By davidjay
#11234
If ever the right idea was being carried out by the wrong people it's this one. I know there's two sides to every story but I'm struggling to see this lot as anything other than a bunch of entitled brats.


Tearful woman pleads with demonstrators blocking Blackwall Tunnel to let her see her sick mother


https://news.sky.com/story/insulate-bri ... s-12425750
Oboogie liked this
User avatar
By Malcolm Armsteen
#11249
I've been watching their interviews on TV in the past hour. I'm not impressed at all.

There are ways of persuading, there are already groups who can be led into these policies. But it requires hard work and long-term commitment, which these people do not demonstrate.
User avatar
By Abernathy
#11255
Rosvanian wrote: Mon Oct 04, 2021 7:08 pm It's desperate stuff. If someone wanted to do damage to the sustainability agenda, they could do a lot worse than this.
Don’t you mean they couldn’t do a lot worse than this ?
By Youngian
#11262
davidjay wrote: Mon Oct 04, 2021 12:58 pm If ever the right idea was being carried out by the wrong people it's this one. I know there's two sides to every story but I'm struggling to see this lot as anything other than a bunch of entitled brats.


Tearful woman pleads with demonstrators blocking Blackwall Tunnel to let her see her sick mother


https://news.sky.com/story/insulate-bri ... s-12425750
I doubt this group will change most people’s view that insulation is a good idea. But they’re doing their best.
davidjay liked this
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#11271
This looks like the worst idea since Extinction Rebellion decided to cause havoc at Canning Town station.

I mean, I know the media doesn't report regular protest, but at least disrupt something more appropriate than electrically powered mass transit. At least make me think, "Well, I'm glad it wasn't me being delayed, but I sort of see their point".
By Bones McCoy
#11274
Abernathy wrote: Mon Oct 04, 2021 7:22 pm
Rosvanian wrote: Mon Oct 04, 2021 7:08 pm It's desperate stuff. If someone wanted to do damage to the sustainability agenda, they could do a lot worse than this.
Don’t you mean they couldn’t do a lot worse than this ?
It's almost like the fuel lobby has hired a fringe group to discredit the cause.
mattomac liked this
User avatar
By kreuzberger
#11277
Where to even begin with this. On the one hand, "won't someone think of the King's horses" but on the other, IB and IXR need to find and deploy something that the UK seems to deem optional at the moment - leadership.

Of course, ambulances need to be let through the cordons but the disruptions are the only measure that seems to be cutting through, for better or for worse. There again, when protest now needs by its very nature to be decentralised, it is very hard to provide and communicate leadership when hashtags are being flooded by the cops and sundry fasho groups.

In the longer term, of course, tons and cities need to mobilise from within local governmental decision making. Free, safe, and convenient public transport along the lines of the best of the NHS, insulation grants for the woeful housing stock supported by the energy franchisees, and transport policies which relegate cars to third-class road users.

Meantime, stop being twats and let the essential services do their vital thing.
Tubby Isaacs liked this
User avatar
By Andy McDandy
#11293
Back then, Special Branch protection only covered the very top jobs and people such as the NI secretary. Nowadays many more ministers have it, plus heightened home security. Anyone trying the coal stunt would risk a fatal dose of high speed lead poisoning.

Another issue here is what constitutes an essential service? As seen at both the current fuel shortages and the 2000 protests, opinions vary. Ambulances and fire engines, obviously. Police vehicles - depends on where in the country you are. Many taxi drivers would consider their services essential, as would delivery drivers and others reliant on their van - especially in the current climate. And "essential for wider society" vs "essential for me making a living and feeding the kids" is a whole other question. Next level down, the disabled person who needs their car to get about, or the parent who needs to collect their kid from school. Are they essential users? Well, certainly on a personal level again. Maybe that says something about the cult of the self, but the point is, very few people would classify their vehicle use as not essential.
By davidjay
#11300
Andy McDandy wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 9:14 am Back then, Special Branch protection only covered the very top jobs and people such as the NI secretary. Nowadays many more ministers have it, plus heightened home security. Anyone trying the coal stunt would risk a fatal dose of high speed lead poisoning.

Another issue here is what constitutes an essential service? As seen at both the current fuel shortages and the 2000 protests, opinions vary. Ambulances and fire engines, obviously. Police vehicles - depends on where in the country you are. Many taxi drivers would consider their services essential, as would delivery drivers and others reliant on their van - especially in the current climate. And "essential for wider society" vs "essential for me making a living and feeding the kids" is a whole other question. Next level down, the disabled person who needs their car to get about, or the parent who needs to collect their kid from school. Are they essential users? Well, certainly on a personal level again. Maybe that says something about the cult of the self, but the point is, very few people would classify their vehicle use as not essential.
Good point all of them, but in the me-first culture of modern Britain, being filmed preventing a woman from visiting her ill mother in hospital is never going to win any converts.
By mattomac
#11308
Tubby Isaacs wrote: Mon Oct 04, 2021 9:57 pm
mattomac wrote: Mon Oct 04, 2021 7:23 pm They should have blocked the Tory party conference.

Plenty would have supported that.
Probably very hard to get anywhere near it in fairness.
Someone nearly got a cone on IDS head.... it's a start.
Tubby Isaacs, Nigredo liked this
User avatar
By The Weeping Angel
#11316
davidjay wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 11:25 am
Andy McDandy wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 9:14 am Back then, Special Branch protection only covered the very top jobs and people such as the NI secretary. Nowadays many more ministers have it, plus heightened home security. Anyone trying the coal stunt would risk a fatal dose of high speed lead poisoning.

Another issue here is what constitutes an essential service? As seen at both the current fuel shortages and the 2000 protests, opinions vary. Ambulances and fire engines, obviously. Police vehicles - depends on where in the country you are. Many taxi drivers would consider their services essential, as would delivery drivers and others reliant on their van - especially in the current climate. And "essential for wider society" vs "essential for me making a living and feeding the kids" is a whole other question. Next level down, the disabled person who needs their car to get about, or the parent who needs to collect their kid from school. Are they essential users? Well, certainly on a personal level again. Maybe that says something about the cult of the self, but the point is, very few people would classify their vehicle use as not essential.
Good point all of them, but in the me-first culture of modern Britain, being filmed preventing a woman from visiting her ill mother in hospital is never going to win any converts.
That doesn't win converts in any culture.
User avatar
By Nigredo
#11344
Boiler wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 5:33 pm I've actually looked at their website and how they would achieve this.

It looks like it relies on external cladding for older buildings and there seems to be a lot of mention of ground-source heat pumps as well as solar.
The retrofitting market will be huge once it eventually takes off (and quite rightly because making thousands of homes more energy efficient is an eminently sensible idea).

Companies are still biding their time for when local councils are desperate and have no choice but to accept silly tender bids from the former though.
long long title how many chars? lets see 123 ok more? yes 60

We have created lots of YouTube videos just so you can achieve [...]

Another post test yes yes yes or no, maybe ni? :-/

The best flat phpBB theme around. Period. Fine craftmanship and [...]

Do you need a super MOD? Well here it is. chew on this

All you need is right here. Content tag, SEO, listing, Pizza and spaghetti [...]

Lasagna on me this time ok? I got plenty of cash

this should be fantastic. but what about links,images, bbcodes etc etc? [...]