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Stephen Walsh
Stephen Walsh
10 months ago

There are over 100,000 farmers in the UK so the cost of crime figures quoted are fairly low per farmer, albeit very painful for the victims. And most farmers can’t afford a Land Rover Defender. According to Keir Starmer “I gave up as a matter of principle years ago on the basis that eating meat wasn’t the right thing for the body and the planet”. Both Starmer and his wife have been strict vegetarians for many years, which puts them in a pretty small (some might say extreme) minority for people of their age. If farmers think they’ll get a better deal from Starmer, Yvette Cooper, or (heaven help us) the Green Party, they unfortunately have another thing coming. The opposition parties are as reckless about British food security as they are about British energy security.

Last edited 10 months ago by Stephen Walsh
Dougie Undersub
Dougie Undersub
10 months ago
Reply to  Stephen Walsh

That wasn’t a pepperoni pizza he had in Durham then?

JR Stoker
JR Stoker
10 months ago
Reply to  Stephen Walsh

The Landrover Defenders that are nicked for parts are the old ones which are difficult to procure parts for!

Dougie Undersub
Dougie Undersub
10 months ago
Reply to  Stephen Walsh

That wasn’t a pepperoni pizza he had in Durham then?

JR Stoker
JR Stoker
10 months ago
Reply to  Stephen Walsh

The Landrover Defenders that are nicked for parts are the old ones which are difficult to procure parts for!

Stephen Walsh
Stephen Walsh
10 months ago

There are over 100,000 farmers in the UK so the cost of crime figures quoted are fairly low per farmer, albeit very painful for the victims. And most farmers can’t afford a Land Rover Defender. According to Keir Starmer “I gave up as a matter of principle years ago on the basis that eating meat wasn’t the right thing for the body and the planet”. Both Starmer and his wife have been strict vegetarians for many years, which puts them in a pretty small (some might say extreme) minority for people of their age. If farmers think they’ll get a better deal from Starmer, Yvette Cooper, or (heaven help us) the Green Party, they unfortunately have another thing coming. The opposition parties are as reckless about British food security as they are about British energy security.

Last edited 10 months ago by Stephen Walsh
Chris Amies
Chris Amies
10 months ago

Puts me in mind of Chesterton’s “The Secret People.” Conservatives seem to assume the countryside will vote for them even while they use the countryside as an open sewer.

Chris Amies
Chris Amies
10 months ago

Puts me in mind of Chesterton’s “The Secret People.” Conservatives seem to assume the countryside will vote for them even while they use the countryside as an open sewer.

Stephen Rimmer
Stephen Rimmer
10 months ago

I personally think that if Police don’t solve a burglary within a reasonable time frame then the insurance company should have free reign to sue the Police for the cost of the insurance payout.

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
10 months ago
Reply to  Stephen Rimmer

Hear hear! Plod are hopeless and bent!

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
10 months ago
Reply to  Stephen Rimmer

Hear hear! Plod are hopeless and bent!

Stephen Rimmer
Stephen Rimmer
10 months ago

I personally think that if Police don’t solve a burglary within a reasonable time frame then the insurance company should have free reign to sue the Police for the cost of the insurance payout.

Victoria Cooper
Victoria Cooper
10 months ago

Labour doesn’t have a hope in hell in the countryside unless it abandons its woke agenda. Despite incomers, country people are down to earth. They also have a great understanding and love of the land, seeing that it was they who managed it over hundreds of years and shaped the Britain we know today (or knew…) So probably not so keen on open borders. The other crime that has been neglected in the countryside is drugs. Untrammelled by the “sophistications” of the city, they have been an easy sitting target. As for “Labour being the party of law and order” – I nearly choked. Like saying Labour is the party of economic growth. And don’t get me started on Defra.

Victoria Cooper
Victoria Cooper
10 months ago

Labour doesn’t have a hope in hell in the countryside unless it abandons its woke agenda. Despite incomers, country people are down to earth. They also have a great understanding and love of the land, seeing that it was they who managed it over hundreds of years and shaped the Britain we know today (or knew…) So probably not so keen on open borders. The other crime that has been neglected in the countryside is drugs. Untrammelled by the “sophistications” of the city, they have been an easy sitting target. As for “Labour being the party of law and order” – I nearly choked. Like saying Labour is the party of economic growth. And don’t get me started on Defra.

P N
P N
10 months ago

Anyone in the countryside who thinks voting Labour will improve matters needs their head examining.

Last edited 10 months ago by P N
Oliver Nicholson
Oliver Nicholson
10 months ago
Reply to  P N

There is also the small matter of field sports.

Oliver Nicholson
Oliver Nicholson
10 months ago
Reply to  P N

There is also the small matter of field sports.

P N
P N
10 months ago

Anyone in the countryside who thinks voting Labour will improve matters needs their head examining.

Last edited 10 months ago by P N
Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
10 months ago

There is a crime in the countryside that I believe should attract capital punishment… shiny new roof racked Land Rover defenders with wide wheels disgorging people with Children called Courtenay, Tiger Jayde and Chardonnay all decked out in shiny new now totally passee Berbours and Hunter gum boots, fresh up from intra M25 nu britn……

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
10 months ago

There is a crime in the countryside that I believe should attract capital punishment… shiny new roof racked Land Rover defenders with wide wheels disgorging people with Children called Courtenay, Tiger Jayde and Chardonnay all decked out in shiny new now totally passee Berbours and Hunter gum boots, fresh up from intra M25 nu britn……

Alan Gore
Alan Gore
10 months ago

Here in the US we can just shoot the bastards, but if you live in a country where just carrying a cricket bat in public requires that you be able to prove you are on your way to a game, more rural policing is the only solution. If the thieves are using drones, why can’t the police extend their operational range in the same way?

Billy Bob
Billy Bob
10 months ago
Reply to  Alan Gore

In America your likely be shot by the crook before you had chance to pull your weapon. While having your gear stolen is incredibly annoying, I’d rather that than ending up in a gunfight with a 50-50 chance of survival

Billy Bob
Billy Bob
10 months ago
Reply to  Alan Gore

In America your likely be shot by the crook before you had chance to pull your weapon. While having your gear stolen is incredibly annoying, I’d rather that than ending up in a gunfight with a 50-50 chance of survival

Alan Gore
Alan Gore
10 months ago

Here in the US we can just shoot the bastards, but if you live in a country where just carrying a cricket bat in public requires that you be able to prove you are on your way to a game, more rural policing is the only solution. If the thieves are using drones, why can’t the police extend their operational range in the same way?

j watson
j watson
10 months ago

It’s nearly all gone wrong hasn’t it.
Listening to Cameron/Osborne evidence at Covid Inquiry certainly makes one ponder how much our current problems were seeded in the austerity strategy they initiated (and which has never really ended). Even the IMF, no bastion of Marxist economics, concluded we’d squeezed too hard.
The longer term affects are everywhere now. There is a long term cost consequence to the ideology that was pursued over and above that which others felt economically unnecessary. Remember to rebalance one’s finances it’s what we put in too that makes a difference and the fixation with tax cuts led us to squeeze essential services beyond a sensible balance point.

Andrew Raiment
Andrew Raiment
10 months ago
Reply to  j watson

Looks like you have posted on the wrong article.

j watson
j watson
10 months ago
Reply to  Andrew Raiment

Rural crime, cuts in policing?
Can’t get a rural GP appt – cuts in doctor numbers?
Etc
I assume too much I know

Last edited 10 months ago by j watson
j watson
j watson
10 months ago
Reply to  Andrew Raiment

Rural crime, cuts in policing?
Can’t get a rural GP appt – cuts in doctor numbers?
Etc
I assume too much I know

Last edited 10 months ago by j watson
Dougie Undersub
Dougie Undersub
10 months ago
Reply to  j watson

There was no austerity, that was just smoke and mirrors talk from Osborne to keep the markets on side. Public spending went up, in real terms, every year from 2010. Spending may not have been as high as you might have wished but that’s not austerity.

Desmond Wolf
Desmond Wolf
10 months ago

Well not for the most vulnerable and not if take into account population rises. The stats have been much massaged by the rising spending on pensions which hid the fact that there were freezes for the bulk of benefits.
As this article makes clear:
‘The 2010 Conservative-led government chose to implement a type of austerity that reshuffled spending away from the future and current generations by cutting spending on education (crumbling schools, tuition fees) and the working poor (tax credits and housing benefit cuts), to state pension recipients. This, of course, is not to suggest that state pension recipients have been sheltered from austerity. In fact, the UK’s state pension is among the lowest in developed countries with old age poverty sharply on the rise.’
https://www.economicshelp.org/blog/21496/economics/economic-record-of-osborne-and-cameron-2010-2016/

Desmond Wolf
Desmond Wolf
10 months ago

Well not for the most vulnerable and not if take into account population rises. The stats have been much massaged by the rising spending on pensions which hid the fact that there were freezes for the bulk of benefits.
As this article makes clear:
‘The 2010 Conservative-led government chose to implement a type of austerity that reshuffled spending away from the future and current generations by cutting spending on education (crumbling schools, tuition fees) and the working poor (tax credits and housing benefit cuts), to state pension recipients. This, of course, is not to suggest that state pension recipients have been sheltered from austerity. In fact, the UK’s state pension is among the lowest in developed countries with old age poverty sharply on the rise.’
https://www.economicshelp.org/blog/21496/economics/economic-record-of-osborne-and-cameron-2010-2016/

Andrew Raiment
Andrew Raiment
10 months ago
Reply to  j watson

Looks like you have posted on the wrong article.

Dougie Undersub
Dougie Undersub
10 months ago
Reply to  j watson

There was no austerity, that was just smoke and mirrors talk from Osborne to keep the markets on side. Public spending went up, in real terms, every year from 2010. Spending may not have been as high as you might have wished but that’s not austerity.

j watson
j watson
10 months ago

It’s nearly all gone wrong hasn’t it.
Listening to Cameron/Osborne evidence at Covid Inquiry certainly makes one ponder how much our current problems were seeded in the austerity strategy they initiated (and which has never really ended). Even the IMF, no bastion of Marxist economics, concluded we’d squeezed too hard.
The longer term affects are everywhere now. There is a long term cost consequence to the ideology that was pursued over and above that which others felt economically unnecessary. Remember to rebalance one’s finances it’s what we put in too that makes a difference and the fixation with tax cuts led us to squeeze essential services beyond a sensible balance point.

Howard Gleave
Howard Gleave
10 months ago

Your figures of the low millions is hilarious. The theft of my reversing camera is £800. The government’s reaponse to Covid was…£600 bn? This article is divorced from reality .

Howard Gleave
Howard Gleave
10 months ago

Your figures of the low millions is hilarious. The theft of my reversing camera is £800. The government’s reaponse to Covid was…£600 bn? This article is divorced from reality .

Alphonse Pfarti
Alphonse Pfarti
10 months ago

This is rather muddled. Yes, the young female farmer says she won’t vote Tory. This is in no way evidence that she or others will vote Labour or Green. Indeed, the Green vote is most likely town types who have relocated and taken it upon themselves to deliver sermons to the locals. Cooper’s remarks in now way guarantee any increase in rural policing and theft of livestock and machinery might be seen as a bit more than ‘antisocial behaviour’.

Alphonse Pfarti
Alphonse Pfarti
10 months ago

This is rather muddled. Yes, the young female farmer says she won’t vote Tory. This is in no way evidence that she or others will vote Labour or Green. Indeed, the Green vote is most likely town types who have relocated and taken it upon themselves to deliver sermons to the locals. Cooper’s remarks in now way guarantee any increase in rural policing and theft of livestock and machinery might be seen as a bit more than ‘antisocial behaviour’.

Timothy Baker
Timothy Baker
2 months ago

Lewis may be an old market town, but two of the major local employers are local government and Sussex University, a few miles down the road at Falmer. Students may choose in live in trendy Brighton, but a lot of admin and teaching staff prefer Lewes. I personally doubt that Maria Caulfield, excellent MP though she is, will survive the next General Election, despite the fact she is a hard worker and has achieved good results for her constituents.

Robbie K
Robbie K
10 months ago

The author always seems to thrive on the cynical and nihilistic. Awful content.

Stuart McCullough
Stuart McCullough
10 months ago
Reply to  Robbie K

Says a Townie, no doubt.

Robbie K
Robbie K
10 months ago

You get an uptick for that. The ‘countryside’ is an illusion that folks like Lewis-Stempel prefer to perpetuate, building this grand vision of how they are custodians of nature being oppressed by wicked government legislation. Truth is they will turn anything for a buck, virtues and morals are instantly forgotten if something is affecting the profit margin. And I can guarantee the livestock disappearances are fraudulent insurance claims – moving animals is a long, difficult and noisy business, amazing therefore how they mysteriously vanish without being noticed.

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
10 months ago
Reply to  Robbie K

Quite.. one just has to look at all the ghastly urban middles out on let days in their shiny too new shooting kit….

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
10 months ago
Reply to  Robbie K

Quite.. one just has to look at all the ghastly urban middles out on let days in their shiny too new shooting kit….

Robbie K
Robbie K
10 months ago

You get an uptick for that. The ‘countryside’ is an illusion that folks like Lewis-Stempel prefer to perpetuate, building this grand vision of how they are custodians of nature being oppressed by wicked government legislation. Truth is they will turn anything for a buck, virtues and morals are instantly forgotten if something is affecting the profit margin. And I can guarantee the livestock disappearances are fraudulent insurance claims – moving animals is a long, difficult and noisy business, amazing therefore how they mysteriously vanish without being noticed.

Stuart McCullough
Stuart McCullough
10 months ago
Reply to  Robbie K

Says a Townie, no doubt.

Robbie K
Robbie K
10 months ago

The author always seems to thrive on the cynical and nihilistic. Awful content.