Vote Quimby!
Vote Quimby!
Just had a quick look at the BBC summary of Burnham speech.
Didn't Osbourne say (and try) similar devolutionary things?
And got lambasted for it from other parties?
"Northern Powerhouse". What did that actually consist of? Was it just baubles, like Johnson's levelling up?
Yeah but he didn't make some hilarious gags about running shorts, and that's what the public wants.
I don't like this narrative that you can't say, or adopt, ideas that are contrary to a position that you, or (even more bonkers) a loosely aligned cluster of people with a convenient label to whom you are associated with, previously espoused or decried. Otherwise how could the tories have been able to so fulsomely adopted fascism (or any change in relation to subsequent bad experience redressed)? How can change response to changing conditions? You have been persuaded this is a thing by an establishment that has prospered (at your cost) for centuries by stunting change and broader thinking.
Not that I'm saying these ideas are, or are not, good ones. I just deeply dislike the intellectual merit of a fallacy whataboutery objection.
I'm not sure I understand all of that.
But anyway I was just amused by the fact that an idea can be both good and bad depending on who proposed it.
Schrodingers idea.
On a more important note, the room where Burnham did his presser is where we are having our client day in September.
Get out of town. That is insane.
Isn't that 80% of party politics?
You saying 80% of ideas in politics are shared by more than one party?
Sounds a lot but I've got no stats to prove either way.
It's more like 63% I think.
So we're rounding to whole numbers now? No precision. Games gone