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Stirlingsays 17 Oct 22 12.24am | |
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Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle
That might have been what you meant but it’s not what you said! You are talking about inflation, not devaluation. Everywhere is suffering from inflationary pressures at the moment. Blaming any government for all of it. is juvenile, but of course people do it. Governments can make things worse, sometimes much worse as ours has done, but by comparison the current US administration is handling things much better. The inflation rate there is 8.2% but expected to fall to 3.5% in 2023. . Ours is 8.6% and expected to rise sharply next year after the disaster of the recent weeks. So I suggest you refocus your sights on the stupidity of the libertarian trickle down politics practiced by the sort of Brexit loving politicians you favour. Look where that has got us! I wager that the the worsening economy is down to far longer term affects and consequences. However, Brexit is hardly at fault for our current situation as the inflation and economic situation in other European countries testify. The huge debt levels over the last thirty years that came to a head in 2008 (when finance finally accepted that it could never be paid back normally), allied to the covid economic response of telling huge numbers of the workforce to sit on their arsse at home (which you supported) and then this absolutely nutty war in the east of Europe to feck people on energy bills...well that's put the icing on the economically disastrous cake. Now that's what you are looking at....not sodding Brexit, which has been sold down the line anyway. As for inflation in the US dropping to 2 percent next year....I'll hold you to that....as I don't think it'll get anywhere near it.
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
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Maine Eagle USA 17 Oct 22 4.13am | |
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Originally posted by Teddy Eagle
Sure but when combined with "the naiveté" of same its hardly flattering. Calm down, snowflake. Did I touch a nerve?
Trump lost. Badly. Hahahahahahaha. |
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Maine Eagle USA 17 Oct 22 4.23am | |
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Originally posted by HKOwen
Is it childish to be concerned that the President of the US is not firing on all cylinders? The longer he is in office the more examples of his declining acuity and cognitive decline. If the US are ok with this and willing to continue on the basis they think he has a good team actually making the decisions then that is up to them. To deny the obvious is simply blind ideology. Joe Biden is doing fine, he’s not the sharpest tool in the shed, but experience and a steady hand counts for a lot in the White House. The main things I like about him are that he is not a sociopathic pathological liar, unable to form normal relationships with those around him and consumed by the need for attention, affection and wracked by paranoia and jealousy, with the conflict resolution skills of a 3 year old during a tantrum over not getting ice cream.
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Stirlingsays 17 Oct 22 5.03am | |
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Originally posted by Maine Eagle
Joe Biden is doing fine, he’s not the sharpest tool in the shed, but experience and a steady hand counts for a lot in the White House. The main things I like about him are that he is not a sociopathic pathological liar, unable to form normal relationships with those around him and consumed by the need for attention, affection and wracked by paranoia and jealousy, with the conflict resolution skills of a 3 year old during a tantrum over not getting ice cream. Yes he is and he's lied since the moment he entered politics, he lied about educational performance where he said he finished at the top of his law school class when in truth he finished near the bottom. He had to drop out of the 1988 presidential race when it was proved there was plagiarism from a Kinnock speech. He has falsely claimed he was "appointed" to the Naval Academy. He's lied about being arrested when protesting civil rights (no record). He's lied about being arrested in South Africa (no record). He oddly claims he was 'sort of raised in the Puerto Rican community at home.' Here he is lying about how his son died....I'm not sure that we can blame this one on mental failities.....but no doubt you'll have an excuse for his lies. If you seriously believe that Biden isn't a liar then I guess you're one of those blueanons who actually believe in Corn Pop....that 'dangerous dude'. [Tweet Link]
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
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Midlands Eagle 17 Oct 22 6.08am | |
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Originally posted by Matov
I just cannot see how the Tories survive just their MP's appointing Sunak as PM without going through the normal leadership process. Deciding you no longer want to be in Government is one thing (and I am convinced they feel it is better to be sitting out the next few years for all sorts of reasons) but trying to just impose a PM who is not popular with your core membership, who are already thoroughly pissed off, is just suicidal. I think that the "core membership" have already proved that they are a bunch of clueless buffoons so a more sensible approach might be in order to appoint the next leader like limiting the vote to the MPs who actually know the candidates best of all Edited by Midlands Eagle (17 Oct 2022 6.09am)
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Teddy Eagle 17 Oct 22 8.53am | |
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Originally posted by Maine Eagle
Calm down, snowflake. Did I touch a nerve? Don't flatter yourself Snobby. Just another sign that the long list of people you deem worthy of your condescending patronage doesn't include the working classes.
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Wisbech Eagle Truro Cornwall 17 Oct 22 8.56am | |
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Originally posted by Stirlingsays
I wager that the the worsening economy is down to far longer term affects and consequences. However, Brexit is hardly at fault for our current situation as the inflation and economic situation in other European countries testify. The huge debt levels over the last thirty years that came to a head in 2008 (when finance finally accepted that it could never be paid back normally), allied to the covid economic response of telling huge numbers of the workforce to sit on their arsse at home (which you supported) and then this absolutely nutty war in the east of Europe to feck people on energy bills...well that's put the icing on the economically disastrous cake. Now that's what you are looking at....not sodding Brexit, which has been sold down the line anyway. As for inflation in the US dropping to 2 percent next year....I'll hold you to that....as I don't think it'll get anywhere near it. That many things impact our economy is obvious. Some good, some bad, some long term, some short, some in our control, others not. Deflecting away from those things we have control over is pointless. We must trust the government to handle them but concentrate on those things we do have control over. So whilst blaming Brexit for everything is stupid, so is refusing to acknowledge that Brexit has not made matters worse than it would have been without it. It was an unnecessary, voluntary act by us which has backfired in circumstances which have themselves deteriorated beyond expectations. It was always anticipated, by everyone, to have a negative effect in the short to medium term (and by some in the long term), and has just added to what would have happened without it. Of course I supported the measures to try to limit the impact of the then poorly understood Covid pandemic. We had no vaccines and the threat to our health service, and the potential for a large loss of life, demanded an extra-ordinary response. I supported it then, and do so now. That was the right decision. We survived. So did our health service. The jobs came back. The Ukrainian war is 100% down to Putin. No invasion, no war. You wanted the Nato countries to stand back and let him overpower another country which, despite it's known faults, is making headway towards becoming a modern democratic state. It is also a buffer between other former Soviet states who have succeeded in their quest for democracy. Supporting Ukrainian resistance and wearing down Russia's military was an imperative unless we were prepared to see an emboldened Russia camped on the borders of western Europe. Of course it's costly and painful, but, on balance, the alternative was worse. This was an event over which we had no control. Only the need to react. The forecast I gave for the USA, which is their official one, was 3.5% not 2. Not my forecast. Theirs! If it goes pear shaped you had better address your sarcasm to them. Edited by Wisbech Eagle (17 Oct 2022 9.46am)
For the avoidance of doubt any comments in response to a previous post are directed to its ideas and not at any, or all, posters personally. |
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Teddy Eagle 17 Oct 22 9.14am | |
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Originally posted by Maine Eagle
Joe Biden is doing fine, he’s not the sharpest tool in the shed, but experience and a steady hand counts for a lot in the White House. The main things I like about him are that he is not a sociopathic pathological liar, unable to form normal relationships with those around him and consumed by the need for attention, affection and wracked by paranoia and jealousy, with the conflict resolution skills of a 3 year old during a tantrum over not getting ice cream.
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Wisbech Eagle Truro Cornwall 17 Oct 22 9.58am | |
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Originally posted by Maine Eagle
Joe Biden is doing fine, he’s not the sharpest tool in the shed, but experience and a steady hand counts for a lot in the White House. The main things I like about him are that he is not a sociopathic pathological liar, unable to form normal relationships with those around him and consumed by the need for attention, affection and wracked by paranoia and jealousy, with the conflict resolution skills of a 3 year old during a tantrum over not getting ice cream. Absolutely. As I have said many times Biden did his job as soon as he defeated Trump. Anything else was a bonus. The USA's institutions can function pretty well with any President who can listen and act on sound advice. So Mickey Mouse could have managed it better than Trump ever did. The most important thing is who the Democrats put up in 2024. They need to defeat who-ever is the Republican candidate and then stop the people who seem intent on destroying democracy, mostly those endorsed by Trump. Trump's influence over the GOP needs to be curtailed asap.
For the avoidance of doubt any comments in response to a previous post are directed to its ideas and not at any, or all, posters personally. |
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silvertop Portishead 17 Oct 22 10.06am | |
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Originally posted by Midlands Eagle
I think that the "core membership" have already proved that they are a bunch of clueless buffoons so a more sensible approach might be in order to appoint the next leader like limiting the vote to the MPs who actually know the candidates best of all Edited by Midlands Eagle (17 Oct 2022 6.09am)
I was on the side of Parliament on that one; but that did not make it any more "democratic" (whatever that means?). The only sensible solution is to replace Truss with one candidate who the 5 major factions of the Tory party will support - good luck with that - and then put it to the people in a GE to underpin their mandate - which they won't as they will get creamed. Thus, 2 more years of political turmoil caused not by the system or the difficult environment but by a party that places clinging on to power above the country they are supposed to serve. People forgave the Tories for all the sleaze that brought in Blaire. Ask and I suspect most can't remember the end of the Major years: more their superior stewardship of the economy and world image. However, people still don't forgive Labour for the 1970s. I am afraid that when they come to vote in decades to come, people will talk about the Tory shambles that almost brought the country to its knees like they do about the Callaghan years.
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silvertop Portishead 17 Oct 22 10.09am | |
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I am not taking sides here, but please provide ONE president who could cast the first stone. All are nuanced personalities; none are without fault and/or sin.
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Rudi Hedman Caterham 17 Oct 22 10.37am | |
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Originally posted by Stirlingsays
I wager that the the worsening economy is down to far longer term affects and consequences. However, Brexit is hardly at fault for our current situation as the inflation and economic situation in other European countries testify. The huge debt levels over the last thirty years that came to a head in 2008 (when finance finally accepted that it could never be paid back normally), allied to the covid economic response of telling huge numbers of the workforce to sit on their arsse at home (which you supported) and then this absolutely nutty war in the east of Europe to feck people on energy bills...well that's put the icing on the economically disastrous cake. Now that's what you are looking at....not sodding Brexit, which has been sold down the line anyway. As for inflation in the US dropping to 2 percent next year....I'll hold you to that....as I don't think it'll get anywhere near it. The problem now is that since Brexit we haven’t the trade deals set up to export and grow ourselves out of this. It’s right in front of our eyes, yet even the PM and cabinet appear to have missed this, although no surprises there. The rest I agree with. And western leaders are driving us downwards. It’s inevitable over a longer term period. Problem is they’re managing to make debts worse and futures bleaker at a faster rate year on year.
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