Politics in General

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Re: Politics in General

Post by Rhys Benjamin »

The government's problem last night was the fact two issues were being confused and obfuscated.

The standards committee can, and should, be reformed. This is not that controversial. Indeed, JRM has said they're keeping this on the table but wants to bring it back to the House for a "proper" way of doing it cross-party.

The vote on Paterson's suspension may have been disputed because of compassionate grounds, given his wife's suicide. This is more controversial, but still not a cut-and-dry "corruption" story.

What the govt got wrong was conflating both issues.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Gavin Chipper »

Ian Hislop gave Boris Johnson and the Tories a good kicking on HIGNFY this evening. Rhys's favourite programme.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Paul Anderson »

And now John Major has weighed in. He knows plenty about this topic, so his words will have an effect hopefully
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Martin Long »

Gavin Chipper wrote: Wed Nov 03, 2021 11:20 am
Mark James wrote: Wed Nov 03, 2021 10:28 am In fairness, current Labour probably would be as bad. Starmer being a useless gombeen should probably get a bit mention here too.
I'm no fan of Starmer, but I think as with his predecessors, there is a big danger of people just assigning a sterotype to him and it sticking, and then the Tories win the next general election. With Starmer, it mainly seems to be that he's boring, and also there's the whole "But what does he stand for?" I was watching Frankie Boyle's New World Order the other day, and Boyle really ripped into him about being borng. I like Frankie Boyle on the whole, but here he was just being unoriginal. Is he really any more boring than your average politician? It seems to me that Boyle's just (unwittingly?) bought into the right wing media's sterotype of him. This kind of crap is why the Tories win elections.

There's far more to rip into about Boris Johnson, or indeed proabably any Tory leader ever, but unlike the left, the right are more likely to suck it up on the basis that they have a better chance of winning an election.
I very much doubt that Frankie Boyle has bought into right wing stereotypes of politicians given he is one of the most left wing people in the country. By his own admission, he is more left wing than Noam Chomsky. His political views are far more likely to be similar to that of Mark James.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Mark James »

Why are the left expected to hold their nose and vote for centre, if not centre right, candidates just to beat tories or republicans. Shouldn't the likes of James O'Brien have be saying "I don't like Corbyn but we must vote Labour to defeat the Conservatives" instead of saying he would be voting lib dem. Voting for the lesser of two evils has gotten us nowhere. The current Labour Party needs to be humiliated at the next election.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Callum Todd »

Mark James wrote: Sun Nov 07, 2021 11:41 am Why are the left expected to hold their nose and vote for centre, if not centre right, candidates just to beat tories or republicans. Shouldn't the likes of James O'Brien have be saying "I don't like Corbyn but we must vote Labour to defeat the Conservatives" instead of saying he would be voting lib dem. Voting for the lesser of two evils has gotten us nowhere. The current Labour Party needs to be humiliated at the next election.
Please forgive me if I've misunderstood you but I think the final sentence of your above comment answers the questions you pose earlier in the same comment. If you were to remodel your statement to be from the perspective of a more centrist or centre-left Labour perspective it could read:

"Why are the centre(-left) expected to hold their nose and vote for left, if not far left, candidates just to beat tories or republicans. Why should the likes of James O'Brien have be saying "I don't like Corbyn but we must vote Labour to defeat the Conservatives" instead of saying he would be voting lib dem. Voting for the lesser of two evils has gotten us nowhere. The current Labour Party needs to be humiliated at the next election."
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Martin Long »

I don't think people should be expected to vote for anyone and should vote for the party that matches their views the closest. I guess the only reason why you wouldn't do this is if you had a local candidate whose views didn't match yours but did a lot in your local area.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Gavin Chipper »

Martin Long wrote: Sun Nov 07, 2021 12:01 pm I don't think people should be expected to vote for anyone and should vote for the party that matches their views the closest. I guess the only reason why you wouldn't do this is if you had a local candidate whose views didn't match yours but did a lot in your local area.
It's not about being expected to vote for people, although with our terrible voting system, there are arguments for going against your favourite.

But it's more about people with a voice actively sabotaging their most realistic way of getting rid of Boris Johnson. And it's just more annoying when it's with lazy stereotypes. And claiming to be more left than Chomsky doesn't absolve Boyle from this. If he has real problems with Starmer it would be more reasonable of course - I don't actually think he should escape all criticism from the left just in case the Tories get in again.

And while people on the left and those nearer the "centre" bicker about Corbyn/Starmer etc., the Tories all stick together and win every time.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Mark James »

Callum Todd wrote: Sun Nov 07, 2021 11:51 am
Mark James wrote: Sun Nov 07, 2021 11:41 am Why are the left expected to hold their nose and vote for centre, if not centre right, candidates just to beat tories or republicans. Shouldn't the likes of James O'Brien have be saying "I don't like Corbyn but we must vote Labour to defeat the Conservatives" instead of saying he would be voting lib dem. Voting for the lesser of two evils has gotten us nowhere. The current Labour Party needs to be humiliated at the next election.
Please forgive me if I've misunderstood you but I think the final sentence of your above comment answers the questions you pose earlier in the same comment. If you were to remodel your statement to be from the perspective of a more centrist or centre-left Labour perspective it could read:

"Why are the centre(-left) expected to hold their nose and vote for left, if not far left, candidates just to beat tories or republicans. Why should the likes of James O'Brien have be saying "I don't like Corbyn but we must vote Labour to defeat the Conservatives" instead of saying he would be voting lib dem. Voting for the lesser of two evils has gotten us nowhere. The current Labour Party needs to be humiliated at the next election."
The point is the centrists are not expected to vote for the far left (or even centre left). Corbyn is hardly far left for one but it was fine for James O'Brien to say he would vote for lib dems ahead of Corbyn's Labour without being accused of handing the election to the tories in the same way progressives would get blamed if they say they are not going to vote for Starmer's Labour.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Mark James »

Gavin Chipper wrote: Sun Nov 07, 2021 1:53 pm
Martin Long wrote: Sun Nov 07, 2021 12:01 pm I don't think people should be expected to vote for anyone and should vote for the party that matches their views the closest. I guess the only reason why you wouldn't do this is if you had a local candidate whose views didn't match yours but did a lot in your local area.
It's not about being expected to vote for people, although with our terrible voting system, there are arguments for going against your favourite.

But it's more about people with a voice actively sabotaging their most realistic way of getting rid of Boris Johnson. And it's just more annoying when it's with lazy stereotypes. And claiming to be more left than Chomsky doesn't absolve Boyle from this. If he has real problems with Starmer it would be more reasonable of course - I don't actually think he should escape all criticism from the left just in case the Tories get in again.

And while people on the left and those nearer the "centre" bicker about Corbyn/Starmer etc., the Tories all stick together and win every time.
Again, this argument never seemed to be made when Corbyn was leader. The best way of preventing Johnson gaining power was to vote for Corbyn's Labour in 2017 or 2019. People with a voice like James O'Brien or Russel Howard were using their voice to sabotage Corbyn as well as him having people in his own party actively working against him. Maybe you could make the argument that it was weak leadership from Corbyn to not expel those people and I could agree but this is why we need to move away from civility politics and lesser evilism and start calling these people out and holding them accountable. The likes of James O'Brien voting for lib dems ahead of Corbyn is just as responsible for Johnson gaining power as anyone.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Gavin Chipper »

I think the criticism against Corbyn was ridiculous too, especially from his own party. And considering how close the 2017 election was, it's not hard to draw the conclusion that it made a difference.

And the whole thing about Corbyn being really far left was a fabrication too but people bought it. But no-one could point to specific policies. It was just based on him as an individual and his reputation. People are generally further to the left than the politicians they vote for. They just don't realise how far right the Tories are. There's this weird misalignment. Gyles Brandreth, take it away.

But anyway, that all said, I'd rather have Keir Starmer as Prime Minister than Boris Johnson.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Marc Meakin »

Labour needs a new Messiah someone appealing to all.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Gavin Chipper »

Marc Meakin wrote: Sun Nov 07, 2021 5:44 pm Labour needs a new Messiah someone appealing to all.
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I'll pass on another Tony Blair, thanks.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Mark James »

Saw someone on twitter describe the Democrats as the "party paid to not do good things party" and the Republicans as the "paid to do bad things party". Think that can be applied to Labour and the Conservatives too.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Rhys Benjamin »

Mark James wrote: Sun Nov 07, 2021 11:41 am Why are the left expected to hold their nose and vote for […] candidates just to beat tories or republicans.
This is why I am against electoral pacts and always have been. Not only is it the politics of hate, voting explicitly against someone rather than voting for what you believe in (G Johnson, 2016), but it also relies on the postulate that you will vote for the party/candidate that “they” want you to vote for.

Indeed, John Curtice just this week has published this which suggests that Brexit Party voters would split about 70/30 Con/Lab without a BRX candidate, https://amp.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... ysis-finds, and that Farage’s (unilateral) decision not to stand in the 2017 Conservative seats only saved a handful of Conservatives.

Many people have kidded themselves into thinking that Martin Bell’s win in Tatton in 1997 was a rule rather than an exemption. The Conservatives stood down for Zac Goldsmith in a 2016 by-election (which he lost as an Independent), but regained it under a Conservative label in 2017.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Rhys Benjamin »

In the interests of fairness, here are two great pieces of journalism today:

Ross Atkins’ fair and balanced summary of the Paterson case: https://twitter.com/bbcrosatkins/status ... 73128?s=21

Tom Harwood’s hilarious vox pops of climate change loonies: https://twitter.com/gbnews/status/14576 ... 58595?s=21
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Re: Politics in General

Post by JimBentley »

Rhys Benjamin wrote: Tue Nov 09, 2021 10:07 amTom Harwood’s hilarious vox pops of climate change loonies: https://twitter.com/gbnews/status/14576 ... 58595?s=21
That was pathetic. You right-wingers evidently set the bar very low for "comedy".

And Tom Harwood is just repulsive.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Gavin Chipper »

Whatever one thinks of Alastair Campbell, he did a good job on Boris Johnson on Question Time on Thursday. Also, this is the video he referred to about Johnson's lies.
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Re: Politics in General

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You still watch that rubbish?
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Gavin Chipper »

Question Time? Most weeks, yes. There is a lot of rubbish on it though. Mainly Tories. :mrgreen:
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Paul Anderson »

Yeah I guess it's a decent barometer though. It has been very tory for a few years now but hey Brexit etc. The tide thankfully seems to be turning
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Mark James »

Rhys Benjamin wrote: Mon Nov 15, 2021 10:44 am You still watch that rubbish?
You watch GB news.
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Re: Politics in General

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Mark James wrote: Mon Nov 15, 2021 8:34 pm
Rhys Benjamin wrote: Mon Nov 15, 2021 10:44 am You still watch that rubbish?
You watch GB news.
I don't. I follow them on Twitter. As I do with almost every newspaper and broadcast media.
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Re: Politics in General

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Rhys Benjamin wrote: Mon Nov 15, 2021 10:15 pm
Mark James wrote: Mon Nov 15, 2021 8:34 pm
Rhys Benjamin wrote: Mon Nov 15, 2021 10:44 am You still watch that rubbish?
You watch GB news.
I don't. I follow them on Twitter. As I do with almost every newspaper and broadcast media.

Sourced from viewtopic.php?f=7&t=14904
Rhys Benjamin wrote: Mon Nov 15, 2021 10:44 am Meanwhile my "working from home" schedule has turned into filtering data with GB News on in the background.
I count having things on in the background and consuming their output as watching them.
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Re: Politics in General

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Mark James wrote: Tue Nov 16, 2021 10:23 am
Rhys Benjamin wrote:
Meanwhile my "working from home" schedule has turned into filtering data with GB News on in the background.
I count having things on in the background and consuming their output as watching them.
I don’t count having a news channel on in the background as “watching” it.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Mark James »

Rhys Benjamin wrote: Tue Nov 16, 2021 12:06 pm
Mark James wrote: Tue Nov 16, 2021 10:23 am
Rhys Benjamin wrote:
Meanwhile my "working from home" schedule has turned into filtering data with GB News on in the background.
I count having things on in the background and consuming their output as watching them.
I don’t count having a news channel on in the background as “watching” it.
So if Gavin only had Question Time on in the background but was still able to absorb the content you wouldn’t have questioned him about "watching that rubbish"?
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Mark James »

Always amazes me how Conservatives know that being a Conservative and having Conservative opinions is shitty and they have to try and distance themselves from acknowledging it.

"No No, I don't watch the ludicrous far right propaganda channel, I just have it on in the background."
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Elliott Mellor »

Rhys Benjamin wrote: Tue Nov 16, 2021 12:06 pm
Mark James wrote: Tue Nov 16, 2021 10:23 am
Rhys Benjamin wrote:
Meanwhile my "working from home" schedule has turned into filtering data with GB News on in the background.
I count having things on in the background and consuming their output as watching them.
I don’t count having a news channel on in the background as “watching” it.
Come on Rhys, I've seen some daft arguments in this thread but this is a contender for the daftest of them all. You consciously chose to have it on in the background, so you must have at least been somewhat interested in it - you could have chosen a whole plethora of other channels but chose that specific one each day. It's not like you switch the television on and it forces you to have that channel, you have to choose to put it on. Nobody's claiming you're the most ardent fan of it, but for all intents and purposes you are watching it (at the very least, you're a viewer of it if you really insist on silly technical arguments).

Now, consume whatever material you want, but don't do some sort of dance when people acknowledge your doing so. If you're embarrassed by it, then I suggest you stop watching it. If not, then carry on - it's a free world and you can watch whatever channels you want.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Matt Rutherford »

Rhys Benjamin wrote: Tue Nov 16, 2021 12:06 pm
Mark James wrote: Tue Nov 16, 2021 10:23 am
Rhys Benjamin wrote:
Meanwhile my "working from home" schedule has turned into filtering data with GB News on in the background.
I count having things on in the background and consuming their output as watching them.
I don’t count having a news channel on in the background as “watching” it.
Picture the scene...

BOSS-Why did you have pornographic videos on your phone at your desk?

WORKER-I wasn't watching them, they were just 'in the background'
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Re: Politics in General

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Am... I the only person who has the news on in the background when working from home? I've worked in offices with BBC One / BBC News / Sky News on...?
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Re: Politics in General

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Rhys Benjamin wrote: Wed Nov 17, 2021 11:15 pm Am... I the only person who has the news on in the background when working from home? I've worked in offices with BBC One / BBC News / Sky News on...?
I usually have music on. In the office, the Comms staff always have news on, but where there's a telly elsewhere (rarely), they were only usually on for FMQs or major relevant debates in the Parliament.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Rhys Benjamin »

Ian Volante wrote: Thu Nov 18, 2021 1:21 pm
Rhys Benjamin wrote: Wed Nov 17, 2021 11:15 pm Am... I the only person who has the news on in the background when working from home? I've worked in offices with BBC One / BBC News / Sky News on...?
I usually have music on. In the office, the Comms staff always have news on, but where there's a telly elsewhere (rarely), they were only usually on for FMQs or major relevant debates in the Parliament.
Ah. So it is just me.

Now I understand some of the manufactured outrage above…
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Marc Meakin »

Its not Wagner by any chance 😊
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Gavin Chipper »

People need to sort their quotes out. This outrage is not manufactured.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Marc Meakin »

Gavin Chipper wrote: Thu Nov 18, 2021 2:52 pm People need to sort their quotes out. This outrage is not manufactured.
My bad
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Gavin Chipper »

By the way, the taxi bomber was a Christian convert. Bloody Christianist terrorists.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Gavin Chipper »

From the BBC
A campaign by PC Andrew Harper's widow to give mandatory life sentences to the killers of emergency service workers has been backed by the government.
I don't like this at all. It panders to the populist string-em-up mentality, and this is exactly what the justice system should be moving away from. I'm much more for rehabilitation and reintegration into society where possible. I also don't think some lives are worth more than others, so it shouldn't matter if someone is an emergency service worker. And I think actions and intent are more important than consequences, which can often be a matter of (bad) luck.

I obviously have every sympathy with Andrew Harper's widow for what has happened. However, laws should be set by more objective criteria and not based on emotions.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Phil H »

Gavin Chipper wrote: Wed Nov 24, 2021 12:55 pm From the BBC
A campaign by PC Andrew Harper's widow to give mandatory life sentences to the killers of emergency service workers has been backed by the government.
I don't like this at all... It panders to the populist string-em-up mentality... I also don't think some lives are worth more than others.
Totally agree. Painfully on-brand though for the current Govt, of course.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Noel Mc »

It's laughable really, isn't it?

Any money on Sunak being the leaker of the video?
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Gavin Chipper »

Noel Mc wrote: Tue Dec 07, 2021 8:28 pm It's laughable really, isn't it?

Any money on Sunak being the leaker of the video?
Since that post won't age well, this is the story being referred to. But anyway, could be Sunak after the top job. I've no idea really.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Noel Mc »

Gavin Chipper wrote: Tue Dec 07, 2021 10:36 pm
Noel Mc wrote: Tue Dec 07, 2021 8:28 pm It's laughable really, isn't it?

Any money on Sunak being the leaker of the video?
Since that post won't age well, this is the story being referred to. But anyway, could be Sunak after the top job. I've no idea really.
Oh sorry, yep, context is useful!

Will anything come of it?
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Gavin Chipper »

Noel Mc wrote: Tue Dec 07, 2021 10:42 pm
Gavin Chipper wrote: Tue Dec 07, 2021 10:36 pm
Noel Mc wrote: Tue Dec 07, 2021 8:28 pm It's laughable really, isn't it?

Any money on Sunak being the leaker of the video?
Since that post won't age well, this is the story being referred to. But anyway, could be Sunak after the top job. I've no idea really.
Oh sorry, yep, context is useful!

Will anything come of it?
I doubt it will. This is Boris Johnson's government. They can get away with anything.
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Post by Fiona T »

Gavin Chipper wrote: Tue Dec 07, 2021 10:53 pm
Noel Mc wrote: Tue Dec 07, 2021 10:42 pm
Gavin Chipper wrote: Tue Dec 07, 2021 10:36 pm
Since that post won't age well, this is the story being referred to. But anyway, could be Sunak after the top job. I've no idea really.
Oh sorry, yep, context is useful!

Will anything come of it?
I doubt it will. This is Boris Johnson's government. They can get away with anything.
It does feel like that.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Rhys Benjamin »

Good to see my employer voted against the illiberal and authoritarian Covid passes tonight.
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Post by Gavin Chipper »

Rhys Benjamin wrote: Tue Dec 14, 2021 9:28 pm Good to see my employer voted against the illiberal and authoritarian Covid passes tonight.
What are your main concerns with it?
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Post by Gavin Chipper »

Tories got chucked out in the by-election, since it hasn't been mentioned.
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Post by Rhys Benjamin »

Gavin Chipper wrote: Tue Dec 14, 2021 11:07 pm
Rhys Benjamin wrote: Tue Dec 14, 2021 9:28 pm Good to see my employer voted against the illiberal and authoritarian Covid passes tonight.
What are your main concerns with it?
1 - they don't work. Delta and Omicron have a high vaccine escape, and as Boris said on Sunday that means two doses doesn't work any more. So a vaccine pass means you can be spreading Covid around willy-nilly. The alternative is "third doses only", but that's discriminatory to those who have not had the opportunity to have it.

2 - if you went to LFTs only, these are not 100% either, so for much the same reason.

3 - there are so many edge cases and medical exemptions that you will never get universal coverage.

4 - those who don't want a vaccine should not be treated as second-class citizens.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Noel Mc »

The staggered leaking of photos and videos is hilarious, as it is clearly a power move (probably by Rishi Sunak).
Doesn't pardon the fact Johnson is just an absolute tube though.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Elliott Mellor »

Noel Mc wrote: Sun Dec 19, 2021 9:56 pm The staggered leaking of photos and videos is hilarious, as it is clearly a power move (probably by Rishi Sunak).
Doesn't pardon the fact Johnson is just an absolute tube though.
What annoys me most about this is not the pictures themselves (I knew Boris Johnson was an utterly reprehensibly individual with no integrity at all so I didn't for one second believe he would have been making a concerted effort to follow his own rules when he was with his chums and there were no cameras), it's that whoever is responsible for these leaks (Sunak is a good shout, could also be perhaps Truss or Javid) is going to try and come out of it smelling of roses - "I wasn't at the gathering", "I wasn't at the Christmas party" etc. These photos could have been released MUCH sooner if they were trying to expose Johnson in the name of some sort of moral good - by sitting on them for this long, they are very much complicit and are proving that they only care about exposing wrongdoings when there's an opportunity for them to gain as a result. The spin that will be put on it, and that a great many people will likely buy in to, is that this person is "one of us" - they're extremely far from it.

What is costing Johnson at least as much as the fact he was clearly complicit in illegal gatherings, is that he's got no accountability when presented with irrefutable evidence that they went ahead. A lot of people made huge sacrifices amidst this (okay, I don't think anyone on here can honestly claim they followed every rule to the letter, but what Johnson was complicit in is likely orders of magnitude greater than what the majority on here would have to fess up to) and when there's clear evidence that the government was not making the sacrifices they expected of others and then when approached about this, they're acting as though it isn't even an issue, it breeds an awful lot of distrust-fuelled anger.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Fiona T »

Blimey, not a mention of recent events - show how jaded we've all become with Bojo and his cronies.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Marc Meakin »

Fiona T wrote: Fri Jan 14, 2022 10:09 pm Blimey, not a mention of recent events - show how jaded we've all become with Bojo and his cronies.
I was too busy getting pissed at my office meeting
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Jon O'Neill »

Who's surprised?
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Elliott Mellor »

Fiona T wrote: Fri Jan 14, 2022 10:09 pm Blimey, not a mention of recent events - show how jaded we've all become with Bojo and his cronies.
I must say I was quite surprised by this too - what he's done is so indefensible that perhaps people feel like there's really no debate to be had.

What really infuriates me is that whoever is leaking this (someone wanting to get the top job) has waited until now, long after these events occurred. There'll be an attempt to push "I'm one of you" to the public and this couldn't be further from the truth - it's all for self gain. They could have reported the stuff at the time if they were really concerned about the ethics of it - by waiting until now they are culpable as well.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Marc Meakin »

I would say Cummins is behind a lot of this.
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Re: Politics in General

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Marc Meakin wrote: Sun Jan 16, 2022 2:00 pm I would say Cummins is behind a lot of this.
Hell hath no fury and all that
He may well be behind some of it, but I think there's a definite push by someone to get the top job here.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Gavin Chipper »

When did TikTok become "acceptable"? When it was first getting big, there was a lot of controversy abut it being this scary Chinese product that the Chinese government were presumably using to spy on everyone. Now it's everywhere, and you get the BBC going on about these viral TikTok videos with no reference to what they used to say about it.
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Re: Politics in General

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Gavin Chipper wrote: Thu Mar 10, 2022 3:17 pm When did TikTok become "acceptable"? When it was first getting big, there was a lot of controversy abut it being this scary Chinese product that the Chinese government were presumably using to spy on everyone. Now it's everywhere, and you get the BBC going on about these viral TikTok videos with no reference to what they used to say about it.
Probably around the time they were forced to spin off an American-based version of themselves.
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Mark James »

Privatising Channel 4 would be very bad. That is all.
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Re: Politics in General

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This government privatising it especially, smacks of a Banana Republic
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Re: Politics in General

Post by Gavin Chipper »

Nadine Dorries.

Oh sorry - I thought this was the joke items thread.
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