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World & Current Events > If you're not in the U.S., what's up in your part of the world?

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message 2951: by Ian (new)

Ian Miller | 1857 comments "Those measures went well beyond the ill‐​advised political decision on the part of George Bush’s administration and its successors to push for Ukraine’s admission to NATO." . . ."A few analysts outside the realism and restraint camp even have conceded that trying to gain NATO membership for Ukraine may have been imprudent. But the magnitude of the aggressive moves taken by the Pentagon and CIA are just now becoming apparent."......"For years, the Kremlin made it emphatically clear that inviting Ukraine to join NATO would cross a red line that threatened Russia’s vital security interests. However, it was never merely an issue of Kiev’s formal accession to the alliance. Comments from Russian President Vladimir Putin and other officials signaled that the truly intolerable development was Ukraine becoming a NATO military asset and an arena for the deployment of U.S. and NATO forces. That danger could—and ultimately did—arise, even though France and Germany continued to block a formal membership invitation.

Forgive me if I am wrong, but I thought George was President from 2001 to 2009, which precedes 2014. The above quotes from the link I provided, in my opinion, support my assertion.


message 2952: by Nik (new)

Nik Krasno | 19850 comments The opinion piece you'd placed mentions no cooperation btw CIA and Ukraine prior to 2014. If Bush was such a push (and those who followed), why isn't Ukraine in NATO?


message 2953: by Ian (new)

Ian Miller | 1857 comments Nik wrote: "The opinion piece you'd placed mentions no cooperation btw CIA and Ukraine prior to 2014. If Bush was such a push (and those who followed), why isn't Ukraine in NATO?"

Nik, I answered Papaphilly because he had not said much about this issue, but as I said earlier, this needs to be a Ukraine-free thread. There has to be one of them :-). If you were to remove the three offending posts elsewhere I would willingly answer, but this thread has to be available for the "rest of the world".


message 2954: by Nik (new)

Nik Krasno | 19850 comments Funny that you mention it after a week and probably a few dozens posts


message 2955: by Ian (new)

Ian Miller | 1857 comments In Post 2948 I wrote: "We have been off-topic for about 30 posts, and yes, I have been as guilty of that as anyone." Yours is 7 posts later, not "a few dozen". But my pont remains -can't we have the "rest of the world" Ukraine-free?


message 2956: by Scout (new)

Scout (goodreadscomscout) | 8071 comments So, what's up in your part of the world, Ian?


message 2957: by Ian (new)

Ian Miller | 1857 comments The new government is firing a lot of civil servants to reduce costs. I agree with the principle - there are far too many sitting in offices passing memoranda amongst each other and doing nothing useful. However, what bothers me is the firing is done by managers, and they need firing for getting into this mess, but they won't fire themselves.

More immediately we have signs of global warming. In the last two days the town I grew up in had 0.8 metres of rain. That is a lot.

Finally, the TV channels seem detrmined to reduce staff in the news programs. Channel three, which got sold to Warners, is firing the whole news team. This is not good for democracy.


message 2958: by Papaphilly (new)

Papaphilly | 5042 comments Who says you need an unbiased news? Just look at the U.S......8^)


message 2959: by Ian (new)

Ian Miller | 1857 comments There is no response to that one :-) except, maybe, we are in danger of no news service. Maybe that would be better???


message 2960: by Papaphilly (new)

Papaphilly | 5042 comments Ian wrote: "There is no response to that one :-) except, maybe, we are in danger of no news service. Maybe that would be better???"

At this point, I am not so sure it would be a bad idea.


message 2961: by J. (new)

J. Gowin | 7977 comments To be uninformed or misinformed?


message 2962: by Sean (new)

Sean Parker (sbwparker) | 14 comments At the moment the UK seems to be trying to decide what side it's on on about a million different issues. 'Election year' would appear to be all that really matters.


message 2963: by [deleted user] (new)

Nice to see someone else from the UK on here, Sean.

I've got to be honest, I'm struggling to get excited about election year.

How do you see it going? Do you think the pollsters are right and Labour will win a large majority?


message 2964: by Sean (new)

Sean Parker (sbwparker) | 14 comments Hi Beau, they've been wrong before, we'll see. It's clear that if they do get in it'll be a 'enough of Tories' rather than 'yes please Labour'. I'd love proportional representation, even as an experiment to see, but not holding breath (I try to stay neutral)


message 2965: by Ian (new)

Ian Miller | 1857 comments Sean, there are plenty of other proportional representation governments around the world, so the experiment is done for you :-) We have the extreme - MMP - and it sort of works, but all of them have one major drawback - you end up with politicians. What happens is the winners are the ones that are good at winning elections, and that ends up as their only real ability. Once upon a time our politicians were people who had experienced business, etc, so they had some experience if life, but now we seem to be ending up with professional politicians, who have never done anything outside of politics.


message 2966: by Sean (new)

Sean Parker (sbwparker) | 14 comments Words from the wise! Noted Ian


message 2967: by [deleted user] (new)

I agree with your assessment, Sean. Like 1997, there's a feeling of enough of the Tories but there's not the enthusiasm for Starmer that there was for Blair.

That said, I have a feeling Reform's support will melt, so I don't see the Tories being annihilated. In fact, I've got a sneaky feeling they might even remain the largest party, with either a single figure majority or in a hung Parliament. Still, I'm not a betting man, so we'll see.

PR is an interesting one. The idea is growing on me.

Ian, we are also now loaded with career politicians in our First Past The Post system. I think the trend is universal.


message 2968: by Ian (new)

Ian Miller | 1857 comments Beau, it is universal. My point is, PR won't solve it. You need another criterion before anyone is allowed to stand as a politician.


message 2969: by J. (new)

J. Gowin | 7977 comments Meanwhile in the Land Down Under:

Bestiality references allegedly made during presentation at Renmark High School
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-04-0...

On a hopefully unrelated note, koalas have Chlamydia.
Chlamydia in koalas - Fact sheet - Wildlife Health Australia https://wildlifehealthaustralia.com.a...


message 2970: by Papaphilly (new)

Papaphilly | 5042 comments J. wrote: "To be uninformed or misinformed?"

Both are bad.


message 2971: by J. (new)

J. Gowin | 7977 comments The NHS has released a response to the Cass Review.
https://www.england.nhs.uk/commission...

This is a link to the report.
https://cass.independent-review.uk/ho...

Apparently, puberty blockers are dangerous pharmaceuticals which should not be doled out to children without clinical diagnosis and purpose. This has the fabulous alphabet community up in arms about the tisms.

What do average Brits think about all of this?


message 2972: by Papaphilly (new)

Papaphilly | 5042 comments J. wrote: "The NHS has released a response to the Cass Review.
https://www.england.nhs.uk/commission...

Thi..."


Who would have thought this is bad....


message 2973: by [deleted user] (new)

J, it's a small victory for common sense but the fact we're even having this conversation is cause for concern.

And no, it's not just the fault of the public sector. The private sector has equally bought into this bizarre set of so-called 'progressive' beliefs on a whole range of issues.

When you step back and examine these issues logically, it's a clear sign of an entire civilisation in crisis.


message 2974: by Graeme (new)

Graeme Rodaughan Is the US fentanyl crisis an operation by the CCP.

REF: Zerohedge: https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/wat...


message 2975: by Ian (new)

Ian Miller | 1857 comments Not necessarily. It could be private companies/individuals taking advantage of the means to run drugs legally (well, sort of). Of course the CCP will not be going out of its way to stop this. China still remembers how the West filled China with opium, with sort of legality, so I doubt the Chinese are going to weep much if some Chinese are returning the favour.


message 2976: by [deleted user] (new)

UK Government to Ban Smoking

https://www-bbc-co-uk.cdn.ampproject....

They're not interested in providing decent public services or controlling our borders, but they always make time to nanny people.

Meanwhile, gambling and alcohol, which are far more harmful vices, continue to be celebrated. And people seem oblivious to the inevitable economic black hole (and resulting pressure on the NHS) as tax from fags gradually disappears from the Exchequer.

At the same time, there are calls for weed to be legalised. It might smell like sh*t and turn people psychotic but, hey, perhaps the plan is to fill the revenue gap by taxing that instead? I'm guessing the dozy students and gangsters will have to shop on the black market to find the tobacco part of their joints lol.

Your regular reminder that this is a 'Conservative' Government, elected with an 80+ seat majority.

No chance of this legislation ever being overturned.


message 2977: by [deleted user] (new)

On the other side of the channel, police ban a meeting of mainstream conservatives, over fears counter protests will be too difficult to police:

https://www.hungarianconservative.com...

I've linked to my favourite newspaper but this is big news over here too.

J, Ian, any chance of arranging citizenship for me in one of your respective countries?


message 2978: by J. (new)

J. Gowin | 7977 comments "...you will own nothing [not even yourself], and you will be happy..."

Beau, they want to restore Eden by removing the Serpent. It doesn't matter that without choice there is no free will. And without free will there is no good or evil. Those are arcane concepts best abandoned to the dust bin of history.

In other words, your agency is surplus to requirements for their utopia. So do as you're told, prole.


message 2979: by [deleted user] (new)

Never mind the muppet Truss, we need PM Lock and Chancellor of the Exchequer Load to push back against this phoney utopia.

I can think of one other politician who could do it but best not go there 😑


message 2980: by Ian (new)

Ian Miller | 1857 comments Beau wrote: "UK Government to Ban Smoking

https://www-bbc-co-uk.cdn.ampproject......."


You got to love the logic. The reason for banning smoking is to reduce the incidence of lung cancer, but smoking weed will produce exactly the same cancer causing chemicals, in addition to the brain-modifying ones.


message 2981: by Papaphilly (new)

Papaphilly | 5042 comments Beau wrote: "Never mind the muppet Truss, we need PM Lock and Chancellor of the Exchequer Load to push back against this phoney utopia.

I can think of one other politician who could do it but best not go there 😑"


Is smoking bad in Great Britain?


message 2982: by Scout (new)

Scout (goodreadscomscout) | 8071 comments How much power does the NHS have? Liberals in the US would like us to have a similar national health system. But how good is it, and does it have the power to ban an individual choice like smoking because it's the main provider of health care? If so, I'm glad the idea has failed in the US so far. Just one more government bureaucracy that infringes on personal freedom.


message 2983: by [deleted user] (new)

Papaphilly, the short answer is no.

Although my parents never smoked, when they were young, roughly 1 in 2 smoked.

I'm an ex smoker, and when I started it was roughly 1 in 3.

Now, it's 1 in 7 or 8 of the population.

My issue with this is that I expect government to provide services, not tell people how to live. Smoking has been around a long time and everyone knows the dangers. Leave individuals to decide.

Also, I can't understand why those who are so anti smoking tend to be so laissez faire regarding drink and gambling, which are capable of destroying lives in a short space of time. If smoking's gonna getcha, it takes decades.

Also, many of the anti-smoking lobby seem to be pro cannabis, which is a far, far more harmful drug. It's not like the mild spliffs the hippies used to smoke, it's super strength stuff, which seems to send people comatose and then psychotic.

Since this drug went mainstream and the police started to turn a blind eye to it (quite a recent phenomenon), many of our cities have started to stink of it. They have become full of armies of gormless divvies in grey tracksuits, staggering round, talking like people from the Bronx lol.

If you're wondering why I gave up smoking - money. The continuous price (tax) rises meant it went from small change in your back pocket to a serious financial commitment, which I wasn't willing to make.


message 2984: by [deleted user] (new)

Scout, the NHS has no power to stop smoking. It can lobby for it as a pressure group but the power rests with politicians.

In terms of how good it is, that's a tough one. We hear a lot of negative stories, particularly regarding waiting lists (primarily caused by the response to covid).

However, several members of my family have had to use it over the last couple of years, for illnesses of varying severity. I couldn't fault the treatment they were given. Operating under very difficult circumstances, every NHS staff member I encountered was a credit to their profession.

Some group members may chuckle to hear that when Beau entered the various hospitals, he wore a mask without question lol. The reason wasn't that I'd had some sort of Road to Damascus moment on covid, it was simply that I didn't want to waste these guys' time trying to make a political point when they clearly had so much to do.

Thinking about it, overall, I'd use the description given to the British Army in WWI to describe the NHS: lions led by donkeys, the lions being the doctors, nurses, orderlies and cleaners, the donkeys being the management on their 6-figure salaries.


message 2985: by Nik (new)

Nik Krasno | 19850 comments If I make it to 75+, I might resume smoking, as I remember it as fun, especially since they invented those remedies to enjoy the “best smoking 🚬 moments” till a much greater age. 😎
My mother has resumed smoking at 76. Silly as it is, maybe it alleviates her boredom and stimulates her into going to a store every once in a while.
I hope the yellow camel 🐪 will be still around in case I need it


message 2986: by Ian (new)

Ian Miller | 1857 comments Beau, one difference between smoking and drinking/gambling is that in enclosed spaces non-smokers cannot avoid inhaling the smoke. I personally feel that asking smokers to do it outside is reasonable.

At a personal level, I never smoked. As an organic chemist, handling highly flammable liquids/gases, it seemed stupid to have an ignition source in front of one's face.


message 2987: by J. (new)

J. Gowin | 7977 comments I remember once, while working in a small machine shop, I was deburring parts and cleaning them in a home brew solution of kerosene, acetone, and some degreaser. When we stopped for a break, one of my friends sat down next to me and lit up a cig. Apparently, she couldn't smell the highly combustible fumes coming off my hands.😁


message 2988: by J. (new)

J. Gowin | 7977 comments Mt. Ruang has been erupting in Indonesia. The volcanic lightning is stunning.

Indonesian volcano eruption forces evacuations, airport closure
https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pa...


message 2989: by Ian (new)

Ian Miller | 1857 comments J. wrote: "I remember once, while working in a small machine shop, I was deburring parts and cleaning them in a home brew solution of kerosene, acetone, and some degreaser. When we stopped for a break, one of..."

If she knew enough chemistry, she would know that desorption off your hands would not reach an ignition mixture 😊


message 2990: by J. (new)

J. Gowin | 7977 comments At 18 yo, I didn't know that. I was a bit concerned.


message 2991: by Papaphilly (new)

Papaphilly | 5042 comments Beau wrote: "Papaphilly, the short answer is no.

Although my parents never smoked, when they were young, roughly 1 in 2 smoked.

I'm an ex smoker, and when I started it was roughly 1 in 3.

Now, it's 1 in 7 or..."


so that sounds like about 14% and it sound like it is falling. the United States is around 11.5%. It is falling and has been for decades. Part of it is the education part and part of it is prices. For me it is a conundrum. I am in full agreement about let those decide. However, I am not against the raising of prices because it starts to price out kids. It is well documented if one does not start by 19, they will not start.

Unfortunately, banning cigarettes will have the opposite effect.


message 2992: by [deleted user] (new)

Nik, you've got me feeling all nostalgic about smoking. I used to like Benson & Hedges or Dunhill most, but would buy Gauloise Rouge when available (the French do these things better).

You reminded me of a funny story...

Many moons ago, I went to Tenerife. Although I wouldn't recommend it to the cultured members of WWW, one of the things it had going for it was cheap fags.

There was a brand called Paramount, which I think worked out at about 5p a pack. They weren't great but they were okay, so I maxed out on them to take back to England (note to silent list compilers - only for personal use).

Anyway, some time later, I made the decision to give up. I saw a homeless guy in town and asked him if he smoked. He replied in the affirmative, so I popped back home, picked up the remaining Paramount (about 800 cigarettes in total), returned to town and gave the homeless guy the fags.

He couldn't thank me enough, which put me on a feel-good-about-yourself high for the rest of the day.

Unfortunately, the next day my willpower crumbled, and I had to go to the shop to buy some B&H at English prices.

Lol.


message 2993: by J. (new)

J. Gowin | 7977 comments I know of one other Dunhill smoker. Smoking was not his biggest vice.
https://youtu.be/cQCFdcEXknc?si=wRrr3...

We will never see his like again.


message 2994: by [deleted user] (new)

I've just watched your clip, J. It's made me feel ill.

Considering I'm posting on Goodreads, I'm ashamed to say I'd never heard of this guy, so looked him up. Definitely more Keith Richards than Cliff Richard.


message 2995: by Nik (new)

Nik Krasno | 19850 comments Good story, Beau - 4 cartons of 🚬 was a lavish gift. Too bad - irrevocable. After many highs there is a down a morning after. Used to love B&H too at some point of time. Just checked the drawer and found there a few packs of maybe 15 years vintage and counting, if I ever return to this wonderful/awful habit


message 2996: by Nik (new)

Nik Krasno | 19850 comments Heard about the books 📚 but not about the author. Glad to have found out. Thanks, J. Bohemian lifestyle has some appeal, although sounds like Thompsons went way over the🔝


message 2997: by Nik (new)

Nik Krasno | 19850 comments Happy Passover to all those who celebrate around the world 🌎!


message 2998: by J. (new)

J. Gowin | 7977 comments I'm a first born, but I'm not Egyptian. So, I should be OK.


message 2999: by Nik (new)

Nik Krasno | 19850 comments No danger ⚠️ whatsoever 🍷


message 3000: by Lizzie (new)

Lizzie | 2057 comments I smoked for 30 years and gave them up because of the costs. Salem Slim 100s. I could get cigs from acros the border so i could still afford them, but the health insurance premiums for smokers were so much hgher. I still miss smoking cigarettes.


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