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Brentmiester_General Front line in the battle against t... 10 Jun 18 9.35am | |
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Originally posted by Stirlingsays
Robinson isn't an ideal figure but I'm a secularist and I'm also not a blind fool when it comes to statistics. People on the far left want to shut others up or harm them. Yet they accuse others of being fascists....leaving aside the historical inaccuracy of using this term. 'the fascists of the future will call themselves anti-fascists' (Huey Long) Edited by Stirlingsays (10 Jun 2018 8.50am) Hahahaha. You’ve outdone yourself with this one. Blinder.
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braunstoneagle the middle of bumf*** nowhere... 10 Jun 18 9.48am | |
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Originally posted by Stirlingsays
Once again, Islam isn't a race. Go and develop a brain cell to match your other one. you seem to be nit-picking to avoid the truth. ok, religionism would have to be the correct terminology for you
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Stirlingsays 10 Jun 18 9.58am | |
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Originally posted by braunstoneagle
you seem to be nit-picking to avoid the truth. ok, religionism would have to be the correct terminology for you
Nothing you can convert to is a race. It's a simple fact, not a nit pick.
'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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Stirlingsays 10 Jun 18 10.16am | |
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England is only England if the majority of people in it subscribe to an English identity. This is pure common sense. It doesn't have to be everybody or anything to do with someone's skin colour or indeed their religion. I'm a critic of those who lie about 'hate' or other labels. Some of those critics, but not all, do this for the specific purpose of restricting speech. They wish to censor, and in some cases punish, those who disagree. However, it's highly important that as an secularist I'm highly opposed to any religion that interferes with the freedom of the individual. If you aren't trying to restrict me or others, fine, believe what you want. I might criticise the logic of what you believe. I might criticise its impact on children. However, I won't support impeding on you. Unlike Robinson I believe that Islam, like any other religion can have a future here. I support Islamic reformers, who are prominent. For example: Imam Tawhidi
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Park Road 10 Jun 18 10.26am | |
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Originally posted by braunstoneagle
you seem to be nit-picking to avoid the truth. ok, religionism would have to be the correct terminology for you TR practices religionism? That would make him a religionist. Doesn't sound like TR to me. Edited by Park Road (10 Jun 2018 10.28am)
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Stirlingsays 10 Jun 18 11.10am | |
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Here is a fascinating discussion between Imam Tawhidi and Mufassil Islam on the nature of Islam. It's not an aggressive discussion it's from the perspective of a believer v agnostic debate. These are two fine upstanding individuals from this community. I can recommend it....and again, this isn't pushing any narrative it's just educational to hear these two talk about how they see the religion.
'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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dannyboy1978 10 Jun 18 12.01pm | |
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Originally posted by serial thriller
This, I have to say, is the first time in all my years on this site where such openly racist and ethno-nationalist opinion has not only been expressed on these boards, but afforded this prominence and apparent seriousness. It seems depressingly symbolic. Edited by serial thriller (09 Jun 2018 6.51pm) You said it your self "opinion " does everyone have to have your "opinion"? You and your type are the problem, hindering free speech where people are actually scared to express views.
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Matov 10 Jun 18 12.02pm | |
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Originally posted by Park Road
For someone so irrelevant, there sure were a lot people yesterday demonstrating support for that irrelevance. And that is fascinating. Now I am not convinced about TR for a whole host of reasons but something is going on in our wider society that is that odd mix of both troubling yet fascinating. Here we have a white, working class man, with a dubious past, no formal education, lacking a formal political structure around him and yet he can get thousands to go out on the streets and demand his release, despite the awkward fact that he pleaded guilty. And even more odd, is the fact that there have been other protests in cities around the world. He represents something. A warning light. An energy. Now again I go back to my first point. My own political antenna is twitching away when ever I see TR on the box. Could be my paranoia, could be a whole host of other negative parts to my psyche, but the reality is that TR represents something for an increasing amount of people out there. And people willing to put it on the line. Now those people who attacked the police, did nobody any favours but to see the Police backing off, and I am sure they had their tactical reasons for doing so, is a line being crossed. A direct, and very visible, challenge to the authority of the Government. The actual, and seemingly widening fault line in our society. And it even has, in these Brexit days, an increasingly Pan-European nature to it. Which for those on the left who seek to slag off TR and his supporters, is perhaps the biggest irony of it.
"The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command." - 1984 - George Orwell. |
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dannyboy1978 10 Jun 18 12.14pm | |
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Originally posted by dannyboy1978
You said it your self "opinion " does everyone have to have your "opinion"? You and your type are the problem, hindering free speech where people are actually scared to express views. Incidently having concerns over the high volume of immigration is not racist otherwise it would not be in party manifestos. Having concerns over different groups not integrating is not racist otherwise David Cameron would not be aloud to say this. And finally can one of you from the left tell me why Tommy R cant state multiculturalism hasn't worked but David Cameron can?
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Park Road 10 Jun 18 12.16pm | |
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Originally posted by Matov
And that is fascinating. Now I am not convinced about TR for a whole host of reasons but something is going on in our wider society that is that odd mix of both troubling yet fascinating. Here we have a white, working class man, with a dubious past, no formal education, lacking a formal political structure around him and yet he can get thousands to go out on the streets and demand his release, despite the awkward fact that he pleaded guilty. And even more odd, is the fact that there have been other protests in cities around the world. He represents something. A warning light. An energy. Now again I go back to my first point. My own political antenna is twitching away when ever I see TR on the box. Could be my paranoia, could be a whole host of other negative parts to my psyche, but the reality is that TR represents something for an increasing amount of people out there. And people willing to put it on the line. Now those people who attacked the police, did nobody any favours but to see the Police backing off, and I am sure they had their tactical reasons for doing so, is a line being crossed. A direct, and very visible, challenge to the authority of the Government. The actual, and seemingly widening fault line in our society. And it even has, in these Brexit days, an increasingly Pan-European nature to it. Which for those on the left who seek to slag off TR and his supporters, is perhaps the biggest irony of it.
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serial thriller The Promised Land 10 Jun 18 12.35pm | |
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Originally posted by dannyboy1978
Incidently having concerns over the high volume of immigration is not racist otherwise it would not be in party manifestos.
What I've been trying to explain to people on here, and I will continue to do so sporadically and patiently, is show that racism isn't some form of street movement on the fringes of British society. Rather, it is an institutionalised dictum which has been generated by the establishment, and one which some - but thankfully always a minority - of working class people have been swayed by. Let me give you another example. After the war, the government passed the Commonwealth Citizenship act which allowed for all members of the Commonwealth at the time to become citizens, and many of them were brought to the mainland to plug the gaps left in our depleted workforce. Now some may see this as cynical, others like Stirling may claim it means nothing. But given that many of these people had fought for the British, had family members who gave their lives for Britain and of course had worked for the riches of the British Empire for generations, I think they had a fair claim to British citizenry. One person who clearly didn't see it that way was Thatcher. She passed, in 1981, the 'British Nationality Act', which now only formally recognised as 'first tier British citizens' those born on the island, or with parents and grandparents who were born there. That meant that your Boris Johnson's and Aaron Banks' and all the other 'expats' born outside of the Isles were given dominant citizen status, but the Jamaicans and pakistanis and Malaysians who may have lived here all of their adult lives were, in effect, second class citizens. As if to enshrine the obviously implicit racial dimension of this law, in 1983 as Britain and Argentina were having it off in the Falklands Thatcher granted an exception to her rule by making Falkland inhabitants - who are of course overwhelmingly white - citizens of Britain. The legacy of course of all this is the current Windrush scandal, and the amnesia of the establishment towards the concerns of black and brown citizens of the country, many of whom were 'sent back' to countries they'd never lived in in their life! Racism in policy is neither new nor surprising, but should be fought against for reasons that I hope are blindingly obvious to everyone. Finally, if you honestly think I'm 'hindering free speech', I suggest you go and have a long hard look on this wikipedia page and learn the actual definition of something you supposedly care so much about: [Link]
If punk ever happened I'd be preaching the law, instead of listenin to Lydon lecture BBC4 |
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Park Road 10 Jun 18 12.48pm | |
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Originally posted by serial thriller
What I've been trying to explain to people on here, and I will continue to do so sporadically and patiently, is show that racism isn't some form of street movement on the fringes of British society. Rather, it is an institutionalised dictum which has been generated by the establishment, and one which some - but thankfully always a minority - of working class people have been swayed by. Let me give you another example. After the war, the government passed the Commonwealth Citizenship act which allowed for all members of the Commonwealth at the time to become citizens, and many of them were brought to the mainland to plug the gaps left in our depleted workforce. Now some may see this as cynical, others like Stirling may claim it means nothing. But given that many of these people had fought for the British, had family members who gave their lives for Britain and of course had worked for the riches of the British Empire for generations, I think they had a fair claim to British citizenry. One person who clearly didn't see it that way was Thatcher. She passed, in 1981, the 'British Nationality Act', which now only formally recognised as 'first tier British citizens' those born on the island, or with parents and grandparents who were born there. That meant that your Boris Johnson's and Aaron Banks' and all the other 'expats' born outside of the Isles were given dominant citizen status, but the Jamaicans and pakistanis and Malaysians who may have lived here all of their adult lives were, in effect, second class citizens. As if to enshrine the obviously implicit racial dimension of this law, in 1983 as Britain and Argentina were having it off in the Falklands Thatcher granted an exception to her rule by making Falkland inhabitants - who are of course overwhelmingly white - citizens of Britain. The legacy of course of all this is the current Windrush scandal, and the amnesia of the establishment towards the concerns of black and brown citizens of the country, many of whom were 'sent back' to countries they'd never lived in in their life! Racism in policy is neither new nor surprising, but should be fought against for reasons that I hope are blindingly obvious to everyone. Finally, if you honestly think I'm 'hindering free speech', I suggest you go and have a long hard look on this wikipedia page and learn the actual definition of something you supposedly care so much about: [Link] Interesting, only working class are swayed by it, Douglas Murray well known chav. Again an attack on a group of people by someone who frequently uses the label racist, to shut down any reasonable form of debate. I think its been mentioned upteen times that you can't be racist against a religion. What's the terminology for someone who only thinks the working class are stupid? Edited by Park Road (10 Jun 2018 12.50pm) Edited by Park Road (10 Jun 2018 12.50pm)
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