmonkeyplc on Oct 17, 2024 15:48:49 GMT
First example for the new online safety law:
"You fucks allowed this?, not anymore"
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Post by Jambowayoh on Oct 17, 2024 15:49:34 GMT
Truly a fuck around find out moment.
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askew
Full Member
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Post by askew on Oct 17, 2024 16:14:39 GMT
Is she going to get dropped into Windermere?
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Post by Jambowayoh on Oct 17, 2024 16:22:44 GMT
This case is also interesting for what would have been the public response if she was brown and also those free speech absolutist.
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jeepers
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Post by jeepers on Oct 17, 2024 17:44:37 GMT
and by holding them to account we mean putting their Board in a public pillory to be hosed down with Windermere slurry Or given top jobs at the Environment Agency! It’s nice to not be purdah innit? 😀
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Post by Dougs on Oct 17, 2024 20:02:54 GMT
A rare, inadvisable momentary slip...but enjoyable nonetheless
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zephro
Junior Member
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Post by zephro on Oct 18, 2024 11:51:51 GMT
Are you basing that on sickness absence days? If so many of those days are from minor sickness, eg. colds, minor covid etc. A lot of people will have those as sick days rather than spreading things now + why not? More people back in the office adds to that with the new found caution of respiratory illnesses. Things like stress could also be fallout from the Covid years + being back in the office. I keep seeing reports about how it affected children's social skills, similar would have happened with adults to some degree. Plus the NHS is fucked. I don't know a reference doc for this as it's been repeated in articles/podcasts so I can't think of a specific place to dig the stats out from. It's specifically not sick days. It's long term sickness and more generally working age people dropping out of the workforce entirely. Some of which go on to benefits and therefore there's information on why. But a lot of them just go dark so the reason why isn't recorded. It's incredibly unlikely British people are just work shy, as Badenoch would claim. But the percentages are far higher in the UK than other similar economies. So an example would be. Someone works in a warehouse, as a driver or even in a bookshop. They need to carry shit around for their job. They develop a minor back problem. If the NHS was working correctly they'd see a physio, get their health sorted out and then be back in the workforce in no time. Good for them because they're not in pain and good for the economy: as they don't take benefits; they pay taxes and spend in their local economy. Virtuous cycle. What in fact happens. Is it's non-urgent. It takes 6 months to see a physio. They are in constant pain and unable to work. They end up signing off as long term sick. Or drop out and rely on their partner's income. Similar things happen around obesity and the complications of pre-diabetes and so on. Ditto NHS workers getting extremely stressed out, due to overworking. End up signed off. The NHS ends up paying a fucking idiotic amount in temp workers. They then have less money for hiring new people to deal with the overworking. You end up in a vicious cycle. Or childcare costs being fucking insane. Mothers just drop out of the workforce for years. Etc. etc. That all then feeds in to skills shortages and a lower tax base. Which increases the urgent need for immigration. That then feeds back into making our politics toxic. Which then feeds into the Tories getting more votes, causing the NHS to get worse. It's a doom loop. I kind of assume Streeting was basically going. If the NHS can afford X amount of ozempic, it's better used getting out of work people healthy enough to work again, trying to break the whole cycle. Plus it costs the NHS less in the long run. Rather than giving it out to middle class people who can work the system better. But it is Wes Streeting and it's almost guaranteed he phrased it in the most agro way possible as he's a bit of a dick.
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zephro
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Post by zephro on Oct 18, 2024 12:00:53 GMT
I guess it also all fits in with the lack of any long termism. The Brown government started HS2 because it was evident the West Coast Mainline was going to break. The track is shared with local West Midlands commuter services and over night its used for freight to ship goods from the North to London primarily. Increasing demand it was going to collapse in to a heap eventually. And so it has happened. Because the Tories spent 14 years completely fucking it all up.
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Post by Bill in the rain on Oct 18, 2024 13:37:23 GMT
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Post by Chopsen on Oct 18, 2024 14:44:34 GMT
The data on UK long term unemployment on health grounds is interesting.
The most stark rise in rates is in younger people and those with mental health problems. Chronic pain is another leading cause, and there a lot of overlap with that and mental health issues. There was a big uptick in from 2019 onwards, and this was something seen across the world with COVID. Most other countries have seen a fall in unemployment due to health problems in more recent years, but it has remained sticky (and I think still rising) in the UK.
Causes are unclear. It's a well understood but rarely politically discussed* fact that the main determinants of health are social. What the NHS does in most cases is pick up the pieces and try to mitigate the problems caused by social inequality, poverty, diet, drugs abuse and social isolation. Putting more resources in traditional healthcare is not going to completely fix this any more than improving the roadside recovery is going to improve road safety. Obviously more input in to mental health services is a priority. There's been a stark rise of mental health problems in young people**, and a shocking lack of resources put in to mental health services for children and young people. I think this is a national scandal. There is also a significant long term cost to this: if you struggle with mental health for most of your formative years with no support, your chances of being a good little worker bee as an adult are limited.
It's still not established what is making the UK so uniquely bad at long term unemployment due to long term sickness. I think it's a broad social and resourcing problem, and putting more money in to the NHS is not going to solve it *on it's own*.
(*this has always annoyed me).
(**I blame this in part on smart phones and social media, and there is now a bit of evidence building up supporting this)
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Post by Dougs on Oct 18, 2024 16:06:58 GMT
It needs a holistic approach. Prevention os better than cure and all that. But everything is so disjointed and short term, it's hard to see change. To really see a difference, we need to provide jobs that afford people to live, fund things like school meals for all kids, affordable housing, address unaffordable essential services ans utilities, regulate the internet, mental health support where needed and much, much more. Put the foundations in place and the back end cost will be much less - both literally and figuratively.
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Post by Chopsen on Oct 18, 2024 16:34:48 GMT
There are solutions, it's just nobody wants to do them because they are going to cause short term upset.
I'm not usually a fan of a muscular state intervention, but I genuinely think a ban on smartphone usage in children would be long term social benefit. It's never going to happen without state intervention (as nobody wants their kid to be the weird one), so it needs legislation.
Making housing more affordable will be a single most effective economic intervention you could make. Liberalise planning regulations and make it a "where not if" proposition for LA where NIMBYs can no longer block where houses are built.
Tax sugar, tax convenience food. Tax alcohol to drink at home to the point it's actually cheaper to go to the pub and restaurants. If you're going to drink, at least make it a social thing that gets you out of the house to meet people.
Equalise the "unearned" income from wealth with income from labour by abolishing NI and put PAYE up to make it cost neutral for workers and moves the burden to those who live off passive incomes.
Give those in rented accommodation rights more akin to home owners: they can decorate, they can have pets, they can't be chucked out on a whim.
This gives people more money, makes it easier to make healthier choices, and improves people's day-to-day lives and wellbeing. All of it is completely achievable by implementing legislation, so it's entirely feasible for a government to do.
The only thing standing in our way is....the electorate. Who vote for people and things which make their lives worse. Again and again and again.
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zephro
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Post by zephro on Oct 18, 2024 16:40:38 GMT
There are solutions, it's just nobody wants to do them because they are going to cause short term upset. I'm not usually a fan of a muscular state intervention, but I genuinely think a ban on smartphone usage in children would be long term social benefit. It's never going to happen without state intervention (as nobody wants their kid to be the weird one), so it needs legislation. Making housing more affordable will be a single most effective economic intervention you could make. Liberalise planning regulations and make it a "where not if" proposition for LA where NIMBYs can no longer block where houses are built. Tax sugar, tax convenience food. Tax alcohol to drink at home to the point it's actually cheaper to go to the pub and restaurants. If you're going to drink, at least make it a social thing that gets you out of the house to meet people. Equalise the "unearned" income from wealth with income from labour by abolishing NI and put PAYE up to make it cost neutral for workers and moves the burden to those who live off passive incomes. Give those in rented accommodation rights more akin to home owners: they can decorate, they can have pets, they can't be chucked out on a whim. This gives people more money, makes it easier to make healthier choices, and improves people's day-to-day lives and wellbeing. All of it is completely achievable by implementing legislation, so it's entirely feasible for a government to do. The only thing standing in our way is....the electorate. Who vote for people and things which make their lives worse. Again and again and again. This is basically the same as my list. Someone just has to muscle through a load of unpopular headlines, bad polling and shitty local elections for a few years to actually get any of this on track. Also probably fucking off a load of "interest" groups along the way. Also it's not that bad after a while. Once houses start getting built, people are happier, more productive, back in work, tax receipts then go up etc. People often think Keynsianism is just spending shit (Corbyn times) the point is you don't need to keep spending so much once you get everything in to a virtuous cycle.
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Post by Chopsen on Oct 18, 2024 16:42:58 GMT
You need a government with a large majority to do a kamikaze run, really, who just know they're never going to get a second term and just speed run legislation to get everything done.
Fuck it, throw Levison 2 in there as well.
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