Olap 12 hours ago • 100%
I think the 2014 made money, but Glasgow got a big grant to update the velodrome and pool to do it. Big grant this time too, and fewer events should mean less road closures
Olap 1 day ago • 100%
Yes, Japan in Super Rugby makes a lot of sense to me. And Argentina with MLR (who should also invite some Canadians too). And I never thought you did say that about SA, but I did!
Fantastic news, 2014 was genuinely great to be in Glasgow. And Glasgow has many venues ready to roll, so the reduction to 10 different disciplines makes lots of sense. I attended a fair bit of the rugby sevens, so hoping to see that again, but swimming, cycling, and athletics are all no brainers for Glasgow to host, as would badminton, indoor bowls, and curling potentially. Exciting times!
Olap 2 days ago • 100%
I was pretty adament SA wouldn't add much to European rugby. But I've been proven wrong, they have enlived the competition and are no pushovers. Your comments about the timezones show why a club world cup won't work too. Though I would love to see a Champions Cup vs Super Rugby match annually
Olap 2 days ago • 100%
Moar DRS, moar crashes for singapore!
Olap 2 days ago • 100%
Everyone talked about tanks as ww1 winners. But people don't quite realise the stupendous artillery advantage the allies had. 2 or 3 to 1 by the end of the war in places. And significantly more shells. There's a reason we are still digging then up today
The only people that actually want this are the Welsh. The URC is working well, the prem needs to reign in the spending, and the Champions Cup needs to change to a format people understand. I'd go full knock out like a football cup personally. Sorted, no B&I league needed. But I do suspect NZ and Aus would like to see SA back in Super Rugby
Back Doune the Rabbit hole, the first iteration was very highly rated, but I do suspect Scotland has enough wee festivals, and with prices only ever increasing for attendees - will this one be able to break even? Find out next year! Anyone make it to a festival this year in Scotland?
Olap 3 days ago • 100%
Update: rejected as expected
A literal monorail. I bet the council approves it and then Holyrood has to step in. Surely national parks need differing planning standards, this is madness!
Olap 6 days ago • 100%
I put you down for WooWoo cans. Do you have to await a report now?
Olap 6 days ago • 100%
We aww dae. 400 tickets or there aboot. And Palomas, and tequila, and corn beers, and margaritas, and giant chili costumes, and sombreros, and face paint
Olap 6 days ago • 100%
geoblocked :(
What a fuck up. The man in charge at the time, has now been rewarded with a Labour seat in Edinburgh. Labour: rewarding failure since time immemorial
Olap 6 days ago • 100%
Where's your preferred source of wanking material then? Progressed from nudey mags in the bushes?
Olap 6 days ago • 100%
Chili cook off tomorrow! 10 bars, 10 chili pots, 1 drunken Olap
Taking it easy tonight in prep
Olap 6 days ago • 100%
:set color=blue
Olap 6 days ago • 100%
Some tasty match ups going on paper. Getting to a game yourself?
Olap 7 days ago • 100%
That's child's play for oil cash over 13 years. It's also less than half the story with opex not being divulged, and earnings is weasel words which isn't EBITDA or revenue or actual accounting terms, which can hide a lot of misgivings. Show me the full accounts and I'll be able to tell you more in other words. This is jim rattling his tax sabre still, and Holyrood can do fuck all really - it doesn't set any business taxes. This lies wholly with Westminster, who can certainly give in to Jim. Or buy it off him and have GBEnergy have their first assets. Or sink it and ensure Scotland is dependent on it's neighbour despite having the lions share of production
Poor Grangemouth, big blow to the area. Leaving Scotland without a refinery forcing us to rely on English production an obvious defenestration to independence ambitions too. Really tragic to see under a Labour government, combined with port Talbot - just what is Starmer doing???
Dodson was bullish and unapologetic; Tom here talks of cash, but I'd prefer to see bridges being built and listening. It's no coincidence the amateur game is finding things tough, and the pathways aren't there. It's no surprise the money blackhole is there when the pro club sides are obvious money pits too. Funnily enough likely due to the pathways not being there so talent is bought in at bigger prices, this includes coaching staff which aren't helping with the community game either. Re: money. Squeezing the fan for more will quickly start to backfire, any investment in the matchday experience is unlikely to offset its cost in significant terms and amount to little more than a distraction imo. Redeveloping Murrayfield into a 100k stadium the only real possibility of significant earning potential, but what a cost that will bring. Instead costs must come down, and that's the wage bill. I've no idea what a player earns, but between Edinburgh and Glasgow it must be over 100 full time professionals each including sales & marketing, coaching, squad, rehab/medical, scouts, managers, and others I'm sure. Glasgow still leasing their ground annually too, I'll bet GCC ask a pretty penny. And Scotland staff must be phenomenal too. Alex here with a hard first couple of years
Well done Unite and GMB! Diageo have been extracting profit for decades now, they can pony up for staff
Olap 1 week ago • 100%
Love the reversal on the usual meme
Poor Midge and Oats. Sadly as we add more to the wild, more will die, but it's good to hear that some are doing well all the same
Not just the council. No confidence in the highland health board either
Olap 1 week ago • 100%
That's so evil, and given Enterprise's cancellation mid season also: perfect
Olap 2 weeks ago • 100%
10 to go and Australia are just embarrassing now sadly. NZ just can't lose to them.
Olap 2 weeks ago • 100%
Argentina game is a cracker so far. 50minutes in and a 1 score game! Both sides looking hungry for it
Olap 2 weeks ago • 100%
If Australia somehow manage to pinch a win, do you wait for November to change?
Olap 2 weeks ago • 100%
Well, bollocks. Stress induced already eh? Reading anything good at least?
Olap 2 weeks ago • 100%
Leeks, washed and 1cm chopped. Tatties, peeled and 2cm cubed. Maybe 4 medium tatties to 1 big leek. Stock cubes/pots about 1 per leek, preferably chicken or veg. Half a 1cm diced carrot per leek is optional, but I like it. Boil for 20, stick blend after. Salt, pepper to finish, serve with a dollop of sour cream and scallions on top, or a drizzle of cheffy oil with french stick and plenty of butter
If you're feeling bold though. French Onion soup - Deliah Smith's is delightful with the beefy base and cheesey gruyere croutons https://www.deliaonline.com/recipes/international/european/french/french-onion-soup
Or Dodie McMuckie's cullen skink is fantastic: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mB4YQUy4I0w
Or maw Broons' cookbook my ither go to. She's a fine lentil and a couple of broths in there. Hopefully inspiration for you!
Olap 2 weeks ago • 100%
Working late and stressing obviously not working then. Make sure you're plan is sound, cut it as much as you can, and then finish bloody early as I'll bet you're well past that stage already. Teachers get in such a tizzy but the LA isn't there on a witch hunt! And if you are short anywhere, remember it's your head's issue and not yours
And aye, weather's been far too wet this year, my poor plum tree gave a bumper crop last year, and only about 20 this year :( apples looking better thankfully. Best of luck with the bbq, and my top tip: no burgers on the bbq, be more creative
Can NZ get some revenge for last week? Will Australia show up and get their act together?
Olap 2 weeks ago • 100%
Gie driech in Embra the day, got a mate roond an we lost at Pandemic :( Aff tae tabletop Scotland the moro, shuid be guid an hopye mair successfu than the nicht! RPGs an board gaming ahoy, mibbe a new RPG book, or sum dice
Sunday ah reckun sum cuikin, thinkin it's aboot time fer soupin. Leek an tattie aways a favourite in this hoose - an dead simple!
Whatever happened to the midge burger?
Good to hear, no women should be harassed for her choices
Better to use the savings than any bigger cuts imo, and the cuts in this article affect the least they could I suspect. Well done on balancing the books! The Guardian failing to highlight that Starmer is doing yet more failed austerity the bigger problem imo. Sycophantic claptrap to have any criticism of the SNP without explaining why they have to make these cuts
Olap 2 weeks ago • 100%
Excel mostly, csv wasn't much of a standard and thus it's horrible to work with. We can fix that with a parquet importer and exporter!
I don't object to a resort, but a monorail ffs? Scale it back and you'll get it through!
Olap 2 weeks ago • 66%
Friends don't let friends use csv in 2024. Excel needs a good parquet importer and exporter today. Ya hearing Microsoft? Quit pissing around with recall and build something useful!
Olap 2 weeks ago • 100%
About fucking time
Scotland leading the way back in the 10th century with its international outloom. Proving that brexit is still bullshit
Olap 3 weeks ago • 100%
Yup, https://duckduckgo.com/?q=horse+gas+mask&t=fpas&iax=images&ia=images - loads of varities though I'm not sure on numbers deployed. Due to the rather static lines of defense I do believe the second world war actually saw more horses used! The nazis were always scrambling for oil and petroleum and thus they utilised stupendous amounts of horses
Olap 3 weeks ago • 100%
Do you play in a club yourself? It was glorious today in Scotland for the first day of the men's season
Olap 3 weeks ago • 100%
The thing about air: there's a lot of it. Not many gases take that long to settle/dissipate. And a gas mask is pretty effective at filtering. I do imagine worst case scenario in the heaviest bombardment is a brief evacuation of current line of defense only, as this is what happened back in the somme. It was far more effective vs artillery: artillery regiments weren't equipped as well and thus they were denied counter battery fire for enough time to allow front lines to cross no mans land. Which were backed up by creeping barrages, which I haven't read much out in Ukraine yet
Olap 3 weeks ago • 100%
All Blacks throwing this one away! 5 to go, nail biting stuff
Olap 3 weeks ago • 98%
Gas in WW1 changed the battlefield for about 6 weeks whilst they scrambled for gas masks, but after this it didn't have the effect either side thought it would. A stupid distraction that will earn Putin and his generals a trip to the Hague for sure
Olap 3 weeks ago • 100%
Bannocks also powered the last Scottish army - the Jacobite incursion into England
Olap 3 weeks ago • 100%
Love the blackened thrash on steroids here, on the to see list for sure
Olap 3 weeks ago • 100%
Lots of Tolkien fanboys getting their knickers in a twist about it. But I rated season 1 quite highly, been looking forward to this. I'm also currently listening to the Lord of the Rings when I get a spare moment though...
Olap 3 weeks ago • 100%
Going anywhere this weekend, or just recuperating then?
Olap 3 weeks ago • 100%
Ooh, well done then. Give it a year or two and you'll get your own manager to manage!
Olap 3 weeks ago • 100%
First three ae S2 only the noo. And gettin oot when ye've kids is the ainly way tae stay sane like
Olap 3 weeks ago • 100%
Goos fer ye. Folk dinnae leave jobs, they leave managers, and that ramble was a new manager one!
Olap 3 weeks ago • 100%
Men's rugby kicks aff the moro, will head oot tae swatch a bit o it. The nicht ah reckun world of tanks, followed by a film ae sum sort, ah'm waitin fer mah best mate tae cum roon fer watching Rings o Power - mibbes Sunday.
Nice weather though mibbe tak the wee ane up Arthur's Seat
Friday nicht an wha's awa oot? Sun's oot, last gallus weekend ae the summer upon us
Anyone sat through them all yet?
Both games Saturday 31st South Africa vs New Zealand - 1700 SAST (UTC+2) - Johannesburg Argentina vs Australia - 1900 ART (UTC-2) - La Plata Predictions in the thread very welcomed
SUDDENLY, it’s winter. Not just because of the sodden weather, but also the snell winds louring over our political landscape. Autumn has happened gradually this month with the Scottish Government axing schemes. No free asylum bus passes for asylum seekers. A resumption of rail peak fares. No more Open Fund for artists, writers and musicians. £5 million removed from the nature restoration fund to finance pay settlements for local government. No Warsaw office to extend Scotland’s international office network. And of course, the means testing of Winter Fuel Payments in Scotland. There are also indirect cuts with axed teacher posts being planned by Glasgow and almost every political shade of Scottish council. Parent groups blame the councils. Many of them blame the SNP’s council tax freeze and others the austerity set in train by Labour’s new Chancellor, Rachel Reeves. Yet more cuts lurk within the latest NHS waiting lists. Of course, more generous Scottish pay awards have reduced the economic and social cost of strike action should cut key worker reliance on top-up state benefits, help reverse demoralisation and the use of more expensive agency staff. But if there’s a Scottish recruitment freeze, then over-burdened doctors and nurses will still head for better-resourced lives elsewhere. It’s suddenly winter. The question is what to do and who’s to blame. According to the Scottish Fiscal Commission: “While UK Government policies contribute to the pressures on the Scottish budget, much of it comes from the Scottish Government’s own decisions. Higher than expected public sector pay deals, the renewed council tax freeze and welfare spending – matters within the SNP’s control – have all added to the difficulties of balancing the government’s budget.” Really? The council tax freeze is indeed hugely debatable. But when even Labour are agreeing pay rises with public sector workers instead of spending billions on long destructive disputes, could Scotland lag behind? The Brexit we didn’t vote for means fewer European workers, and since Labour won’t revisit Brexit or apply geographical policies (lest that acknowledge Scotland’s status as a nation) we must compete with the wealthier, better-resourced south of England for staff. Although Scotland has so much to offer, it’s not a fight this or any other northern country tends to win. Equally, UK-wide curbs on the Winter Fuel Payment look equal but will obviously hit Scotland worse, and energy-rich but fuel-poverty-stricken parts of the Highlands and Islands worse again. Geography matters – but that’s off the Westminster table. So, should a Scottish Government really not be trying to mitigate that? Indeed, is anyone but the Tories really saying that Scotland could afford NOT to agree pay deals that give our public services a better chance of recruitment and retention? And as for welfare spending, should we just enable the bedroom tax like Tory/Labour England when we know, 75% of those affected are disabled folk who need a spare bedroom for equipment or for a partner to sleep in? Perhaps though, the commission is eyeing larger budget items – like free prescriptions and free university tuition. According to a recent Scotsman leader: “Means-testing prescription charges, with provisions for the most expensive drugs, would ensure no one would be denied treatment on the basis of cost and free up extra funding for life-saving frontline services that are bordering on collapse… it seems Scottish exceptionalism comes at a price we cannot afford.” A poll sponsored by Gordon Brown’s Our Scottish Future last October found 54% of Scots believe universal free prescriptions should end so the NHS can be improved. Alex Salmond’s SNP government abolished prescription charges in 2011. By 2020/21 the annual bill had reached £1.4 billion – though that covers both the cost of items dispensed and of providing the service. MEANWHILE, in a Labour-led Commons debate calling for free prescriptions in England earlier this year (!) Andrea Leadsom said: “In 2022-23, those contributions gave about £670m in revenue to England’s NHS – a sum equivalent to 12,500 full-time nurses and health visitors for a year.” Now, I’m no health economist. But the likely income from paid prescriptions in Scotland is likely to be about an eighth of that English sum. It’s not nothing. But it doesn’t come anywhere near offsetting the overall prescriptions bill or transforming hospital waiting lists – as England has already found. BMA Scotland has already stated its support for free prescriptions pointing out they particularly benefit folk with complex, long-term conditions: “Any reversal of that threatens to be costly and have a negative impact on population health, building up further costs and pressure on our NHS in the long term.” Well quite. And of course, many Yessers will discount means testing as an essentially Unionist position. Yet, the argument is already falling on fertile ground. At a recent conference, working-class community leaders were talking about means-testing, prescriptions and even folk on state pensions felt they were in a position to pay, scoffing at the old argument that means-testing costs almost as much to administer as it ever saves. Perhaps the Scottish Government’s reluctant decision to rubber stamp Westminster’s means testing of Winter Fuel Payments means a Rubicon has been crossed. Now it will get harder and harder to resist the erosion of the universality that characterises progressive Scotland and is so admired by public health experts in other parts of the UK and abroad. And with the loss of that stance, Scotland’s national distinctiveness will also wither, unless there is resistance or a better, well-explained, front-footed strategy. This is a very high-stakes game, yet so far there has not been an effective, alternative narrative-creating response from the SNP/Scottish Government, save a few cagey interviews on Radio Scotland and “I told you so” tweets from Stephen Flynn. Now, the SNP’s Westminster leader certainly did tell everyone the £20bn black hole in UK Government spending would force cuts or higher taxes from the new Labour government during the recent General Election campaign. Labour speakers chose their words carefully, but basically lied through their collective teeth – especially about energy costs, which will once again soar this winter. But we’re here now. And simply pointing out Labour lied and could currently choose otherwise, isn’t enough. How will the SNP leadership respond? If the SNP won’t point out that independence gives us the chance to handle our whole public finances differently, then when? If the SNP insists Labour should have the courage/decency to stop keeking endlessly o’er their collective shoulder for accusations of being spendthrift closet-Corbyns, will they boldly go where Labour fears to tread and raise taxes? Will the SNP be honest and pro-active, setting out spending and constitutional options in this austere, winter-like new normal or will they just try to cut quietly and weather the storms of public discontent? And how will the SNP conference tackle this spending crisis, bubbling up as it has since motions were submitted and the agenda created? A FEW motions could produce more cash for the Scottish Exchequer – but given past resistance to a land tax, the SNP leadership will likely oppose or just ignore that proposal if passed. Will there be calls to raise the Scottish income tax to protect services? And above all, will John Swinney produce a strategy or let cuts keep raining down mixter maxter, meaning few in the public or third sectors will be able to plan ahead because they fear their service will be next? Of course, as Craig Dalzell and Richard Murphy have eloquently argued in this paper – with agreement from the far from radical Institute for Fiscal Studies – Reeves could and should borrow more money rather than imposing cuts. What’s happening is indeed the product of a political choice by the new Labour government using the weary metaphor of belt-tightening deployed by Thatcher, Osborne et al. Except that metaphor works. No matter how many well-argued pieces demonstrate that cuts to folk who actually spend just damage them and shrink the economy, the enduring meanness of the British public realm compared to any other north European democracy has produced a public resigned to losing “benefits” instead of asking where their taxes have actually gone. And sadly, that includes Scots. So, we can become boiled frogs with a Scottish Government drip feeding cuts in the hope no-one will notice – randomly administered to new programmes or anything due for renewal. Or we can have a brave debate about all of this. Which will it be?
Great to hear something being secured for education and children, as lots of talks from councils of cuts, cuts, cuts sadly. This scheme has seen immense success having started out in the Raploch and TIL it's all over Scotland!
Little over 6m til Holyrood elections. The SNP period looking to be well and truly over. Not a surprise given that the budget for the SG is so tight, we can't pay bin men even. But any party that has been in this long, for a period of such sustained squeezing would feel it. And Libby here quite correvt with no feasible route for the SNP. Far too little at the last manifesto in WM to allow Holyrood to run a vote. Literally no point in voting for the SNP at holyrood at the moment. Unless of course you want to keep Labour, the Tories, and the LibDems out - as these pricks are going to be even more useless, and an assault on free prescriptions, busses for the elderly and young, and Scottish water will all also be on the cards. And wait then for the NHS to start going out in tender for parts. Then wait for more public private partnerships where you and me pay over the odds for everything, and still have to pay to park in Edinburgh Royal for the shame. It's not looking good people unless you have 100K stashed away to invest in these robbers
Yup, Scotland has an embarrassment of power. HVDC lines springing up all over the sea will see it transported to the UK population centers. And the King through the crown estate has already reaped millions, with a recurring revenue of millions more projected. We're going to see hydrogen in a growing way in the coming decade. We're going to see salt batteries installed, and they'll be huge. We're going to see nuclear likely repowering existing sites in Scotland (the SNP left a loop whole - no NEW nuclear power in Scotland). We're going to see more pumped storage finally built. And decarbonise, not because we must (although we must!), but because these techs all stand to make a lot of money. Oil and coal can't stand up to the no running costs of these techs and the installation costs are dropping like stones for them all. What does this mean for the union? The Guardian won't tell you, but Scotland is the biggest cash cow for investors again. Forget the Mccrone report, that will look chump change by 2060. These assets are cash printers - and are you going to benefit? Will the SG?
Having been to Eigg, seems I'll have to pop over to Rùm some time
Foos yer doos loons an quines? How's it going folks? How are we peoples? Ciamar a tha sibh?
Mmm, drama in camp before the boks match. TRC R3 to be juicy
Highland council should take note too
Yes, yes it does!
In Dalgety Bay, The Kingdom of Fife no less. Not just CAMRA either, tripadvisor giving it a 4.5/5 too - who knew fife has something worth visiting?
Lions hype begins! The currently longest serving fly-halves in the Lions nations pairing up? Who doesn't want to see that?
Good news story for us today, who doesn't like seeing a bushy tailed red?
SNP c+s lead council, NOC. A real shame on the people who live there, 180k people now have to have some service curtailed to pay for this botched job. https://renfrewshire.cmis.uk.com/renfrewshire/Councillors/tabid/63/ctl/ViewCMIS_Person/mid/383/id/1177/Default.aspx - here's the convenor, a Jim Paterson, Renfrewshire making it easy to find his interests and he looks pretty clean essentially. Out of his depth most likely
Bets on him coming out full Trump? London can't figure out if going full nutter will do then any good, but this walloper looks to be starting that way. Holyrood has a decency problem indeed, list MSPs who don't have the decency to dissappear after two terms. See Labour and Conservative benches for the best examples
An amazing find, really highlighting how little surveyed our waters are. Hard to imagine having picked up the post a few hours earlier to then going bang without ceremony
Also, an expansion to 24 teams. 6 pools of 4, top 2 go forward automatically, next 4 highest winners, with a knock out of 16 to look forward to too
Holyrood shirking responsibility here, or democratising?