Mike Baines

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Mike Baines

Mike Baines

@PiceaNudge

Retired from computer modelling etc. in multi-nationals. Creator and spotter of b∪⌊⌊sh⍳⊤ figures.

England, United Kingdom Katılım Temmuz 2012
618 Takip Edilen125 Takipçiler
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Mike Baines
Mike Baines@PiceaNudge·
@jameschappers ask DD how much to duplicate all of the EU regulatory bodies and whether these new organizations will be ready st April 2019?
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Pat McFadden
Pat McFadden@patmcfaddenmp·
Modernising the state should be a big mission for the country. Time to stop rooting around for council tax and utility bills to prove who you are and go digital? My interview in the Times. thetimes.com/article/f790cb…
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Mike Baines
Mike Baines@PiceaNudge·
@patmcfaddenmp The Estonian ID system and Blair's phone app proposals have a fundamental weakness - they require immediate access to the internet. There is a better way:
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Jake Richards MP
Jake Richards MP@JakeBenRichards·
I’ve had a little break from Twitter over summer, but return to see the worrying spectacle of senior Conservatives attacking juries and judges, spreading conspiracy theories and hanging out with far right hooligans. A once great Party. Not good for our politics.
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Mike Baines
Mike Baines@PiceaNudge·
@campbellclaret A poor, frightened man, who has not had a privileged life and education. He does not know how to deal with a world of strangers. It is rather sickening when 'superior' people use social media to crush him some more.
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Ed Miliband
Ed Miliband@Ed_Miliband·
Wind power has overtaken gas as Britain’s biggest source of electricity. This is a huge moment in our journey away from energy insecurity and towards clean homegrown power. dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ar…
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Mike Baines
Mike Baines@PiceaNudge·
@Ed_Miliband Misleading! Tell the truth. We do not have a giant battery. Sorry forgot, you cannot tell the whole truth - you are a politician. When will we get bright and brave people in Govt?
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Mike Baines
Mike Baines@PiceaNudge·
@Ed_Miliband So what, precisely, are you going to do cope with current weather, days and days of no sun & little wind in 2030? You haven't even signed off on 2 SMR contenders. Will you buy every battery in the World?
Mike Baines tweet media
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Ed Miliband
Ed Miliband@Ed_Miliband·
Clean power by 2030 is achievable, cheaper, and makes our country more secure. Expert analysis backs our policy and its benefits for the country. Defeatist critics should take note My piece today 👇 theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
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Mike Baines
Mike Baines@PiceaNudge·
Why are the media and politicians ignoring a major and immediate problem: Day after day of no sun and little wind. Imagine freezing fog. Nuclear is the only option. Wake up World! @guardian @independent @FT @BBCNews @thetimes
Mike Baines tweet media
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Mike Baines
Mike Baines@PiceaNudge·
@BBCNews having interrogated every UK elector and fed the data into my Polynomial Stepwise Regressive model, excluding all assumptions and applying the randomised instability algorithm, I am convinced that your exit poll will be of no value. The actual result is shown below.
Mike Baines@PiceaNudge

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Mike Baines retweetledi
Mike Baines
Mike Baines@PiceaNudge·
@jameschappers ask DD how much to duplicate all of the EU regulatory bodies and whether these new organizations will be ready st April 2019?
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Mike Baines
Mike Baines@PiceaNudge·
@campbellclaret I doubt his childhood was steeped in UK & US war films. The Sunak house probably echoed to the sound of Bollywood videos. He's ill-equipped to grasp the importance of D-Day to older Brits who might have voted Tory, so perhaps we should cut him some slack. Or was it deliberate?
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ALASTAIR CAMPBELL
ALASTAIR CAMPBELL@campbellclaret·
Rightly a lot of the focus on Sunak responsibility for coming back from D-Day earlier but who on earth was with him? Did none of his team, none of them, say “hold on a minute, you just cannot do this.” Where was his personal snapper or his bag carrier or his “best pal” James Forsyth? I know it would be beyond their responsibility but I am surprised the police protection team didn’t step in. There is no way in the world TB would ever have done this but if he had I am pretty sure one of our coppers would have taken me to one side and said “for fuck’s sake he is not really cutting this short to do a telly interview is he, just as half the world’s leaders pitch up?” labour must fight against complacency the end but even I think he might be done.
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Mike Baines
Mike Baines@PiceaNudge·
@DavidGauke I live in Brexitland and during the months before BJ got Brexit done, I used Canada's cheese tariffs as an example of the perils ahead. Feel so guilty that I failed to convince the unworldy - should have tried harder.
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Rory Stewart
Rory Stewart@RoryStewartUK·
Whoever becomes the next Mayor of London should plant another million trees in the city
The Cultural Tutor@culturaltutor

12 Reasons Why Cities Need More Trees: 1. Temperature Control One large tree is equivalent to 10 air conditioning units, and the shade they provide can reduce street temperature by more than 30%. 2. Noise Reduction Trees can reduce loudness by up to 50%. In urban areas filled with the sound of cars, construction, sirens, aeroplanes, and music, trees are essentially the best way to block noise and keep cities — along with the homes and workplaces in them — quieter. 3. Air Purity Trees remove an astonishing amount of harmful pollutants and toxins from the air. In urban areas air quality is often disastrously bad — with severe consequences for our health. Trees make the air we breathe much cleaner. 4. Oxygen And, while absorbing all those pollutants, trees also put more oxygen back into the urban environment. Oxygen levels are significantly lower in cities compared to the countryside; trees help to solve that problem. 5. Water Management Trees do more than just shelter us and our buildings from rain — which is, in fact, extremely important. They also absorb huge quantities of water, reduce run-off, neutralise the severity of flooding, and make flooding more unlikely altogether. Not to forget that their roots absorb pollutants and prevent them from feeding back into a city's water supply. 6. Psychological Health Studies have proven what we instinctively know to be true: that human beings are significantly happier when surrounded by nature rather than sterile urban environments. Our emotions, behaviour, and thoughts are shaped by the places we spend time — and trees have a profoundly positive effect on our psychology. The consequential benefits of being happier and more peaceful — as individuals and as a society — are immense. 7. Physical Health Beyond all the other ways in which trees improve air quality and the urban environment, much to the benefit of our health, they also encourage people to go outside. Cycling, running, and walking are all more common in urban areas with plenty of trees. A knock-on effect of people spending more time outdoors is also social integration and stronger communities. 8. Privacy A simple point, but not inconsequential, is that trees provide privacy. 9. Economics The total economic benefit of urban trees is hard to calculate. There are costs, of course, including the repair of infrastructure damaged by roots and maintaining the trees themselves. But the total economic benefit — a consequence of everything else in this list and more — far outweighs the expenditure. Trees make cities wealthier. 10. Wildlife Trees are miniature cities all of their own, serving as a habitat for hundreds of different species, including birds and mammals and insects. 11. Light Pollution Trees don't only block the light shining down, therefore keeping us and our cities cooler — they also disrupt light shining up, from street lighting, cars, houses, and billboards. Skies are clearer in cities with more trees. 12. Aesthetics And, finally, trees are beautiful. They break up the potential monotony of urban environments — the sharp geometry, the greyscale roads and buildings, the endless rows of cars — with their trunks, boughs, canopies, and flowers. Just think: the gold and red of falling leaves in autumn, the white and pink blossom of spring, the vast green canopies of summer, and the branches lined with hoar-frost in winter. Every single tree is a myriad of intricacy and texture, of colour and scent, of dappled light on the pavement, mottled bark, knotted roots, of clustered leaves and delicate petals and stern boughs. Few streets would not be improved by the kaleidoscopic aesthetic delights of a tree, not to mention the many different species of tree, all over the world, whether willow, oak, lime, cherry, aspen, maple, birch, horse chestnut, dogwood, hornbeam, ash, sycamore... the list goes on. There are some drawbacks to urban trees, most of them context-specific, and they are not — of course — universally appropriate. But it seems fair to say that many cities would benefit from at least a few more trees here and there.

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