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Thread: UK General Election 2019

  1. #301
    BrownWings: AirViceMarshall Senior Member Furunculus's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    conserve, dear boy. conserve... ;)
    Furunculus Maneuver: Adopt a highly logical position on a controversial subject where you cannot disagree with the merits of the proposal, only disagree with an opinion based on fundamental values. - Beskar

  2. #302
    Voluntary Suspension Voluntary Suspension Philippus Flavius Homovallumus's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Montmorency View Post
    It can't help but reinforce the dichotomy that the left want to build and the right only know how to destroy. As though the mere arbitrary desire not to be in the European Union could be justified at any cost.
    This is a gross distortion of the facts and a slanderous attack on those here who voted to leave the EU.

    For one thing, Brexit is not a Left/Right issue - our Right-Wing Prime Minister and the Hard-Left Leader of the Opposition are both highly Euro-sceptic and until 1992 Euro-scepticism was primarily a Left-Wing position.

    You really need to stop projecting your own malign politics onto our malign politics. Just because we speak English doesn't mean we're much more like you than the French are.
    "If it wears trousers generally I don't pay attention."

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  3. #303
    Headless Senior Member Pannonian's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Boris Johnson won't do an Andrew Neil interview unlike the other leaders, and now Jeremy Vine says that Johnson strung him along about a likely interview before saying that he won't, unlike the other leaders who have done so.

    And you know what, this lack of accountability will make no difference whatsoever to those who continue to vote Tory anyway. I bet Johnson can cancel PMQs and other ways of holding the government to account, and these Tory voters would not care.

  4. #304
    BrownWings: AirViceMarshall Senior Member Furunculus's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    This is performative outrage.

    We deal with the political system we have, imperfect politicians included.
    Do i launch great skyward skeins of shock and anger when i find out that most of corbyns front bench dont trust him to be in charge of a playmobil toyset?
    “oh don't worry, the mechanisms of the state will move into a defensive posture...”

    i realise your get out cllause is that you don't like corbyn eigher, but then what...?

    your problem isnt boris as a creature, it is that the vision he is selling is somehow winning, but all you have left as a counter is outrage.
    yes, i take note of your outrage, but boris will advance most ideas i like and poison at birth most ideas i don't like... So he gets my vote.
    Furunculus Maneuver: Adopt a highly logical position on a controversial subject where you cannot disagree with the merits of the proposal, only disagree with an opinion based on fundamental values. - Beskar

  5. #305
    Darkside Medic Senior Member rory_20_uk's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Pannonian View Post
    Boris Johnson won't do an Andrew Neil interview unlike the other leaders, and now Jeremy Vine says that Johnson strung him along about a likely interview before saying that he won't, unlike the other leaders who have done so.

    And you know what, this lack of accountability will make no difference whatsoever to those who continue to vote Tory anyway. I bet Johnson can cancel PMQs and other ways of holding the government to account, and these Tory voters would not care.
    If only Brexit wasn't a facet in the election. If only it had been completed and there wasn't just one party stating they'd complete Brexit.

    Which is better? 5 bad years and Brexit occurring or someone else and no Brexit - this is the first time the British public have been asked for their opinion in the last 30 years. It is a very poor choice.

    An enemy that wishes to die for their country is the best sort to face - you both have the same aim in mind.
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  6. #306
    Headless Senior Member Pannonian's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by rory_20_uk View Post
    If only Brexit wasn't a facet in the election. If only it had been completed and there wasn't just one party stating they'd complete Brexit.

    Which is better? 5 bad years and Brexit occurring or someone else and no Brexit - this is the first time the British public have been asked for their opinion in the last 30 years. It is a very poor choice.

    Shouldn't Johnson's deal have been subjected to full scrutiny in the last Parliament then? There were mechanisms for dealing with this legislation. Why did Johnson bypass them, and why is it deemed correct to bypass them? After all, as you've said before, we vote for individual MPs, not party leaders. So the last Parliament should have been deemed as fit for purpose as any other.

  7. #307
    Headless Senior Member Pannonian's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Furunculus View Post
    This is performative outrage.

    We deal with the political system we have, imperfect politicians included.
    Do i launch great skyward skeins of shock and anger when i find out that most of corbyns front bench dont trust him to be in charge of a playmobil toyset?
    “oh don't worry, the mechanisms of the state will move into a defensive posture...”

    i realise your get out cllause is that you don't like corbyn eigher, but then what...?

    your problem isnt boris as a creature, it is that the vision he is selling is somehow winning, but all you have left as a counter is outrage.
    yes, i take note of your outrage, but boris will advance most ideas i like and poison at birth most ideas i don't like... So he gets my vote.
    So if Johnson deems all scrutiny to be undesirable, and he wins a majority, does it mean that all media and Parliamentary scrutiny should be dispensed with? He has intimated it in his manifesto, and his past actions indicate that he's open to doing whatever he's not legally blocked from doing.

    If in the future someone wins an election with a tight majority and then removes the rights of those opposing them, will this also be justified as they've won the argument? If a bare majority of the electorate supports removing the rights of the bare minority, will this be justified as they've won the argument? What lines should not be crossed by a Parliamentary majority?

  8. #308
    Praefectus Fabrum Senior Member Anime BlackJack Champion, Flash Poker Champion, Word Up Champion, Shape Game Champion, Snake Shooter Champion, Fishwater Challenge Champion, Rocket Racer MX Champion, Jukebox Hero Champion, My House Is Bigger Than Your House Champion, Funky Pong Champion, Cutie Quake Champion, Fling The Cow Champion, Tiger Punch Champion, Virus Champion, Solitaire Champion, Worm Race Champion, Rope Walker Champion, Penguin Pass Champion, Skate Park Champion, Watch Out Champion, Lawn Pac Champion, Weapons Of Mass Destruction Champion, Skate Boarder Champion, Lane Bowling Champion, Bugz Champion, Makai Grand Prix 2 Champion, White Van Man Champion, Parachute Panic Champion, BlackJack Champion, Stans Ski Jumping Champion, Smaugs Treasure Champion, Sofa Longjump Champion Seamus Fermanagh's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Pannonian View Post
    So if Johnson deems all scrutiny to be undesirable, and he wins a majority, does it mean that all media and Parliamentary scrutiny should be dispensed with? He has intimated it in his manifesto, and his past actions indicate that he's open to doing whatever he's not legally blocked from doing.

    If in the future someone wins an election with a tight majority and then removes the rights of those opposing them, will this also be justified as they've won the argument? If a bare majority of the electorate supports removing the rights of the bare minority, will this be justified as they've won the argument? What lines should not be crossed by a Parliamentary majority?
    Ultimately, Pan,' that will depend on your electorate. If the voters tolerate such behavior, then it will become the norm. If enough of your pols become convinced that their districts will can them if they don't allow for the opposition to perform its traditional "scrutiny" role, then they will make sure it happens. If they are convinced that the voters won't do much more than complain, but pull the lever for them anyway, then the pols will let scrutiny efforts wither. The primary objective of most politicians is winning re-election personally. It always comes down to that as the real leverage upon them to do their jobs.
    "The only way that has ever been discovered to have a lot of people cooperate together voluntarily is through the free market. And that's why it's so essential to preserving individual freedom.” -- Milton Friedman

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  9. #309
    Member Member Greyblades's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    I do wish he was pushed harder, I also wish he didnt have the luxury of not having to be scrutinied to be elected, but his opposition is utterly fucking useless and thats one thing you cant blame him for.
    Being better than the worst does not inherently make you good. But being better than the rest lets you brag.


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  10. #310
    Darkside Medic Senior Member rory_20_uk's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Pannonian View Post
    Shouldn't Johnson's deal have been subjected to full scrutiny in the last Parliament then? There were mechanisms for dealing with this legislation. Why did Johnson bypass them, and why is it deemed correct to bypass them? After all, as you've said before, we vote for individual MPs, not party leaders. So the last Parliament should have been deemed as fit for purpose as any other.
    So... Remind me again why you're surprised people are voting for the only party offering to deliver Brexit?

    An enemy that wishes to die for their country is the best sort to face - you both have the same aim in mind.
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  11. #311
    Headless Senior Member Pannonian's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Greyblades View Post
    I do wish he was pushed harder, I also wish he didnt have the luxury of not having to be scrutinied to be elected, but his opposition is utterly fucking useless and thats one thing you cant blame him for.
    There are certain mechanisms allowing scrutiny, independent of politicians. That's what Johnson has been dodging. Shouldn't it matter to you that he's been dodging said scrutiny? The media, particularly the more rigorous elements, are supposed to be able to hold politicians of all colours accountable, by allowing well briefed and trained journalists to question politicians on current affairs. Unlike your average voter, the better journalists won't be fobbed off with meaningless catchphrases, such as Johnson's encounter with Eddie Mair. If other leaders are willing to endure such scrutiny, but Johnson consistently avoids them, even to the extent of hiding to avoid questions (as happened today, and had happened in the past), shouldn't that matter to would be Tory voters? At what point do you say, this man is not fit to be PM?

  12. #312
    Headless Senior Member Pannonian's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by rory_20_uk View Post
    So... Remind me again why you're surprised people are voting for the only party offering to deliver Brexit?

    Does this mean that you'd vote for a party with a literal dog as a leader, as long as the party of said canine promises to pass Brexit? If said party promises to pass Brexit, but uses its majority to pass a load of other stuff to lock down their permanent control, would you say it was worth it? NB. the latter is in the Tory manifesto, and the last two Tory PMs have tried it in government, only to have courts overrule their attempts and restore sovereignty to Parliament.

  13. #313
    Darkside Medic Senior Member rory_20_uk's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Pannonian View Post
    Does this mean that you'd vote for a party with a literal dog as a leader, as long as the party of said canine promises to pass Brexit? If said party promises to pass Brexit, but uses its majority to pass a load of other stuff to lock down their permanent control, would you say it was worth it? NB. the latter is in the Tory manifesto, and the last two Tory PMs have tried it in government, only to have courts overrule their attempts and restore sovereignty to Parliament.
    That is the system weve got. If we had had input many years ago my future wouldn't have been ruined in this way.

    But here we are with the choices we've got. Corbyn is objectively a worse option and in my constituency there is no third party option - thanks to first past the post.

    An enemy that wishes to die for their country is the best sort to face - you both have the same aim in mind.
    Science flies you to the moon, religion flies you into buildings.
    "If you can't trust the local kleptocrat whom you installed by force and prop up with billions of annual dollars, who can you trust?" Lemur
    If you're not a liberal when you're 25, you have no heart. If you're not a conservative by the time you're 35, you have no brain.
    The best argument against democracy is a five minute talk with the average voter. Winston Churchill

  14. #314
    BrownWings: AirViceMarshall Senior Member Furunculus's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Pannonian View Post
    Does this mean that you'd vote for a party with a literal dog as a leader, as long as the party of said canine promises to pass Brexit? If said party promises to pass Brexit, but uses its majority to pass a load of other stuff to lock down their permanent control, would you say it was worth it? NB. the latter is in the Tory manifesto, and the last two Tory PMs have tried it in government, only to have courts overrule their attempts and restore sovereignty to Parliament.
    Let's just remind ourselves of the leader polling, both positive and negative...

    Who is coming out best/least worst?
    Furunculus Maneuver: Adopt a highly logical position on a controversial subject where you cannot disagree with the merits of the proposal, only disagree with an opinion based on fundamental values. - Beskar

  15. #315
    Headless Senior Member Pannonian's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Furunculus View Post
    Let's just remind ourselves of the leader polling, both positive and negative...

    Who is coming out best/least worst?
    Are you trying to get me to speak up for Corbyn again?

  16. #316
    BrownWings: AirViceMarshall Senior Member Furunculus's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Pannonian View Post
    Are you trying to get me to speak up for Corbyn again?
    i return to my previous point:

    "i realise your get out clause is that you don't like corbyn either, but then what...?"

    [you] have a particular problem with boris, finding him particularly objectionable.
    however, the [electorate] seem to disagree, rating boris considerably higher in positives and lower in negatives than either corbyn or swinson.
    and - if you were honest with yourself - i think it is this fact more than anything else that you find outrageous.
    Furunculus Maneuver: Adopt a highly logical position on a controversial subject where you cannot disagree with the merits of the proposal, only disagree with an opinion based on fundamental values. - Beskar

  17. #317
    Headless Senior Member Pannonian's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Furunculus View Post
    i return to my previous point:

    "i realise your get out clause is that you don't like corbyn either, but then what...?"

    [you] have a particular problem with boris, finding him particularly objectionable.
    however, the [electorate] seem to disagree, rating boris considerably higher in positives and lower in negatives than either corbyn or swinson.
    and - if you were honest with yourself - i think it is this fact more than anything else that you find outrageous.
    I believe in all politicians being adequately scrutinised, whether the electorate likes them or not. Do you agree?

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  18. #318

    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Philippus Flavius Homovallumus View Post
    This is a gross distortion of the facts and a slanderous attack on those here who voted to leave the EU.

    For one thing, Brexit is not a Left/Right issue - our Right-Wing Prime Minister and the Hard-Left Leader of the Opposition are both highly Euro-sceptic and until 1992 Euro-scepticism was primarily a Left-Wing position.

    You really need to stop projecting your own malign politics onto our malign politics. Just because we speak English doesn't mean we're much more like you than the French are.
    What does Brexit do to achieve a better life for Britons, if that is the aim? It is not the aim.

    Euroskepticism doesn't entail leaving the EU for above all the psychic pleasure of not existing within the EU.

    Exit politics today are overwhelmingly not within the left. For those to whom it is a matter of left-wing politics, they are mistaken in their narrative; the EU and its rules do, if anything, more to restrain the far-right than the far-left. The British electorate itself is ultimately the only impediment to a Lexiteer Red Labour paradise. There is also the more roundabout Lexiteer theory of 'Nach Brexit, uns', but holding out for social devastation is not a credible model for building power. I hope the reasons are obvious, both practical and moral.



    Regarding the favorability of Boris Johnson, I'm sure to most people he is more likeable than Jeremy Corbyn in video. "Boris Johnson is charming" is Boris Johnson's whole public persona, right? Corbyn's public persona - I don't know, does he have one in particular?

    On that subject I invite you all to read this about Johnson. Much of it we all probably know, but the overall composition is worthwhile and I have to say the white supremacist stuff threw me. Read the whole to continue. (BTW Furunculus, many of the character traits identified in Johnson reflect the kind of sneering larkishness that I dislike most as it sometimes appears in your presentation.)

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    oris Johnson seems to find all of this tremendously fun, and that actually tells you a lot. It is easy, when politics will have no real material consequences for you or any of your friends, to see it as a kind of game, a continuation of your roguish school days. Here in the United States, we have the West Wing fantasy: boys from Ivy League schools who dream of strutting down White House corridors and outfoxing Republicans. Boris Johnson does a different kind of Live Action Role Play: He sees himself as Winston Churchill, tempered with some self-deprecating buffoonery from the pages of Waugh and Wodehouse. I don’t know if there is anybody in Britain who believes Boris Johnson is in politics because he genuinely believes in effecting positive social change. From the time he was a boy, he had the disturbing fantasy of being “world king,” and he now enjoys being a famous person who gets to sleep with a lot of women. (Johnson once made the unbelievably revolting comment that he had to have a lot of affairs because he was “literally bursting with spunk.”)

    To Boris Johnson, politics is a lark. He makes that very clear. He has no moral core. Those who have known him closely have described him as a person almost completely without principles. When he began his career as a journalist covering Europe, he invented quotes and exaggerated stories, because to him being a foreign correspondent was just a chance to act out Waugh’s Scoop. He made up nonsense about the European government, nonsense that had the direct consequences of fomenting anti-European sentiment and helping to precipitate Brexit. Did Johnson care? Did he think that perhaps telling lies has consequences and could hurt people? He did not. Life, to Boris Johnson, is a novel about a cheeky, witty Oxford lad who pokes the Establishment in the eye. To you and me, politics is something serious, something that determines whether dozens of working class Londoners will be burned alive in their flats. To Boris Johnson, politics is a jolly jape.

    Let us consider racism. Why isn’t racism funny? Why is it acceptable to make fun of someone’s big floppy hat but not to make fun of their race? Because the history of racism is a history of terror and mass murder. Now, you and I understand this quite easily. Boris Johnson does not understand this. Racism, to Boris Johnson, is a laugh. When he became the editor of the conservative Spectator, the magazine had an openly racist columnist on staff, Taki Theodoracopulos. And I do not mean “openly racist” in any debatable sense. His columns literally contained racial slurs. Theodoracopulos referred to Puerto Ricans in New York as:

    A bunch of semi-savages … fat, squat, ugly, dusky, dirty and unbelievably loud. They turned Manhattan into Palermo faster than you can say “spic.”… There has never been—nor will there ever be—a single positive contribution by a Puerto Rican outside of receiving American welfare and beating the system.

    At the time Johnson became his editor, Theodoracopulos was known to “peppe[r] his conversation with words like ‘wop,’ ‘yid’ or ‘dago.’” Of Africa, he wrote: “Democracy is as likely to come to bongo-bongo land as I am to send a Concorde ticket to my children.” Here is a writer’s 2012 report on what it was like to dine with Theodoracopulos:

    During lunch, Mr. Theodoracopulos employed a number of epithets for various ethnic and racial groups. The n-word rolled off his tongue. He was unapologetic about his use of such terms, and made us uncomfortably complicit by leaning in conspiratorially and smiling while saying some of the more horrific things we’ve ever heard outside of a Quentin Tarantino film. He expressed disgust for professional athletes: “They have 12 kids and beat up on their wives, and she can’t go to court because she’s black and doesn’t have an education.” He praised Robert E. Lee and condemned Abraham Lincoln as “a murdering traitor.” He chuckled as he told us the story of a controversial Sunday Times editorial he once wrote: “I said that I thought I saw a gorilla once at Wimbledon. It was Venus Williams.”

    Theodoracopulos was such a racist that he appointed Richard Spencer as managing editor of Taki’s Mag, his online journal that became an outlet for white nationalism. Last year, Theodoracopulos published a column called “In Praise of the Wehrmacht” in Johnson’s former magazine arguing that “the real heroes of D-Day were the German soldiers.”

    When he became editor of the Spectator, Johnson knew Theodoracopulos was an infamous racist and anti-Semite (interesting that Jeremy Corbyn gets scrutiny over his associations but Johnson does not), and there was public pressure on Johnson to fire him. Johnson refused. He said that sacking Theodoracopulos “would be such a contemptible thing to do” and that if forced to do it he would resign himself. Instead, he said of Theodoracopulos that: “I really think that, at his best, he is a hugely entertaining columnist of exemplary professionalism.” A journalist reports asking Johnson about Theodoracopulos’s use of the word “sambo”:

    Johnson looks thoughtful. “Yah. Mmm. In what context did he say ‘sambo’? Was he quoting Little Black Sambo?” No, he was discussing a black man who wanted to be involved in the upbringing of his child: “Good for sambo,” wrote Taki. “Go for it sambo.“

    “Well. I dunno.” [said Johnson.] “I wasn’t editing then. I can’t remember the piece. But you’re right, on the whole, I’m not mad for that stuff.”

    So Theodoracopulos continued to provide his signature brand of “exemplary professionalism” under Johnson’s leadership. In 2003, Theodoracopulos wrote a column praising Enoch Powell’s infamous “rivers of blood” speech, saying it was “prophetic as well as true, and look what the bullshitters of the time did to the great man.” Theodoracopulos’s article included the lines:

    Only a moron would not surmise that what politically correct newspapers refer to as “disaffected young people” are black thugs, sons of black thugs and grandsons of black thugs … West Indians were allowed to immigrate after the war and multiply like flies.

    When a black lawyer publicly complained about the article, he immediately began receiving death threats from racists, leading Johnson to be investigated by the British police on suspicion of inciting racial hatred. No charges were filed, and Johnson kept Theodoracopulos on staff, where he continued to produce his “hugely entertaining” and professional column.

    It is unsurprising that the most Johnson could bring himself to say about his openly racist columnist was that he was “not mad for that stuff.” Johnson himself wrote columns like “Africa is a mess, but we can’t blame colonialism,” discouraging Brits from feeling bad about their imperial past—saying “the best fate for Africa would be if the old colonial powers, or their citizens, scrambled once again in her direction; on the understanding that this time they will not be asked to feel guilty”—and used offensive terms about Africans. (Ah, but he was using the term “piccaninny” ironically, you see.) In the 1990s, he published a sympathetic interview with the last Apartheid-era South African president F.W. de Klerk, and wrote of “the majority tyranny of black rule.” (Of de Klerk, he asks: “did he realize that the gig was up for white rule, that dark thumbs were about to close on the National Party’s windpipe?”) Johnson declined to apologize for having called gay men “tank topped bum boys.” Instead he simply said that if you go through his writings, “there is no doubt you can find things that can be made to seem offensive.” Made to seem.

    It’s not difficult to see why Johnson thought Taki’s columns were amusing bits of provocation, or he could himself be “ironically” racist. Nothing matters to Boris Johnson, and nothing he does has any negative consequences. He is not the person who will have to receive the racist death threats. He can invoke the Scramble For Africa as a good thing, and encourage some new scrambling, because nobody he knew was the victim of colonialism’s crimes. Johnson infamously conspired to have a journalist physically attacked, and today laughs about it (the attack did not end up taking place, thank God), because he, after all, was not the one being terrorized.

    At Oxford, Johnson was a member of the infamous Bullingdon Club, whose specialty is getting drunk and trashing restaurants. The rich do not have to clean up their own destruction. So much can be a joke to them that isn’t a joke to the people it falls on. As Fintan O’Toole puts it in an overview of Johnson’s career for the New York Review of Books, Johnson has “the studied carelessness affected by a large part of the English upper class… Consequences are for the little people, seriousness for those who are paid to clean up the mess.” Johnson’s Spectator could run a headline like “LONG LIVE ELITISM” and sneer at democracy. There are real world effects to the belief that the rich should rule, however. For the residents of Grenfell Tower, “elitism” meant that political elites ignored desperate pleas from poor, non-elite residents for adequate fire safety protection. Ah, but I’m sure the Spectator headline was a joke. And yet not one. See, when you’re Boris Johnson, you always get to have your cake and eat it too. You’re bad, but with a wink, so you’re not really bad.

    It has been extensively documented that Boris Johnson, because he has no principles, does not care whether the things he says are true or not. He lied in his career as a journalist, he told giant whoppers as part of the Leave campaign, and now, on the campaign trail, he has been fabricating the number of hospitals the Tories will build, fabricating figures about Labour spending plans, and fabricating numbers about how many new police officers he will add. His achievements as mayor of London include a catastrophic multi-million dollar infrastructure boondoggle and the alleged unethical funneling of public money to a possible lover. To the extent that he has a political philosophy, it is simple plutocracy, and his will leave more Britons poor and overworked, their lives controlled by rich imbeciles who do not care about them. (“Can you think of anyone who stuck up for the bankers as much as I did? I defended them day in, day out.” No, Boris, we cannot.)

    Johnson’s treatment of women is infamously despicable and proudly caddish. He has been credibly accused of groping a journalist, has such an infamously “ferocious temper” that police were recently dispatched to his home over a domestic altercation. (Johnson has “the fiercest and most uncontrollable anger I have seen. A terrifying mood change can be triggered instantly by the slightest challenge to his entitlement or self-worth.”) He was gleefully adulterous, his extramarital affairs producing two pregnancies and one child. He has routinely used sexist comments, casts aside those women no longer useful to him, and been patronizing and dismissive toward women in government. Sonia Purnell, who wrote a critical biography of Johnson, says that his team put pressure on media organizations not to interview her, and that Johnson spread rumors that she had had an affair with him in order to discredit her reporting:

    There was really nothing he could dispute factually, so what else can you do? Well, you can undermine the author. How do you undermine a woman? Well, what you do is you go round saying to everyone that she had an affair with you, and that you wouldn’t marry her, and that she’d written the book as a woman scorned.

    A consistent theme echoed by those who have observed Johnson over the years is that he believes in little except his own advancement. One journalist who profiled him came away thinking: “I couldn’t really sort out what he felt passionate about, or why he bothered to become a Tory MP.” Purnell concluded that he “is never boring but seems to lack vision or moral convictions, although he bears grudges aplenty.” His bumbling and absent-minded public persona has allowed him to avoid being pinned down on issues—it would be a typical Boris joke for him to stammer and announce that he has forgotten his stance on this or that. Despite being one of the most prominent voices of the campaign for Britain to leave the European Union, he might not even have been sure which side he stood on, and tended to also say things like:

    I’m rather pro-European, actually. I certainly want a European community where one can go and scoff croissants, drink delicious coffee, learn foreign languages and generally make love to foreign women.

    This after all is what matters to Boris: making love to “foreign women” and devouring croissants. Once again, he shows no inclination to take serious things seriously. It’s all just ripping good fun.

    * * * *
    I wonder if you’ve noticed, though, that in criticizing Boris Johnson for his lack of moral seriousness, I can’t help but sound dour and sanctimonious. Johnson has in common with Donald Trump that in chastising him for thumbing his nose at the business of politics, you end up sounding like a joyless school principal. People like Boris Johnson in part because he is silly and unkempt, because he isn’t “self-serious.” The find it charming when he forgets his prepared speech or gets stuck on a zipline. There is a perverse pleasure in watching the antics of a “class clown” upending “politics as usual.”

    Boris Johnson has an appeal, and it’s important to understand it. He may be unpopular, but he has spent his career winning over the press and parts of the public. The Guardian in 1995 called him “amiable and hard-working, ambitious and self-effacing.” Early news coverage referred to him as “clever, outspoken, brimming with bonhomie, flaxen-haired Mr Johnson.” Even Purnell’s critical book says he is “blessed with immense charisma, wit, sex appeal and celebrity gold dust,” and Purnell does not hate Boris, saying he “disappoints far more than he offends.” Here, journalist Lynn Barber recounts meeting Johnson and being charmed:

    I guess this was the moment at which I surrendered – five minutes in his company and I was totally charmed. He has charm the way people have perfect pitch – something he can rely on, deploy whenever he needs. There is a telling anecdote in his book about how he was getting on a plane with his wife and four children, and they had been put in separate rows, so he decided to ask his neighbours to swap places. Instead of asking the stewardess to fix it, ‘I decided to trust my own powers of charm.’ But for once his charm didn’t work – the man simply snarled – and Boris was shocked to the core. ‘I quivered,’ he recalls, ‘like a puppy unexpectedly kicked.’ What is remarkable about this incident is that it shows how rarely Johnson has known his charm to fail. Most of us, I imagine, would put our chances of getting people to change places on planes at less than evens (or less than zero in my case), but he has led, literally, a charmed life.

    We know the charm is a put-on. A former Spectator cartoonist, Martin Rowson, says he once begged Johnson to drop “the PG Wodehouse bollocks” and answer some serious questions, and Johnson coldly replied “I think you’ll find what you term ‘the PG Wodehouse bollocks’ has served me very well thus far!”, leading Rowson to the (somewhat extreme) conclusion that Johnson was “a ruthlessly hollow narcissistic psychopath.” This is consistent with other accounts of Johnson’s sudden switches from warm and appealing to venomous and cruel.

    In fact, while Boris Johnson is often called a British Donald Trump, a more appropriate comparison might be Bill Clinton. Trump is not “charming,” and does not use selective self-deprecation and oily ingratiation. Clinton and Johnson are both known for making people adore them and then ruthlessly betraying them. Donald Trump gets people to fear him, but Boris Johnson (in Bertie Wooster mode) gets people to like him. He makes them laugh. He appeared on comedy panel shows. He is “fun.” I remember reading one political commentator noting that Boris Johnson makes people feel good, leaves them with a smile on their face. That can be powerful.

    The trouble is that in bleak times, a person who can make you smile is at an advantage. We could desperately use a good laugh. Who wants to be reminded about climate change and poverty? Boris offers a warm nostalgic vision of Britain—he kept the red double-decker bus, he promised to build a Garden Bridge over the Thames. Of course, it’s all a lie, because Boris Johnson isn’t Bertie Wooster and the British Empire was not a gentle and humane place. But if you want to stave off having to confront a depressing reality, Boris promises to govern with relentless sunny good cheer, comic ineptitude, and self-effacing wit. “Fuck it, at least it’s entertaining,” a disillusioned individual may think. Let’s watch Boris goof off while the world burns.

    * * * *
    Here is the main reason I like Jeremy Corbyn so much: He is a morally serious person. He understands what politics is about. He has seen who its victims are. Consider what Corbyn said in the lead up to the Iraq War: It would “set off a spiral of conflict, of hate, of misery, of desperation, that will fuel the wars, the terrorism, the depression, and the misery of future generations.” Prescient! Consider the Labour Manifesto and its clear vision for greener, more equal Britain. Corbyn does not appear to be an unprincipled monster, but a person genuinely concerned about what happens to people who are not himself. He understands what a war is, and what it does to people. He understands that colonialism is not just a term of abstraction, but a very real and violent process.

    But he’s also not very funny. He’s not nearly as “charming.” But this is, in part, because he is not a moral lightweight. The British people currently face a choice: Do they want somebody who doesn’t give a shit about them, who had never once showed true moral courage, whose persona is a lie designed to trick them into forgiving his cruelty, who is proudly ignorant and deceitful and treats everyone around him like absolute trash? Or do they want somebody who, while human and flawed, has spent his entire career tirelessly working for the improvement of working people’s lives? To be honest, I find it hard to understand how there is a single person in Britain who could look at Boris Johnson’s history of sociopathic self-advancement, look at Jeremy Corbyn’s career of anti-war, anti-apartheid, pro-labor activism, and decide that they want to live Johnson’s lie with him.

    Asked if he had any convictions, Boris Johnson once replied: “Only one. For speeding.” Ha ha. But no, seriously, does he? Johnson has spent a career showing that if you’re a certain class of man, you can get away with absolutely anything. People won’t just forgive you. They’ll think your flaws are part of your appeal.

    I know this in part because I’ve been this kind of man, a privileged bumbler who survives on self-deprecating charm. But it’s because I recognize the injustice of a world where some people’s fumbling makes people like them, while for other people laziness or ineptitude would lead to their deaths. I try every day to commit myself to treating the important things with the moral gravity they deserve. We can joke around, and I do, but at the end of the day, a lot of this isn’t very fucking funny. Let us have a comic novel about a man like Boris Johnson governing a country. But in the real world, let us have someone who has shown some hint that he understands people’s real world problems and cares about fixing them.

    I am tired of men like Boris Johnson failing upward and being given more and more power despite never doing a single thing to deserve it. I am tired of reading about how scandals seem to “roll right off them” and watching clearly psychopathic behavior being treated as signs of rakish wiliness. I am tired of there being so little justice in the world and I hope Britain seizes the opportunity it has to finally wipe the smirk from Boris Johnson’s face and create a government that acts for the many and not the few.



    When reading I passed the name Taki Theodoracopulos and thought, "Taki? Like, from the Nazi site?" But yes indeed, the founder of TakiMag was a long-time friend and subordinate of Boris Johnson at the Spectator (which willingly published Taki's material for decades and does to this day, it should be noted.) If you lazy bastards didn't read the article, here are some Taki-related excerpts:

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    Theodoracopulos referred to Puerto Ricans in New York as:

    A bunch of semi-savages … fat, squat, ugly, dusky, dirty and unbelievably loud. They turned Manhattan into Palermo faster than you can say “spic.”… There has never been—nor will there ever be—a single positive contribution by a Puerto Rican outside of receiving American welfare and beating the system.
    At the time Johnson became his editor, Theodoracopulos was known to “peppe[r] his conversation with words like ‘wop,’ ‘yid’ or ‘dago.’” Of Africa, he wrote: “Democracy is as likely to come to bongo-bongo land as I am to send a Concorde ticket to my children.” Here is a writer’s 2012 report on what it was like to dine with Theodoracopulos:

    During lunch, Mr. Theodoracopulos employed a number of epithets for various ethnic and racial groups. The n-word rolled off his tongue. He was unapologetic about his use of such terms, and made us uncomfortably complicit by leaning in conspiratorially and smiling while saying some of the more horrific things we’ve ever heard outside of a Quentin Tarantino film. He expressed disgust for professional athletes: “They have 12 kids and beat up on their wives, and she can’t go to court because she’s black and doesn’t have an education.” He praised Robert E. Lee and condemned Abraham Lincoln as “a murdering traitor.” He chuckled as he told us the story of a controversial Sunday Times editorial he once wrote: “I said that I thought I saw a gorilla once at Wimbledon. It was Venus Williams.”
    Theodoracopulos was such a racist that he appointed Richard Spencer as managing editor of Taki’s Mag, his online journal that became an outlet for white nationalism. Last year, Theodoracopulos published a column called “In Praise of the Wehrmacht” in Johnson’s former magazine arguing that “the real heroes of D-Day were the German soldiers.”

    When he became editor of the Spectator, Johnson knew Theodoracopulos was an infamous racist and anti-Semite (interesting that Jeremy Corbyn gets scrutiny over his associations but Johnson does not), and there was public pressure on Johnson to fire him. Johnson refused. He said that sacking Theodoracopulos “would be such a contemptible thing to do” and that if forced to do it he would resign himself. Instead, he said of Theodoracopulos that: “I really think that, at his best, he is a hugely entertaining columnist of exemplary professionalism.” A journalist reports asking Johnson about Theodoracopulos’s use of the word “sambo”:

    Johnson looks thoughtful. “Yah. Mmm. In what context did he say ‘sambo’? Was he quoting Little Black Sambo?” No, he was discussing a black man who wanted to be involved in the upbringing of his child: “Good for sambo,” wrote Taki. “Go for it sambo.“

    “Well. I dunno.” [said Johnson.] “I wasn’t editing then. I can’t remember the piece. But you’re right, on the whole, I’m not mad for that stuff.”
    So Theodoracopulos continued to provide his signature brand of “exemplary professionalism” under Johnson’s leadership. In 2003, Theodoracopulos wrote a column praising Enoch Powell’s infamous “rivers of blood” speech, saying it was “prophetic as well as true, and look what the bullshitters of the time did to the great man.” Theodoracopulos’s article included the lines:

    Only a moron would not surmise that what politically correct newspapers refer to as “disaffected young people” are black thugs, sons of black thugs and grandsons of black thugs … West Indians were allowed to immigrate after the war and multiply like flies.
    When a black lawyer publicly complained about the article, he immediately began receiving death threats from racists, leading Johnson to be investigated by the British police on suspicion of inciting racial hatred. No charges were filed, and Johnson kept Theodoracopulos on staff, where he continued to produce his “hugely entertaining” and professional column.


    Bonus I found out about for Seamus and other Americans: The American Conservative was founded by Taki and Pat Buchanan, the latter of whom was also a cofounder of Takimag. A shame those decrepit old louts are still alive.
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  19. #319
    BrownWings: AirViceMarshall Senior Member Furunculus's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    i feel entirely at liberty to employ the Panonnian defense:

    I don't really respect much Boris much either - to use the vernacular he is an 'unserious' person.
    Now, this doesn't really matter much as a politician, but I was dismayed to find that he had been made Foreign Secretary.
    As a person that believes in an activist Foreign Policy with a Ministry of Offence configured for power projection, I do understand that this is not a fashionable view these days.
    So both on the merits of what I personally want as well as what the public expect, I require a Foreign Secretary to be very serious about his role.
    Both in the way they conduct themselves, and with the diligence with which they apply themselves to the role!
    Boris failed on both these counts.
    Likewise as PM - i don't want or value a 'character' in the role, not least as they will be the person directing the activities of the Foreign Office and Offence.

    So he is not my choice, my enormous preference would have been for Gove.
    But - what is my choice?
    Boris does at least act like a 'leader' rather than a manager - giving subordinates their head to run their brief rather than trying to micro-manage. This is how he successfully ran London, and hopefully his model for the future.
    And his government will "get brexit done" and then continue to organise british society along lines of which I broadly approve...

    ...Where Corbyn would do the opposite, in organising society in a direction that i deem utterly wrong. A deeply serious man whose serious ideas I fear!

    "BTW Furunculus, many of the character traits identified in Johnson reflect the kind of sneering larkishness that I dislike most as it sometimes appears in your presentation"

    You get what you merit. Your sneering conviction in presuming the moral inferiority of people who hold views you do not share deserves challenge.
    Last edited by Furunculus; 12-12-2019 at 09:00.
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  20. #320
    Senior Member Senior Member Idaho's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    The Tories tactics this election are vile, and a foretaste. Fake news + avoiding scrutiny and.... er.. repeat "get brexit done" (which as we've all agreed is a lie as brexit will take years).

    ... Not to mention a servile and infiltrated BBC (political editor is a Tory party member) and a press that is rabidly brexit due to being owned by tax dodging billionaires.
    Last edited by Idaho; 12-12-2019 at 11:32.
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  21. #321
    Mr Self Important Senior Member Beskar's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    I too, like Boris, try to escape my problems by going into the fridge. Though I usually come out with food and not do it on live TV.
    Last edited by Beskar; 12-12-2019 at 14:56.
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  22. #322
    Senior Member Senior Member Idaho's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Beskar View Post
    I too, like Boris, try to escape my problems by going into the fridge. Though I usually come out with food and not do it on live TV.
    Can you imagine if Corbyn would have done that? It would be wall to wall for weeks.
    "The republicans will draft your kids, poison the air and water, take away your social security and burn down black churches if elected." Gawain of Orkney

  23. #323
    Voluntary Suspension Voluntary Suspension Philippus Flavius Homovallumus's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Montmorency View Post
    What does Brexit do to achieve a better life for Britons, if that is the aim? It is not the aim.

    Euroskepticism doesn't entail leaving the EU for above all the psychic pleasure of not existing within the EU.

    Exit politics today are overwhelmingly not within the left. For those to whom it is a matter of left-wing politics, they are mistaken in their narrative; the EU and its rules do, if anything, more to restrain the far-right than the far-left. The British electorate itself is ultimately the only impediment to a Lexiteer Red Labour paradise. There is also the more roundabout Lexiteer theory of 'Nach Brexit, uns', but holding out for social devastation is not a credible model for building power. I hope the reasons are obvious, both practical and moral.
    For the Leftist position you'll have to ask Corbyn (hard socialist), McDonnell (Trotskyist) or Frank Field (hardcore Old Labour). It remains the case that many of the hardcore Brexiteers are also hard left. Don't like it? Not my problem.

    I voted out because I believe the EU is a malign and undemocratic institution regardless of its original intentions, it is also incapable of the root and branch reform required.

    Regarding the favorability of Boris Johnson, I'm sure to most people he is more likeable than Jeremy Corbyn in video. "Boris Johnson is charming" is Boris Johnson's whole public persona, right? Corbyn's public persona - I don't know, does he have one in particular?

    On that subject I invite you all to read this about Johnson. Much of it we all probably know, but the overall composition is worthwhile and I have to say the white supremacist stuff threw me. Read the whole to continue. (BTW Furunculus, many of the character traits identified in Johnson reflect the kind of sneering larkishness that I dislike most as it sometimes appears in your presentation.)

    When reading I passed the name Taki Theodoracopulos and thought, "Taki? Like, from the Nazi site?" But yes indeed, the founder of TakiMag was a long-time friend and subordinate of Boris Johnson at the Spectator (which willingly published Taki's material for decades and does to this day, it should be noted.) If you lazy bastards didn't read the article, here are some Taki-related excerpts:

    Bonus I found out about for Seamus and other Americans: The American Conservative was founded by Taki and Pat Buchanan, the latter of whom was also a cofounder of Takimag. A shame those decrepit old louts are still alive.
    You're way behind the curve - people have dug up Johnson's 2004 novel where he has a character representing unfavourable Jewish stereotypes.

    however, let me translate this for you:

    “Well. I dunno.” [said Johnson.] “I wasn’t editing then. I can’t remember the piece. But you’re right, on the whole, I’m not mad for that stuff.”

    This means, "I would not have published that, that is not an acceptable thing to say."

    There are probably two reasons Johnson kept him on staff:

    1. The articles were/are funny and there's a guilts pleasure in reading them.

    2. Johnson is generally in favour of free speech - as an American I'm sure that's a difficult concept for you to grasp, though.
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  24. #324
    Voluntary Suspension Voluntary Suspension Philippus Flavius Homovallumus's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Furunculus View Post
    You get what you merit. Your sneering conviction in presuming the moral inferiority of people who hold views you do not share deserves challenge.
    I would go a little further - his disdain for good manners and any attempt at congenial conversation is reprehensible.

    It's like talking to a religious zealot - like the N'name guy who used to post here, Young Creationist... eventually went Muslim because other Christians were too moderate.
    "If it wears trousers generally I don't pay attention."

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  25. #325
    Headless Senior Member Pannonian's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Philippus Flavius Homovallumus View Post
    For the Leftist position you'll have to ask Corbyn (hard socialist), McDonnell (Trotskyist) or Frank Field (hardcore Old Labour). It remains the case that many of the hardcore Brexiteers are also hard left. Don't like it? Not my problem.

    I voted out because I believe the EU is a malign and undemocratic institution regardless of its original intentions, it is also incapable of the root and branch reform required.
    How on earth does the EU merit this description? There was a lot of hostile and warlike rhetoric from one side during the negotiations, and it wasn't coming from the EU. From the evidence, it's England that is malign, and not only towards the EU, but also towards the other nations in the UK.

  26. #326
    Praefectus Fabrum Senior Member Anime BlackJack Champion, Flash Poker Champion, Word Up Champion, Shape Game Champion, Snake Shooter Champion, Fishwater Challenge Champion, Rocket Racer MX Champion, Jukebox Hero Champion, My House Is Bigger Than Your House Champion, Funky Pong Champion, Cutie Quake Champion, Fling The Cow Champion, Tiger Punch Champion, Virus Champion, Solitaire Champion, Worm Race Champion, Rope Walker Champion, Penguin Pass Champion, Skate Park Champion, Watch Out Champion, Lawn Pac Champion, Weapons Of Mass Destruction Champion, Skate Boarder Champion, Lane Bowling Champion, Bugz Champion, Makai Grand Prix 2 Champion, White Van Man Champion, Parachute Panic Champion, BlackJack Champion, Stans Ski Jumping Champion, Smaugs Treasure Champion, Sofa Longjump Champion Seamus Fermanagh's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Idaho View Post
    The Tories tactics this election are vile, and a foretaste. Fake news + avoiding scrutiny and.... er.. repeat "get brexit done" (which as we've all agreed is a lie as brexit will take years).

    ... Not to mention a servile and infiltrated BBC (political editor is a Tory party member) and a press that is rabidly brexit due to being owned by tax dodging billionaires.
    "Get brexit done" is not a lie at all. They want to be voted in to start making it happen and then have the voters retain them in power until it finishes a decade or so down the pike. Even if Boris spends that decade saying "you may very well think that..."
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  27. #327
    Senior Member Senior Member Idaho's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Philippus Flavius Homovallumus View Post
    ...ask Corbyn (hard socialist), McDonnell (Trotskyist) or Frank Field (hardcore Old Labour).
    Do you want a bit of mayonnaise with your omlette topped, custard covered egg pudding? You are just waving around Tory scare words to excite yourself.

    Corbyn is a fairly traditional labour democratic socialist, same as Field and McDonnell. This is the political tradition that rebuilt the country after WW2, that gave us the health service, a welfare state, safety at work, basic consumer and civil rights. To masquerade these things as bad is like the bonkers ukippers who bemoan the European human rights act (which Britain drafted).
    "The republicans will draft your kids, poison the air and water, take away your social security and burn down black churches if elected." Gawain of Orkney

  28. #328
    BrownWings: AirViceMarshall Senior Member Furunculus's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Yes, but leavened 80:20 with a bulk of solid british common sense. :)

    He does represent a change, looking to move the median spend of gdp from sub 40 to 45 plus... which is why i oppose him.
    Furunculus Maneuver: Adopt a highly logical position on a controversial subject where you cannot disagree with the merits of the proposal, only disagree with an opinion based on fundamental values. - Beskar

  29. #329
    Darkside Medic Senior Member rory_20_uk's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Quote Originally Posted by Idaho View Post
    Do you want a bit of mayonnaise with your omlette topped, custard covered egg pudding? You are just waving around Tory scare words to excite yourself.

    Corbyn is a fairly traditional labour democratic socialist, same as Field and McDonnell. This is the political tradition that rebuilt the country after WW2, that gave us the health service, a welfare state, safety at work, basic consumer and civil rights. To masquerade these things as bad is like the bonkers ukippers who bemoan the European human rights act (which Britain drafted).
    Three day week? Bailout by the IMF? Strikes? Rampant inflation?

    It is that tradition I'm hoping to avoid.

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  30. #330
    Member Member Greyblades's Avatar
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    Default Re: UK Election 2019

    Monster raving loony party were running in my area, brexit party didnt.
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