Lawmakers will on Saturday debate emergency legislation that would give the business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, the power to keep the S****horpe British Steel site running as the government tries to find a buyer to co-invest in the steelmaker.
Why is the name censored? Omg it is censoring the cunt inside Scunthorpe
Amazing, it’s literally called the Scunthorpe problem too!
Even more relevant now that AI bots are a thing and are subject to puritanical advertiser-friendly American sensibilities.
I reposted this to see why. It seems like it is OPs instance doing the filter, mine retains the original text.
Interesting. @mc900ftJesus@lemy.lol, any idea why it would do that?
It wasn’t my instance, I was pulling an elaborate ruse after seeing what town it was.
Shitty insurance ran by puritans, probably
I never made it past flailing. Sounds kinda dangerous.
UK government go “brrrrr” to bail out failing, Chinese owned, massively polluting steel co.
Massively failing, hugely polluting UK water companies, pumping shit into our waterways, UK government go “… Let the market sort it out”.
The entire system is fucked.
The current situation is slightly more nuanced than that. The Chinese owners want to shut down the blast furnaces at the site, possibly as early as next week. Once the furnaces are shut down they cannot be restarted, so that would be the end of the site as a steel production factory, and it’s the only one the UK has that can process iron ore, so it’s considered critical.
The government’s long term plan is to take the site into public ownership, then try to find private sector interest to take on part of it, but short term just to keep it alive long enough to be able to keep it running, with the happy side effect that a large number of jobs are not lost.
None of this is to say the situation with with the water companies is acceptable. Frankly they should already be publicly owned.
Odd wording from Politico, why would they say “plots” as though it were some sinister Machiavellian scheme?