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Johnny Eagles berlin 20 Feb 15 3.08pm | |
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Quote serial thriller at 20 Feb 2015 2.04pm
Quote Johnny Eagles at 19 Feb 2015 11.01am
Threads like this puzzle me. I dislike politicians. I think the Tories are charlatans who wouldn't know what a principle was if one crawled up their trousers and bit them. I think the parliamentary Labour party are metropolitan bourgeois snobs who secretly despise the people who give them most of their votes. "Out of touch" is possibly fair criticism (of MPs in general). But "heartless"? "Bloodthirsty"? Do you honestly think they are immoral people who willingly want to go out and damage people's lives? That strikes me as incredibly immature and irrational. I'm all for passion in politics but this reduces debate to a puerile, schoolboy level.
One example is the Tory's pledge to stop funding the EU's Mare Nostrum initiative, which saves hundreds of refugees, asylum seekers and those seeking religious, political and economic persecution in Africa who are fleeing for Europe by boat. The Tories' Baroness Anelay said they were stopping funding because they didn't want to encourage others to attempt the move. Regardless of your opinion on it, what is so frequently ignored in the debate around it is if you do follow Anelay's mode of thinking, you are implicitly condemning thousands of human beings to death in the short term. Often the only way I have found effective in translating this point in discussing with those on the right who are anti-migration is to resort to hyperbole. I'd rather not, nut so often a more moderate analysis of something so bleak and hopeless as mortality goes overlooked, and for me it can't afford to. Similarly in arguments of austerity, the death count of policy is again so often ignored. The official statistics of suicide in this country among men is at it's highest in 15 years, and that's ignoring the numerous unofficial deaths of ostracised groups, like illegal immigrants and homeless people. As with Mare Nostrum, the Tories are aware of these statistics, and only the most blinkered 'out of touch' human being would fail to see a correlation. The Tories may well ideologically believe that austerity measures such as the one I alluded to in this thread are beneficial overall for this country, but there has to be an awareness that they are killing people, however subtly, and to my mind that is totally c*ntish and must be exposed fully to their advocates, and if hyperbole is the only thing that allows a thread like this to go past it's 5th page or whatever, than that is justified. 1. Hyperbole in Debate: 2. On "Austerity" I am reading a book about Suez at the moment. What is striking is how Eden and co pursued the illusion of "global influence" at a massive cost to Britain to virtually no worthwhile effect. I think this is true of lefties who think Britain should be funding every last "Good Cause" there is in the world, from giving weapons to Ukraine to defeating global warming to ending human rights abuses in Saudia Arabia. When challenged, the refrain is often "we're the 6th richest country in the world". (Actually we're not, we have the 6th biggest economy, but let's put that to one side.) My point is, if we don't sort out our economy - and the Tories, for all their boasting, have not made a dent in levels of public spending we simply cannot afford - you can have all the good intentions you want, but they won't make a blind bit of difference. I think the "austerity" Britain has experienced isn't worthy of the name and doesn't compare to what will happen - think Greece but worse - if we don't get a handle on our over-indebted, under-educated and under-productive economy in the next few decades. Attachment: How to disagree.jpg (56.54Kb)
...we must expand...get more pupils...so that the knowledge will spread... |
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dynamicdick Dormansland 20 Feb 15 3.32pm | |
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G Quote serial thriller at 20 Feb 2015 2.11pm
Quote dynamicdick at 19 Feb 2015 8.43pm
Quote serial thriller at 15 Feb 2015 11.39pm
Just in case you didn't realise... I don't even know where to begin. They are c*nts, out of touch, heartless, bloodthirsty c*nts of the highest order and I hope that Ed Milliband wins a landslide not because I like Labour, but just to rub in in these horrible conceited c*nts' faces that even a morally bankrupt party like Labour with a clown as leader is more popular than their brand of victimising, fear-inducing alienating politics. F*ck you Cameron. F*ck you. g --------------- Milliband...a lefty...you have me in tears sir! Edited by serial thriller (20 Feb 2015 2.11pm)
Bring back Brolin |
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ghosteagle 20 Feb 15 4.29pm | |
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Quote dynamicdick at 20 Feb 2015 3.32pm
G Quote serial thriller at 20 Feb 2015 2.11pm
Quote dynamicdick at 19 Feb 2015 8.43pm
Quote serial thriller at 15 Feb 2015 11.39pm
Just in case you didn't realise... I don't even know where to begin. They are c*nts, out of touch, heartless, bloodthirsty c*nts of the highest order and I hope that Ed Milliband wins a landslide not because I like Labour, but just to rub in in these horrible conceited c*nts' faces that even a morally bankrupt party like Labour with a clown as leader is more popular than their brand of victimising, fear-inducing alienating politics. F*ck you Cameron. F*ck you. g --------------- Milliband...a lefty...you have me in tears sir! Edited by serial thriller (20 Feb 2015 2.11pm)
With Cameron on Murdoch's lap.
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Pussay Patrol 20 Feb 15 4.55pm | |
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Quote serial thriller at 20 Feb 2015 2.04pm
Quote Johnny Eagles at 19 Feb 2015 11.01am
Threads like this puzzle me. I dislike politicians. I think the Tories are charlatans who wouldn't know what a principle was if one crawled up their trousers and bit them. I think the parliamentary Labour party are metropolitan bourgeois snobs who secretly despise the people who give them most of their votes. "Out of touch" is possibly fair criticism (of MPs in general). But "heartless"? "Bloodthirsty"? Do you honestly think they are immoral people who willingly want to go out and damage people's lives? That strikes me as incredibly immature and irrational. I'm all for passion in politics but this reduces debate to a puerile, schoolboy level.
One example is the Tory's pledge to stop funding the EU's Mare Nostrum initiative, which saves hundreds of refugees, asylum seekers and those seeking religious, political and economic persecution in Africa who are fleeing for Europe by boat. The Tories' Baroness Anelay said they were stopping funding because they didn't want to encourage others to attempt the move. Regardless of your opinion on it, what is so frequently ignored in the debate around it is if you do follow Anelay's mode of thinking, you are implicitly condemning thousands of human beings to death in the short term. Often the only way I have found effective in translating this point in discussing with those on the right who are anti-migration is to resort to hyperbole. I'd rather not, nut so often a more moderate analysis of something so bleak and hopeless as mortality goes overlooked, and for me it can't afford to. Similarly in arguments of austerity, the death count of policy is again so often ignored. The official statistics of suicide in this country among men is at it's highest in 15 years, and that's ignoring the numerous unofficial deaths of ostracised groups, like illegal immigrants and homeless people. As with Mare Nostrum, the Tories are aware of these statistics, and only the most blinkered 'out of touch' human being would fail to see a correlation. The Tories may well ideologically believe that austerity measures such as the one I alluded to in this thread are beneficial overall for this country, but there has to be an awareness that they are killing people, however subtly, and to my mind that is totally c*ntish and must be exposed fully to their advocates, and if hyperbole is the only thing that allows a thread like this to go past it's 5th page or whatever, than that is justified.
Maybe if investment in that refugee program meant less of them turning up at Sangatte and trying to sneak in it would be a good investment
Paua oouaarancì Irà chiyeah Ishé galé ma ba oo ah |
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Hoof Hearted 20 Feb 15 5.11pm | |
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Quote serial thriller at 20 Feb 2015 2.04pm
Quote Johnny Eagles at 19 Feb 2015 11.01am
Threads like this puzzle me. I dislike politicians. I think the Tories are charlatans who wouldn't know what a principle was if one crawled up their trousers and bit them. I think the parliamentary Labour party are metropolitan bourgeois snobs who secretly despise the people who give them most of their votes. "Out of touch" is possibly fair criticism (of MPs in general). But "heartless"? "Bloodthirsty"? Do you honestly think they are immoral people who willingly want to go out and damage people's lives? That strikes me as incredibly immature and irrational. I'm all for passion in politics but this reduces debate to a puerile, schoolboy level.
One example is the Tory's pledge to stop funding the EU's Mare Nostrum initiative, which saves hundreds of refugees, asylum seekers and those seeking religious, political and economic persecution in Africa who are fleeing for Europe by boat. The Tories' Baroness Anelay said they were stopping funding because they didn't want to encourage others to attempt the move. Regardless of your opinion on it, what is so frequently ignored in the debate around it is if you do follow Anelay's mode of thinking, you are implicitly condemning thousands of human beings to death in the short term. Often the only way I have found effective in translating this point in discussing with those on the right who are anti-migration is to resort to hyperbole. I'd rather not, nut so often a more moderate analysis of something so bleak and hopeless as mortality goes overlooked, and for me it can't afford to. Similarly in arguments of austerity, the death count of policy is again so often ignored. The official statistics of suicide in this country among men is at it's highest in 15 years, and that's ignoring the numerous unofficial deaths of ostracised groups, like illegal immigrants and homeless people. As with Mare Nostrum, the Tories are aware of these statistics, and only the most blinkered 'out of touch' human being would fail to see a correlation. The Tories may well ideologically believe that austerity measures such as the one I alluded to in this thread are beneficial overall for this country, but there has to be an awareness that they are killing people, however subtly, and to my mind that is totally c*ntish and must be exposed fully to their advocates, and if hyperbole is the only thing that allows a thread like this to go past it's 5th page or whatever, than that is justified.
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dannyh wherever I lay my hat....... 20 Feb 15 5.26pm | |
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. Edited by dannyh (20 Feb 2015 5.28pm)
"It's not the bullet that's got my name on it that concerns me; it's all them other ones flyin' around marked 'To Whom It May Concern.'" |
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dannyh wherever I lay my hat....... 20 Feb 15 5.29pm | |
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Quote serial thriller at 18 Feb 2015 6.06pm
Quote dannyh at 17 Feb 2015 3.38pm
Quote serial thriller at 15 Feb 2015 11.39pm
Just in case you didn't realise... I don't even know where to begin. They are c*nts, out of touch, heartless, bloodthirsty c*nts of the highest order and I hope that Ed Milliband wins a landslide not because I like Labour, but just to rub in in these horrible conceited c*nts' faces that even a morally bankrupt party like Labour with a clown as leader is more popular than their brand of victimising, fear-inducing alienating politics. F*ck you Cameron. F*ck you.
At the heart of Mr Cameron’s speech was the suggestion that young people would no longer be eligible for welfare. “Today it is still possible to leave school, sign on, find a flat, start claiming housing benefit and opt for a life on benefits. It’s time for bold action here,” he said. “We should ask, as we write our next manifesto, if that option should really exist at all.” Instead, young people should have a “clear, positive choice” to go to school or college, do an apprenticeship or get a job. “But just choose the dole? We’ve got to offer them something
What the Tories have very cunningly done (after all, w@nkers do tend to be very cunning) is frame the whole thing around the popular image of the 'benefit scrounger'. Even though so much information has come out proving just how exaggerated an issue this is, even though benefits have been squeezed and squeezed and squeezed in recent years, and even though the Joseph Rowntree Foundation found that there is no correlation between removing benefits and people looking for work, it's still so appealing: it's difficult to defend that sort of lifestyle, even if only a few thousand people live by it. But of course we're not talking about a policy which will only affect the long-term unemployed; we're talking about something that will affect the hundreds of thousands of kids who will seek benefits for totally legitimate reasons. Maybe you work in construction and you break your leg, or maybe you try to set up a business and it goes tits up. Where previously the state intervened to provide you with financial support, if Cameron gets his wish it no longer will and you will instead be forced in to a joke job just to pay the bills. That's cunning, really f*cking cunning because it means not only do the Tories get to pander to the Daily Mail readers who genuinely believe the country is buckling under the millions of benefit scroungers, but it means the Tories enter the election with record employment figures, while their mates in big business find a new pool of workers willing to work for pennies on insecure contracts. And so, to wrap up in typically dramatic fashion, they are all c*nts and are first against the wall come the revolution. Do you actually believe all that bollicks you just posted ?
"It's not the bullet that's got my name on it that concerns me; it's all them other ones flyin' around marked 'To Whom It May Concern.'" |
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TUX redhill 20 Feb 15 6.07pm | |
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Quote Hoof Hearted at 20 Feb 2015 5.11pm
Quote serial thriller at 20 Feb 2015 2.04pm
Quote Johnny Eagles at 19 Feb 2015 11.01am
Threads like this puzzle me. I dislike politicians. I think the Tories are charlatans who wouldn't know what a principle was if one crawled up their trousers and bit them. I think the parliamentary Labour party are metropolitan bourgeois snobs who secretly despise the people who give them most of their votes. "Out of touch" is possibly fair criticism (of MPs in general). But "heartless"? "Bloodthirsty"? Do you honestly think they are immoral people who willingly want to go out and damage people's lives? That strikes me as incredibly immature and irrational. I'm all for passion in politics but this reduces debate to a puerile, schoolboy level.
One example is the Tory's pledge to stop funding the EU's Mare Nostrum initiative, which saves hundreds of refugees, asylum seekers and those seeking religious, political and economic persecution in Africa who are fleeing for Europe by boat. The Tories' Baroness Anelay said they were stopping funding because they didn't want to encourage others to attempt the move. Regardless of your opinion on it, what is so frequently ignored in the debate around it is if you do follow Anelay's mode of thinking, you are implicitly condemning thousands of human beings to death in the short term. Often the only way I have found effective in translating this point in discussing with those on the right who are anti-migration is to resort to hyperbole. I'd rather not, nut so often a more moderate analysis of something so bleak and hopeless as mortality goes overlooked, and for me it can't afford to. Similarly in arguments of austerity, the death count of policy is again so often ignored. The official statistics of suicide in this country among men is at it's highest in 15 years, and that's ignoring the numerous unofficial deaths of ostracised groups, like illegal immigrants and homeless people. As with Mare Nostrum, the Tories are aware of these statistics, and only the most blinkered 'out of touch' human being would fail to see a correlation. The Tories may well ideologically believe that austerity measures such as the one I alluded to in this thread are beneficial overall for this country, but there has to be an awareness that they are killing people, however subtly, and to my mind that is totally c*ntish and must be exposed fully to their advocates, and if hyperbole is the only thing that allows a thread like this to go past it's 5th page or whatever, than that is justified.
But circumstances do.
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imbored UK 20 Feb 15 6.21pm | |
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Quote Hoof Hearted at 20 Feb 2015 5.11pm
Quote serial thriller at 20 Feb 2015 2.04pm
Quote Johnny Eagles at 19 Feb 2015 11.01am
Threads like this puzzle me. I dislike politicians. I think the Tories are charlatans who wouldn't know what a principle was if one crawled up their trousers and bit them. I think the parliamentary Labour party are metropolitan bourgeois snobs who secretly despise the people who give them most of their votes. "Out of touch" is possibly fair criticism (of MPs in general). But "heartless"? "Bloodthirsty"? Do you honestly think they are immoral people who willingly want to go out and damage people's lives? That strikes me as incredibly immature and irrational. I'm all for passion in politics but this reduces debate to a puerile, schoolboy level.
One example is the Tory's pledge to stop funding the EU's Mare Nostrum initiative, which saves hundreds of refugees, asylum seekers and those seeking religious, political and economic persecution in Africa who are fleeing for Europe by boat. The Tories' Baroness Anelay said they were stopping funding because they didn't want to encourage others to attempt the move. Regardless of your opinion on it, what is so frequently ignored in the debate around it is if you do follow Anelay's mode of thinking, you are implicitly condemning thousands of human beings to death in the short term. Often the only way I have found effective in translating this point in discussing with those on the right who are anti-migration is to resort to hyperbole. I'd rather not, nut so often a more moderate analysis of something so bleak and hopeless as mortality goes overlooked, and for me it can't afford to. Similarly in arguments of austerity, the death count of policy is again so often ignored. The official statistics of suicide in this country among men is at it's highest in 15 years, and that's ignoring the numerous unofficial deaths of ostracised groups, like illegal immigrants and homeless people. As with Mare Nostrum, the Tories are aware of these statistics, and only the most blinkered 'out of touch' human being would fail to see a correlation. The Tories may well ideologically believe that austerity measures such as the one I alluded to in this thread are beneficial overall for this country, but there has to be an awareness that they are killing people, however subtly, and to my mind that is totally c*ntish and must be exposed fully to their advocates, and if hyperbole is the only thing that allows a thread like this to go past it's 5th page or whatever, than that is justified.
Surely in many cases their quality of life compels them? It's easy when you're not in their shoes. I'm pretty sure they're not risking their lives all because they like boat rides and freebies.
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silvertop Portishead 20 Feb 15 8.38pm | |
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I think I can hear the not so distant sound of Mr hoof haing a quiet chuckle
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serial thriller The Promised Land 20 Feb 15 9.28pm | |
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Quote dannyh at 20 Feb 2015 5.29pm
Quote serial thriller at 18 Feb 2015 6.06pm
Quote dannyh at 17 Feb 2015 3.38pm
Quote serial thriller at 15 Feb 2015 11.39pm
Just in case you didn't realise... I don't even know where to begin. They are c*nts, out of touch, heartless, bloodthirsty c*nts of the highest order and I hope that Ed Milliband wins a landslide not because I like Labour, but just to rub in in these horrible conceited c*nts' faces that even a morally bankrupt party like Labour with a clown as leader is more popular than their brand of victimising, fear-inducing alienating politics. F*ck you Cameron. F*ck you.
At the heart of Mr Cameron’s speech was the suggestion that young people would no longer be eligible for welfare. “Today it is still possible to leave school, sign on, find a flat, start claiming housing benefit and opt for a life on benefits. It’s time for bold action here,” he said. “We should ask, as we write our next manifesto, if that option should really exist at all.” Instead, young people should have a “clear, positive choice” to go to school or college, do an apprenticeship or get a job. “But just choose the dole? We’ve got to offer them something
What the Tories have very cunningly done (after all, w@nkers do tend to be very cunning) is frame the whole thing around the popular image of the 'benefit scrounger'. Even though so much information has come out proving just how exaggerated an issue this is, even though benefits have been squeezed and squeezed and squeezed in recent years, and even though the Joseph Rowntree Foundation found that there is no correlation between removing benefits and people looking for work, it's still so appealing: it's difficult to defend that sort of lifestyle, even if only a few thousand people live by it. But of course we're not talking about a policy which will only affect the long-term unemployed; we're talking about something that will affect the hundreds of thousands of kids who will seek benefits for totally legitimate reasons. Maybe you work in construction and you break your leg, or maybe you try to set up a business and it goes tits up. Where previously the state intervened to provide you with financial support, if Cameron gets his wish it no longer will and you will instead be forced in to a joke job just to pay the bills. That's cunning, really f*cking cunning because it means not only do the Tories get to pander to the Daily Mail readers who genuinely believe the country is buckling under the millions of benefit scroungers, but it means the Tories enter the election with record employment figures, while their mates in big business find a new pool of workers willing to work for pennies on insecure contracts. And so, to wrap up in typically dramatic fashion, they are all c*nts and are first against the wall come the revolution. Do you actually believe all that bollicks you just posted ?
If punk ever happened I'd be preaching the law, instead of listenin to Lydon lecture BBC4 |
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Hoof Hearted 21 Feb 15 10.47am | |
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Quote silvertop at 20 Feb 2015 8.38pm
I think I can hear the not so distant sound of Mr hoof having a quiet chuckle I'm not that callous........
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