Starbucks union workers go on strike over pay and staffing
Nov. 13th, 2025 05:06 pmUS ends penny-making run after more than 230 years
Nov. 12th, 2025 04:20 pmBetter
Nov. 13th, 2025 09:32 amMajor cult news in today's Timber Ridge Times... Julie is retiring at the end of the year. Julie is the hair dresser. She knows EVERYTHING about EVERYBODY. She's also delightful. And come January she'll be gone. This is big. Really big. She does the hair of everyone - men and women - except me. And, on Mondays, she spends the day in Briarwood - which houses assisted living, the nursing rooms and the memory care unit.
Having someone else do their hair is huge for some of these old people. It will give them something to bitch about for months on end. I can hear Joan now.
And, also, they have finally found a nail person who will be starting soon. Everyone will be all atwitter about this one. I can't wait until elbow coffee on Saturday!
This morning, I am going to pop over to QFC to buy wine. I never drink wine but a couple of weeks ago, at dinner, Bonny pulled out a bottle of Cabernet and offered it up. It was delicious. It turns out to be pretty cheap wine that also keeps well (with a vacuum sealer) so I decided to get some. The internets say it's at QFC and Fred Meyers. Neither place has it on the shelf that I can see nor did they have anyone to ask when I was there. Now I am on a fucking quest. QFC said the wine guy was there in the mornings. So I'm going back this morning to see if I can find him or the friggin wine.
And, really, that's the extent of my to-do list. As it stands now.
Oh wait, no. I do need to cut my hair. Maybe I'll go do that now.

PM says he has ‘full confidence’ in his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney amid calls for him to be sacked
PA Media has more on what the monthly performance figures from NHS England show. PA says:
The data shows 180,329 people in England had been waiting more than a year to start routine hospital treatment at the end of September, down from 190,549 at the end of August.
Some 2.4% of people on the list for hospital treatment had been waiting more than 52 weeks in September, down from 2.6% the previous month.
The NHS waiting list is 230,000 lower than July last year, even as the health service ‘approaches its limit’ with A&E and ambulances facing record demand ahead of winter.
The overall waiting list for September was 7.39m (an estimated 6.24m patients) down 15,845 compared to the previous month and 230,000 fewer than July 2024.
Thanks to the investment and modernisation this government has made, waiting lists are falling and patients are being treated sooner …
The past year is the first time in 15 years that waiting lists have fallen. There’s a long way to go, but the NHS is now on the road to recovery.
Continue reading...No one denies their deep grievances – but after seeing improvements and winning generous pay settlements, the BMA is overplaying its hand
The bizarre, self-defeating assault on Wes Streeting suggests a pre-budget panic. This feels like a government losing touch and escaping from dismal circumstances in the real world. The ricochets damaged the PM and Morgan McSweeney, whoever organised these orchestrated briefings. If the briefers are not “found” and fired, No 10 looks either weak or guilty.
The health secretary shrugged it off with wit and agility in a host of interviews and left for Manchester to speak to the NHS Providers conference. There, he addressed grim-faced managers confronting the hardest of times. Resident (formerly junior) doctors go out on a five-day strike from 7am on Friday. Their timing aims at maximum disruption in what will be “one of the toughest winters our staff have ever faced” according to NHS England’s CEO, Jim Mackey. An exceptionally virulent flu strain has arrived early, with cases already several times higher than normal. Last month, flu hospitalisations were up 74% week-on-week.
Polly Toynbee is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...Irish government announces plan to build 300,000 homes within five years
Nov. 13th, 2025 05:23 pmProposal includes 72,000 social homes to tackle housing crisis, but critics call it ‘old wine in a new bottle’
The Irish government has announced a long-awaited plan to tackle Ireland’s severe housing shortage by building 300,000 new homes within five years.
It plans to boost supply by increasing construction capacity and the amount of zoned and serviced land, and to increase support for vulnerable groups, according to proposals published on Thursday.
Continue reading...‘Diabolical move’: Miranda Priestly’s red shoes get Instagram fashion no-no
Nov. 13th, 2025 05:20 pmCloseup of studded stilettos in trailer for The Devil Wears Prada 2 causes fashion debate on social media
Posting the first trailer for The Devil Wears Prada 2 on Instagram on her birthday this week, the film’s star Anne Hathaway captioned the video with “it’s everybody’s birthday”, prompting copious comments featuring emojis of flames, hearts and – of course – the red shoe now so associated with the film’s poster.
But with the trailer circulating on social media, it’s the shoes that have become the focus of fashion debate – and not in a good way.
Continue reading...Germany decides against conscription to replenish post-cold war military
Nov. 13th, 2025 05:09 pmNew voluntary recruitment model is hoped to attract young people into forces in the face of growing Russian threat
The German government has decided against a new system of compulsory military service after a bitter debate, opting for a voluntary model instead.
Under the plan intended to revamp the country’s depleted military, young German men will have to indicate their readiness to serve and undergo a medical from next year. There will be financial and other incentives to encourage voluntary recruitment, but if that fails to find the numbers a compulsory nationwide call-up will be reconsidered. This would take further legislation, however.
Continue reading...Scott Barrett fit to return and captain All Blacks against England at Twickenham
Nov. 13th, 2025 05:06 pmBarrett missed win against Scotland due to cut
Scott Robertson preparing for aerial contest
Scott Barrett has come back to captain the All Blacks against England at Twickenham this weekend. Barrett had 12 stitches threaded in his leg after he suffered a cut beneath his knee playing against Ireland a fortnight ago, and missed his team’s 25-17 victory against Scotland at Murrayfield last week, but Scott Robertson, the New Zealand head coach, confirmed that he had played a full part in training for the England game.
“We’ve gone for our best team for this game, for this Test,” Robertson said. “It’s remarkable that he healed so well, once you saw the cut. The Barretts must have some good skin.” His older brother Beauden will start at fly-half again, but younger brother Jordie is back in New Zealand having treatment on the ankle injury he suffered in that same match against Ireland.
Continue reading...His alliance with the party’s anti-Corbyn faction was a shotgun marriage that totally lacked vision. Now Labour is paying the price
Wes Streeting was always meant to be their Labour prime minister. The plan, hatched by a tiny clique of rightwing faction fighters, was this: find a candidate on whom they could fake a continuation Corbynism project to win the leadership. Then kick the ladder away from the people who backed them and the promises they made. At the next general election, given the scale of the Tory majority after 2019, get Labour back in the ring with more MPs and then hand over to Streeting. The real grownups would then be in charge and the subsequent election would be secured.
But no one reckoned with Covid, Tory turmoil and the collapse of the SNP. Suddenly Keir Starmer wasn’t going to just lead Labour to a better defeat and a springboard for victory next time. Against the odds, he was going to win. Just as Jeremy Corbyn was Labour’s accidental leader in 2015, Starmer was the party’s accidental prime minister in 2024.
Neal Lawson is director of the cross-party campaign organisation Compass
Continue reading...EU court rules non-alcoholic drinks cannot be called gin
Nov. 13th, 2025 04:56 pmJudges in Luxembourg say EU law prohibits use of term ‘non-alcoholic gin’, in case brought by German lobby group
The makers of spirits may be raising a toast to the European judges of Luxembourg after the EU’s court ruled that non-alcoholic drinks cannot be called gin.
Only spirit drinks based on ethyl alcohol flavoured by juniper berries with a minimum alcoholic strength of 37.5% by volume can be known as gin, the court said in a judgment issued on Thursday.
Continue reading...The silver bullet fallacy
Nov. 13th, 2025 04:12 pmIs there a more annoying cliché in policy-wonk circles than “there are no silver bullets”? If so, it does not readily spring to mind. What those who intone this ritual phrase mean, of course, is not to expect too much. Silver bullets kill werewolves, we are told: just point, fire and forget. But those are fantasy tales. Real-life solutions are never quite as simple, are they?
Just pick your potential policy panacea: from microfinance to community currencies, wealth taxes to flat taxes to land value taxes, tool sharing apps to “nudges”, there is no shortage of ideas that somehow fail to reshape the world. Some of them have simply flopped, others have never won enough political support to be tried. Many work just fine, if in a quiet, understated sort of way. And quiet and understated is fine — provided you don’t expect a silver bullet.
Why, then, my irritation? Not just because the phrase “there are no silver bullets” is grotesquely overused, but because it misstates the difficulty. In fact there are plenty of silver bullets. The challenge is that not every problem we face is a werewolf.
The phrase “magic bullet” was coined by Paul Ehrlich, who won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1908. Ehrlich’s aim was to find chemical compounds that would precisely target bacteria or other disease-causing microbes. He succeeded, discovering that arsphenamine was an effective treatment for syphilis. Penicillin and other antibiotics followed, offering a cure for bacterial infections that was little short of miraculous.
Alongside antibiotics, place vaccines: by priming the immune system with weakened or inactive fragments of a pathogen, vaccines have led to the eradication of smallpox and enormous progress against once-terrible diseases such as polio, measles and more recently Covid-19.
Or, for an example from the world of finance, consider the index fund. The idea was floated by the Nobel laureate Paul Samuelson in 1974, then launched in 1976 by John Bogle of Vanguard. Initially mocked as “Bogle’s folly”, un-American and mediocre by design, index funds are now enormously popular.
Each of these silver bullets downed a particular “werewolf” — a clearly visible, well-defined problem. Antibiotics targeted a common class of pathogens; vaccines recruited the body’s own immune system; the index fund allowed investors a way to make a diversified bet on the stock market without paying high fees to stockpickers of questionable skill. All of them work brilliantly. To say that there are no silver bullets is to do a disservice to the ingenuity of these ideas. Better to say that the difficulty is a lack of werewolves.
In 1973, two professors of design, Horst Rittel and Melvin Webber, published an article describing what they called “wicked problems”. Wicked problems, they argued, had a number of challenging characteristics. They defied clear description, lacked a “stopping rule” at which point the problem could be declared solved, tended to be contested, had few instructive parallels or analogues, and tended to be linked to or symptomatic of other problems. Most challenging of all, they resisted trial-and-error solutions because each experiment was a costly punt with significant real-world consequences for failure.
Examples of wicked problems include crime, climate change, inequality, the fall of birth rates or the rise of AI. When faced with a wicked problem such as these, expect people to disagree about what, if anything, the problem is. Expect solutions to be controversial, difficult to test, and at best provisional.
Not so with a werewolf problem. When there’s a werewolf stalking the neighbourhood, everyone can agree on the problem and on what a successful solution would look like. So go ahead and forge your silver bullet without shame. Don’t let anybody tell you that it will never exist.
Am I being pedantic in my choice of metaphor? Very well then, I am being pedantic in my choice of metaphor. But the distinction matters. When we mumble that there are no silver bullets, we’re implying that no attempt at any solution for any problem will ever really work. But that’s absurd. There are plenty of clearly defined problems worth solving.
This is true even when those clearly defined problems are surrounded by clusters of other problems. For example, antibiotics work spectacularly but within limits. Bacteria evolve resistance, which means we need incentives to develop, but not use, new classes of antibiotic. We also need to tackle the routine overuse of antibiotics, for example in rearing livestock. But these are distinct new problems for which distinct new solutions must be found. As antibiotics become less effective, shrugging and saying “there are no silver bullets” is no kind of response.
Vaccines, too, are a near-miraculous technology, but they only work if people are willing to be vaccinated. That’s not the kind of problem you can fire a silver bullet at. It requires patient, multidisciplinary work to understand the various reasons for reluctance and how we might respond to them. But are modern vaccines themselves a silver bullet? You can literally bet your life that they are.
As for index funds, there’s a simplicity to the idea that verges on genius. Samuelson gave Bogle the credit for an invention he ranked alongside “the wheel, the alphabet, Gutenberg printing, and wine and cheese: a mutual fund that never made Bogle rich but elevated the long-term returns of the mutual-fund owners. Something new under the sun”. That might be overstating the case, but index funds absolutely deliver on their goal of inexpensive, diversified investment.
Are they an investment panacea, though? Of course not. Index fund investors are as capable as anyone else of buying high and selling low, cowering in fear on the sidelines or scrambling to join a late-stage bubble. But to complain that index funds are not silver bullets is to misunderstand the nature of the werewolf that Bogle and Samuelson slew.
In the years since Rittel and Webber published their analysis of wicked problems, they have been much cited, and rightly so. Their formulation reminds us that there are certain kinds of problems that defy a clean, one-shot solution. But they do not deny the existence of problems for which solutions can be defined, tested and delivered.
We clever humans have managed to make silver bullet after silver bullet and slay werewolf after werewolf. So let’s not make the lazy mistake of believing that because some problems can never be fully solved, there is no such thing as a solution.
Written for and first published in the Financial Times on 16 Oct 2025.
I’m running the London Marathon in April in support of a very good cause. If you felt able to contribute something, I’d be extremely grateful.
The magic touch: how healthy are massages actually?
Nov. 13th, 2025 05:00 pmWhile it can be seen as a luxury, massages are often part of healthcare – here’s how it affects physical and mental health
Massages can feel great. But are they actually good for you?
In one study, researchers observed that 8.5% of Americans reported using massage for “overall health” in the 2022 National Health Interview Survey. However, definitions of health tend to vary widely, explains the study’s first author, Jeff Levin, an epidemiologist and distinguished professor at Baylor University. For instance, does it refer to physical health, mental health or both? That makes it tough to study, but may explain why it has such broad appeal, Levin explains.
Continue reading...Hundreds of thousands to lose heat pump subsidies in Reeves’s budget plan
Nov. 13th, 2025 04:59 pmExclusive: Supporters say grants largely going to middle-class households, but experts warn move will slow transition from gas boilers
Hundreds of thousands of homeowners will lose their right to subsidies for eco-friendly heat pumps as a result of government plans to bring down energy bills at the budget.
Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, is planning to announce a series of measures to bring down energy bills amid concerns the country’s stubbornly high cost of living is driving millions of voters to Reform UK.
Continue reading...EU court bans calling non-alcoholic drinks gin
Nov. 13th, 2025 04:56 pmJudges in Luxembourg said EU law clearly prohibited the term ‘non-alcoholic gin’, after a case was brought against the makers of Virgin Gin Alkoholfrei
The makers of spirits may be raising a toast to the European judges of Luxembourg, after the EU’s court ruled that non-alcoholic drinks cannot be called gin.
Only spirit drinks based on ethyl alcohol flavoured by juniper berries with a minimum alcoholic strength of 37.5% by volume can be known as gin, the court said in a judgement issued on Thursday.
Continue reading...PM says he has ‘full confidence’ in his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney amid calls for him to be sacked
PA Media has more on what the monthly performance figures from NHS England show. PA says:
The data shows 180,329 people in England had been waiting more than a year to start routine hospital treatment at the end of September, down from 190,549 at the end of August.
Some 2.4% of people on the list for hospital treatment had been waiting more than 52 weeks in September, down from 2.6% the previous month.
The NHS waiting list is 230,000 lower than July last year, even as the health service ‘approaches its limit’ with A&E and ambulances facing record demand ahead of winter.
The overall waiting list for September was 7.39m (an estimated 6.24m patients) down 15,845 compared to the previous month and 230,000 fewer than July 2024.
Thanks to the investment and modernisation this government has made, waiting lists are falling and patients are being treated sooner …
The past year is the first time in 15 years that waiting lists have fallen. There’s a long way to go, but the NHS is now on the road to recovery.
Continue reading...Bavarian Radio SO/Rattle review – consistently fine and fervent playing
Nov. 13th, 2025 04:46 pmBarbican Hall, London
Janacek’s spine-tingling Taras Bulba was paired with Bruckner’s 7th in an evening of illumination and excitement
Simon Rattle and his Munich-based orchestra began their European tour in Liverpool and Birmingham this week with music by Schumann and Stravinsky. For London, though, they brought a different programme, in the shape of Janáček, a lifetime Rattle speciality, and Bruckner, a composer from whom the conductor once seemed to keep his distance but whose music he has gradually embraced with greater confidence.
The quality of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra was obvious in Janáček’s Taras Bulba rhapsody. At the start, ardent cor anglais, oboe and violin solos float above rich and shimmering strings before a sudden and more violent call to Slavic heroics: Janáček at his most angular and spine-tingling. The Bavarians’ playing of this quicksilver and fervent score was predictably first-class. Maybe, though, the orchestral mastery was also a notch too technically perfect, missing the ineffable fragility that animates so much of Janáček’s music so brilliantly. No reservations, though, about the excitement of the final movement, in which Janáček’s score catches fire.
Continue reading...Yours for £1m! David Shrigley puts 10 tons of old rope on display in a gallery
Nov. 13th, 2025 04:18 pmStephen Friedman Gallery, London
Is the pranksy artist’s latest show a worrying comment about Britain’s discarded rope problem – or a joke at the expense of the buy-anything art world?
How long is a piece of string? David Shrigley can’t answer that, but he can tell you how much it weighs: 10 tons, apparently. His latest installation is literally an exhibition of 10 tons of old rope, accumulated by him over months, and left in towering mounds in this swanky gallery in London’s Mayfair. Most of it is marine rope, destined for landfill. It’s hard to recycle this stuff, it seems, and there’s an endless supply of it dumped around the world. So Shrigley scooped up as much of it as he could find, piled it up and put a massive price tag on it.
The work can be yours for £1m. And that’s the point of the show: this is literally money for old rope. It’s not that deep – it’s just an idea taken to its logical conclusion, an idiom taken too far, a pun taken too literally.
Continue reading...Ineos to cut hundreds of jobs as carmaker struggles with debts
Nov. 13th, 2025 04:16 pmCompany owned by billionaire Jim Ratcliffe says it is simplifying its head office to improve efficiency
The carmaker owned by the billionaire industrialist Jim Ratcliffe will make hundreds of job cuts across the company’s global workforce as his heavily indebted empire comes under increasing pressure.
Ineos Automotive did not specify an exact number of losses from its 1,700-strong workforce, saying only that it would shed “several hundred” head office staff across multiple locations, including the UK and parts of Europe.
Continue reading...