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BS: UK General Election

punkfolkrocker 29 Apr 17 - 10:04 AM
punkfolkrocker 29 Apr 17 - 10:10 AM
DMcG 29 Apr 17 - 10:20 AM
Stanron 29 Apr 17 - 10:21 AM
punkfolkrocker 29 Apr 17 - 10:28 AM
punkfolkrocker 29 Apr 17 - 10:32 AM
punkfolkrocker 29 Apr 17 - 10:43 AM
DMcG 29 Apr 17 - 11:05 AM
DMcG 29 Apr 17 - 11:12 AM
Jim Carroll 29 Apr 17 - 11:13 AM
Teribus 29 Apr 17 - 11:23 AM
Dave the Gnome 29 Apr 17 - 11:35 AM
Dave the Gnome 29 Apr 17 - 11:36 AM
punkfolkrocker 29 Apr 17 - 12:21 PM
punkfolkrocker 29 Apr 17 - 12:38 PM
DMcG 29 Apr 17 - 12:47 PM
Dave the Gnome 29 Apr 17 - 12:56 PM
Big Al Whittle 29 Apr 17 - 05:04 PM
McGrath of Harlow 29 Apr 17 - 07:14 PM
Big Al Whittle 29 Apr 17 - 10:11 PM
Teribus 30 Apr 17 - 01:21 AM
Jim Carroll 30 Apr 17 - 02:45 AM
akenaton 30 Apr 17 - 03:36 AM
akenaton 30 Apr 17 - 03:44 AM
Big Al Whittle 30 Apr 17 - 03:57 AM
Jim Carroll 30 Apr 17 - 04:01 AM
DMcG 30 Apr 17 - 04:40 AM
punkfolkrocker 30 Apr 17 - 04:42 AM
punkfolkrocker 30 Apr 17 - 05:04 AM
Big Al Whittle 30 Apr 17 - 05:16 AM
Jim Carroll 30 Apr 17 - 06:03 AM
Steve Shaw 30 Apr 17 - 06:52 AM
Steve Shaw 30 Apr 17 - 08:35 AM
Big Al Whittle 30 Apr 17 - 08:57 AM
Steve Shaw 30 Apr 17 - 09:07 AM
DMcG 30 Apr 17 - 09:35 AM
Greg F. 30 Apr 17 - 10:19 AM
akenaton 30 Apr 17 - 10:30 AM
Big Al Whittle 30 Apr 17 - 10:35 AM
DMcG 30 Apr 17 - 10:37 AM
Jim Carroll 30 Apr 17 - 10:50 AM
David Carter (UK) 30 Apr 17 - 11:06 AM
akenaton 30 Apr 17 - 11:07 AM
Dave the Gnome 30 Apr 17 - 11:18 AM
Steve Shaw 30 Apr 17 - 12:15 PM
Teribus 30 Apr 17 - 01:03 PM
Greg F. 30 Apr 17 - 01:23 PM
Dave the Gnome 30 Apr 17 - 01:52 PM
Steve Shaw 30 Apr 17 - 02:02 PM
Nigel Parsons 30 Apr 17 - 02:41 PM

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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: punkfolkrocker
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 10:04 AM

Yeah... so clever clogs...

what about all the countless millions before the 6th Century BC.. ??? 🙄


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: punkfolkrocker
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 10:10 AM

.. unless you are saying that progressions in human intellect and ideas can positively disprove previously deeply believed myths and fallacies..???


ahem.. cough... religious intolerance.. cultural prejudices... ???

fair do's then Teri... 😎


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: DMcG
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 10:20 AM

I was discussing this a few days ago. It is more subtle and interesting than that. As far as we can tell, Every society that sails is aware the earth is curved, so they knew the earth was not flat probably as far back as awareness of surroundings goes. By the 6thBC it was not simply a matter of "knowing the earth was round" it had been measured. But there is an easily overlooked quirk in this. They knew for certain the earth was not flat. But they essentially just assumed it was spherical because it was a common shape. As an interesting thought experiment can you propose an experiment which you as an individual could carry out (ie not relying on satellite images etc) whereby you could demonstrate the earth was round rather than any other curved shape like a grape or dimpled like a golfball or a conic section. It is obvious because of mountaons that the earth is not a mathematical sphere so we also have to decide when we call 'more or less round' just 'round'.





And then we can talk about elections.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Stanron
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 10:21 AM

punkfolkrocker wrote: Yeah... so clever clogs...

what about all the countless millions before the 6th Century BC.. ??? 🙄

At some point before the 6th C BC there was less than one million humans on the planet. Diminishing returns. Also any one who goes off shore in a boat knows the surface of the earth is curved. Stuff comes over the horizon.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: punkfolkrocker
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 10:28 AM

Yeah.. elections.. Tough one..

"The Progressive Penguins Party".. or "The Reflatten the World and turn it into a Jigsaw Party"...??? 🤔


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: punkfolkrocker
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 10:32 AM

oh.. I just noticed the typo.. I actually meant

"Quite a few people actually believed countless millions of people used to be convinced the world was flat"


bah.. smug arse pedants... [bet most of them vote tory...???] 😜


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: punkfolkrocker
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 10:43 AM

Btw.. I live in a part of the UK mired in tory safe seats...

Round here discussions about the election are futile and depressing...

All we can do is observe the vile tory propaganda machine
perniciously at work in the nation's sound bite mass media...

THe only option is a pained decision to perhaps vote tactically again for those treacherous Liberals... 😠


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: DMcG
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 11:05 AM

Am i a smug arsed pedant? I will fetch a mirror.. *smile* or ask a friend? "Bit of odd request but can you see a sort of smile in there?" Maybe I won't bother.

The tory question is easier. I'm a Labour supporter by inclination and a current member. I have voted for other parties sometimes because we vote for candidates not parties. Occasionally one of The Other Side is   superior in some way, especially if they have some specific interest. Even though Labour has not announced its candidate in this constituency yet that is unlikely to be a problem as my current (Tory) MP was outed as 'the laziest mp' in Feb of this year by the Independent. He basically juat shrugged.

I do not, and never have, knowingly voted for a penguin.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: DMcG
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 11:12 AM

... though perhaps I should add that on the current showing there could be a lot of parrots in the chamber after June


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 11:13 AM

"Mr Turner is a Christian,"
I assume that's supposed to be a recommendation
The church is an archaic reactionary body which is rapidly being reduced to what it should always have been - a spiritual guide consulted voluntarily
The Christina church in England is a standing joke - it's what they put down on the form when you tell them you are an atheist
It's blood-soaked history makes Islamic extremism look positively liberal
"the Christian Church quite legally defines homosexuality as "wrong"..
The Christian church has no standing in Law - it has no right to decalre anything "evil" - particularly a perfectly natural state of being.
Try telling the generations of kids whose lives were ruined by being raped aand abused - sexually and physically, by clerics who were supposing to teach them right from wrong - that the church's pronouncements on sex makes any sense.
The same Christian church not only tolerated and facilitated the rape of children, but the Vatican still keeps the details of those centuries of rape closely guarded so their crimes will never be known.
Saying homosexuality is wrong is like demanding punishment for writing with your "wrong" hand
"Mr Turners views are not illegal
Not yet they're not, but hopefully it's not too long before society pronounces "gender hatred" as much a crime as race hatred
Are you for real?
Come back Ian Paisley -all is forgiven!!
This is Jurassic Park writ large
Un- fucking - believable!!
Bring back the ducking stool, I say
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Teribus
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 11:23 AM

And they would be? Certainly not of any relevance.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 11:35 AM

the Christian Church quite legally defines homosexuality as "wrong"

Depending what you mean by wrong defining homosexuality as such could well be in breech of both equality and hate speech laws. So the Christian church or anyone else are probably not acting legally if that is what they are really saying. I suspect ake has his facts wrong, his knickers in a twist or a mixture of both. But WTF this has to do with homosexuality, apart from ake's preoccupation with anal sex, is beyond me.

DtG


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 11:36 AM

What this THREAD has to do with homosexuality is what I should have put.

Mea culpa

D.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: punkfolkrocker
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 12:21 PM

I've just had a great idea whilst sat on the bog...

Howsabout a new 21st Century electoral system whereby our individual vote
is no longer confined to the territorial boundaries of our home address constituency...???

Where we can vote online and transfer our vote
to a marginal seat where our favoured party might stand a fair chance of winning..
where every extra vote really would count...!!!

Might shake things up a bit...

Of course, that will never happen.. but we can still dream positive things whilst sat on the crapper..

My mum has voted labour every election for getting on 60 years, and afaik sadly never seen a single win round here in deepest darkest Toryshire..

..even she is wondering whether to bother this time now she's 85...


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: punkfolkrocker
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 12:38 PM

..actually more than 60 years...

She was even a member of some kind of labour youth activist group when she was a teenager
in the town here she's lived in ever since the war...

So if anyone knows anything about futile struggle against the entrenched tories.. that's my old mum.. 😍


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: DMcG
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 12:47 PM

There are lots of ways the voting system could be improved. Back in the days of the alternative vote campaign I pointed to all and sundry that it enabled the Tories to put up a pro and anti EU candidate in the same constituency, the vote would NOT be split because at most one would be eliminated in any round and all votes would go to the other. Solved: the Tories long term EU internal conflict, no need for a referendum and if the people wanted to leave the EU the ordinary election mechanism would arrange it; if not it wouldn't. And nothing hanging on dodgy promises - or no more than a normal election anyway.

Still, it meant the centre didn't keep control of the power (pause for suppressed laughter) so the 'against' campaign decided to go with "it's all too complicated". The 'for' compaign was so incoherent I am not sure what message they were trying for. And so we end up here....


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 12:56 PM

Especially for Nigel Parsons -

Poorest pay higher taxes than richest, new figures show

This section confirms exactly what I have been trying to tell you!

Council tax and VAT were found to hit the poorest households particularly hard. Low earners pay an average of seven per cent of their income in council tax while the wealthiest households pay just 1.5 per cent.

A similar trend applies to VAT, on which the poor pay 12.5 per cent of their income while the rich pay five per cent.



See - Not just me :-)

DtG


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 05:04 PM

its mot a sin to vote for transexual penguins....however the   predjudice remains....


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 07:14 PM

The repeated use of the expression "strong and stable government" in this election is interesting. In fact it's chilling.

That was the very phrase used in the same repeated way in the rise of fascism, as cited in numerous accounts of that period.

"Mussolini and Fascism promised a strong stable government and an end to the political fighting."

It's also noteworthy that in Mussolini's rhetoric at least there was often far more venom against "liberals" than against Communists - "I know the Communists. I know them because some of them are my children…". "Tomorrow, Fascists and communists, both persecuted by the police, may arrive at an agreement, sinking their differences until the time comes to share the spoils. I realise that though there are no political affinities between us, there are plenty of intellectual affinities."


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 29 Apr 17 - 10:11 PM

still you can't ban the use of strong and stable - unfair to horses.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Teribus
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 01:21 AM

When viewing what the alternative that the likes of Corbyn would cobble together as a "government", I see nothing wrong with the Conservatives persistence in promoting themselves as the only party that can deliver a strong and stable government - nothing sinister in that at all, they are merely stating the truth. Let's face it in almost two years Corbyn hasn't even been able to put together an effective "opposition".


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 02:45 AM

"The repeated use of the expression "strong and stable government" in this election is interesting. In fact it's chilling."
Couple this with the rise of the extreme right in Europe and America and you realise we're heading for a new Ice-Age, Brexit being the first floe to move.
Corbyn probably doesn't stand a chance as things are, but there is little value in Labour victory if all we end up with is more of the same.
The system is broken and needs fixing - if it isn't, it's back to political barbarism - the right will have succeeded where Hitler failed and this time they will have the Muslims instead of the Jews as a scapegoat.
"Mussolini and Fascism promised a strong stable government and an end to the political fighting."
Don't think they'll even be able to promise that the trains will run on time, this time
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: akenaton
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 03:36 AM

An excellent post Mr McGrath, one which deserves a thread all of its own.

My only reservation is that shifting quotations into different timeframes often be obstructive to debate.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: akenaton
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 03:44 AM

If we really want to change...or even try to "fix" the system it is imperative that we remove ourselves from the system's biggest and most undemocratic club.

Mrs May seems to be the only politician determined to do that, the rest are simply jockeying for scraps of political power, to serve their own agendas.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 03:57 AM

You don't really know that ake.
After all she was pro Remain in the referendum.
You'd be crazy to trust a politician for what they're saying this week.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 04:01 AM

"If we really want to change...or even try to "fix" the system it is imperative that we remove ourselves from the system's biggest and most undemocratic club."
Britain is now incapable of standing on its own two feet
It has no industry to become self sufficient so Brexit was merely a change of who we would have to rely on.
The decision was taken on a natio/racist myth that foreigners were taking our jobs - the immediate effects were a rapid increase in racists incidents.
Like Ukip - it was a one objective programme.
The oldest ploy of a failing administration is to find a scapegoat - immigrants, and Jews have become favourites.
Get us at each other's throats and they can contiue feathering their own nests without interference.
"Mrs May" is a wannabe Thatcher without the charisma
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: DMcG
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 04:40 AM

There are at least two things wrong with the "strong and stable government". Firstly, as McGrath pointed out, being a strong government may or may not be a good thing for its citizens and the long term future of the country. Every one of us can name at least three strong and stable governments we would want nothing whatsoever to do with. Strength is not a good thing in itself, it is all about what you do with that strength. We may find out when the manifestos are issued, or we may not.

Secondly, when any phrase is used as an alternative to thinking it is extremely dangerous. Blairism was full of such things, and I don't think you will find any defenders of Blair on this forum. We are entering a long period where careful thought is crucial. Many are focusing on the next two years; I would say the 5 years afterwards are probably more important, as we go through the regulations brought under UK law by the Repeal Act and decide which to keep, to modify and to scrap. As my little discussion with Teribus shows, it is dreadfully easy to scrap a regulation because you can see an industry would be better off without it, without being aware that in doing so you inflict a much greater harm on other businesses. We cannot afford to make those kind of mistakes.

So let's try a little thought experiment. May has been absolutely clear that in the case of the EU 'a bad deal for Britain is worse than no deal' and that she will walk away if the deal is bad. Ok, we will take her at her word. She would like a deal with the US. Will she say the same - walk away from a US deal if the terms are not good enough. If she won't say, have no doubt Trump will smell weakness and push. Trump, whatever else he is, is a highly experienced dealmaker and well used to getting his own way. Does anyone at all believe May can force Trump to do anything he is not prepared to do already?

So let's instead assume May is 'strong and stable' enough to walk away because she does not believe the deal in in the UK interests. Great, we have no EU trade deal and no US trade deal. Now everyone else in the world smells our desperation.

As a certain well known figure would put it: Bad!


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: punkfolkrocker
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 04:42 AM

What a choice eh...???
More of the same shite tory government..
or an unelectable weakened labour opposition that has been mercilessly undermined, destabilised and marginalised
by persistent poisonous right wing propaganda...

..and that's not forgetting the contribution of the selfish Scots Nationalists victory
virtually guaranteeing a perpetual tory domination of our tiny islands...


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: punkfolkrocker
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 05:04 AM

Let's just get this election over with and out the way, struggle through the brexit debacle, say bye bye to Scotland if we must,
then look forward to the next general election;
by which time labour might have regrouped, got some semblance of unity
and demonstrable winning sense of purpose... ???????


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 05:16 AM

a wannabe Thatcher...?
wannabe Blair...?

At least those people understood the first rule of the game, which is to get elected.

wanna win three elections...that's a hell of a smear. You could never accuse JC of that. he wants to be a 'principled opposition'...I think you told us that was the aim last week, jim.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 06:03 AM

"I think you told us that was the aim last week, jim."
Never mentioned 'opposition' Al
Being there in the present set-up only benefits career politicians
No party is worth anything unless it fights on an alternative to what is happening - sitting on their thumbs and waiting for the next election only perpetuates the system
Unless Corbyn, or whoever, fights on a genuinely alternative policy, they may as well concentrate their energies on reforming the party and getting rid of the dross.
That is the ticket on which Corbyn won the leadership - now he has to make his policies realities.
Today's parliament is little more than an exclusive club - as one of the Ealing comedy characters once said, "it was either that or the church".
I'm rapidly coming around to teh old Anarchist slogan, "Don't vote for any of them - it only encourages them".
Do you really think another Blair, Brown or Wilson - elected or not - will make the slightest difference to the rest of us??
Jim


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 06:52 AM

Well, Teribus, what evidence have you got that the Tories will be "strong and stable?" In the last two years they have endured a referendum result that they neither remotely expected nor remotely wanted, having been forced into the vote by their fear of a racist party and their own right wing, they have lost their leader in consequence, replaced him with a remainer who has immediately changed her spots, totally screwed up the last budget in the clumsiest possible way and cynically inflicted an opportunist election on us only two years into the parliament in spite of being the architects of a fixed-term parliament system only a few short years ago. On top of all that they are presiding over the disintegration of the NHS, have devastated school budgets and are utterly clueless about what to do about a care system that's rapidly going to hell in a handcart. Oh yes, plenty of signs of strength, stability and dependability there!


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 08:35 AM

Interesting. Dr Andrew Watt, a retired doctor from Glasgow, is of the opinion that Section 2 of the European Union Act 2011 (a UK law) requires a second referendum on brexit once any deal has been agreed. He's put the matter to Theresa May and will likely start legal action if she responds adversely within the next couple of weeks. I read it in the Indy so google it as I can't do links.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 08:57 AM

it makes a lot of difference.
i guess you just have to be in the right places to see the difference.

my wife became disabled out of the blue when she was 26.
the tories do people down at the bottom of society. the labour party - less so.

even when they spend money on a public service - the tories find some way of looting the system, and diverting money away from the frontline - in this way they take care of their backers. fund holding gp's and the national curriculum in schools were great examples of this.

most of my life i have voted for thoroughly decent men... Foot, KInnock, Brown...and now Corbyn. and only Wilson and Blair have had the venality to embrace the realities of the English political system and make it work for the poor people.

that's why i feel nothing but contempt for the forces within the labour party that go on about blairite scum. they are intent on abandoning the poor to the tender mercies of the tories - just for the satisfaction of playing mr. nice guy - offering largesse to everyone in the firm belief that none of their cheques will be cashed, none of their promises held to account.

The present tory policies are some of the most noxious right crap ever to be offered to the electorate. However they have an ace in the hole. A presentable leader.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 09:07 AM

It isn't so much that there's a section of Labour lamenting "Blairite scum." It's more the problem of those so-called Blairites briefing against Corbyn, refusing to support him or serve in the shadow cabinet and perpetuating a lethal rift in the party. They know the election is probably lost and they want him gone. That's a rotten tactic. They are not playing to win.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: DMcG
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 09:35 AM

I think, given the events of the last year or so, it would be unwise to say anyone is unelectable. The general public does not like being ordered around and it seems me that there is very strong back - pedalling on the use of the 'strong and stable' slogan. Andrew Marr challenged her on how robotic it makes everyone sound and forced her to defend it. I strongly suspect it won't appear on campaign literature that has still to be printed.

Being miles behind in the polls isnt great, but a gradual narrowing could be an exciting story to tell and an occasional two or three point jump even more so.

Chicken counting before they have hatched is not wise. But you shouldnt assume they are dead either.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Greg F.
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 10:19 AM

Mrs May seems to be the only politician determined to ["fix" the system]

Just like Trump, right? Please.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: akenaton
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 10:30 AM

Until Brexit is achieved, strong and stable is what is required.
It is my opinion that at some point we will be forced to walk away and construct new trade deals on a world stage. The sooner the better! pussyfooting around trying to pick the pieces we want will never be allowed by a cartel who are desperate to save their money trough.

Flooding our country with impoverished people to prop up our economy is immoral. We need a new start, a new value system with less emphasis on financial aspiration.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 10:35 AM

give it a rest Ake - you have no more idea of what Brexit will mean than anyone else - and seeing as a tory is bringing it in, watch your arses!


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: DMcG
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 10:37 AM

Good article , in my opinion, on whether strong ans stable is desirable and what it means. Your views may vary.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 10:50 AM

Another blow to Brexit has been Trumps intention to put Europe before the U.K. as far as trade deals
One of the claimed benefits of a Trump victory was that Britain would benefit rather than Europe - not going to happen.
Strong and stable in the present situation means, as always, that the less well off will have to bera the brunt to keep the better off in the manner to which they have become accustoms
More pie in the sky, in other words
I've never come accross a "socialist" who puts in so much time and effort into defending the wealthy
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: David Carter (UK)
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 11:06 AM

May beginning to unravel on Marr's programme. Like a good little establishment soldier he tried his best to cover for her. But I hope that people will be beginning to see through her. "Strong and Stable", thats going to come back to bite her on the backside.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: akenaton
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 11:07 AM

Mr Putin almost singlehandedly has given the Russian people back a pride in their country.

After the capitulation of the Soviet Union Russia had become a bad joke. Now President Putin is one of the most popular leaders ever in Russia.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 11:18 AM

Strong and stable like

Being in Europe is the best thing
Oh, hang on...

I am not going to call a general election
Oh, hang on...

:D tG


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 12:15 PM

There is not a scrap of evidence that the Tories deserve the accolade "strong and stable."


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Teribus
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 01:03 PM

Well, Teribus, what evidence have you got that the Tories will be "strong and stable?"

After the mess left by the last UK Labour government they have taken an economy that was heading down the pan and transformed it into one of the best performing economies in the western world, despite all the "doom'n'gloom" predictions during the recent EU referendum.

"In the last two years they have endured a referendum result that they neither remotely expected nor remotely wanted, having been forced into the vote by their fear of a racist party and their own right wing"

In the last three years they've had to endure two referendums of immense importance and impact on the United Kingdom (Scottish Independence Referendum and the EU Referendum). The former they agreed to on request by the political party governing Scotland - the answer given by the electorate of Scotland was that they wished to remain as part of the United Kingdom, the SNP, the party governing Scotland declared at the time that this was a "once in a generation" referendum but within days of them not getting the result they sought changed their minds on that (Gnome please take note, leaders of all political parties change their minds as and when they deem it necessary). Situation is now that polls strongly indicate that any second Indy Ref in Scotland would result in an even bigger NO vote and that only 1 in 4 want a second Indy Ref. Unfortunately this paints Sturgeon into a corner as she has put the matter before the Scottish Parliament in Holyrood and they voted for a second Indy Ref that they now have to deliver or lose an enormous amount of credibility.

The other referendum on membership of the EU was actually promised the electorate of the UK by Gordon Brown in response to sovereign powers being handed over to Brussels and the EU Commission under the terms of the Lisbon Treaty. Didn't come to anything as at least three other EU member states rucked up by voting against it (The French in May 2005, the Dutch in June 2005 and the Irish in June 2008) so the EU Commission in cahoots with the likes of Brown fudged by renaming the Treaty and massaged it into existence via technicalities in 2009. In the 2010 election the Conservatives promised a referendum on EU Membership in their election manifesto, this promise foundered when the Conservatives failed to win an outright majority and had to form a coalition with the Liberal-Democrats who insisted that the EU referendum promise be dropped. There was quite rightly an outcry against this, but the bullet had to be bitten as anything was better than a Labour Government and everyone realised this. In 2015 the promise to hold a referendum on the UK's membership of the EU was in the Conservative Party election manifesto and as they won an overall majority the election promise was honoured and the EU referendum originally promised by Gordon Brown was delivered to the electorate of the UK - no forcing about it. The result of this referendum and the judgement of the electorate of the UK was to LEAVE the EU.

"they have lost their leader in consequence, replaced him with a remainer who has immediately changed her spots"

As the leader of the Government and also leader of the Remain campaign David Cameron had no other alternative apart from resignation when the electorate of the UK voted to leave the EU. The Conservative Party then elected a new leader and made a far better job of it than did the Labour Party in their 2015 leadership election. Irrespective of being a "Remainer" May was considered to be the best leader to carry things forward internationally and domestically by her Party and she honoured the wishes of the electorate to leave the EU by triggering Article 50, which she has successfully done.

totally screwed up the last budget in the clumsiest possible way and cynically inflicted an opportunist election on us only two years into the parliament in spite of being the architects of a fixed-term parliament system only a few short years ago.

Faced with emboldened rebels in her own Party and as you say a "screwed up budget" (Hammond's fault), along with jibes from the SNP at Westminster that she (May) had no personal endorsement or mandate to lead anything May exercised her right to call a General Election and got the backing of Parliament to do so. She did this at a time when all opposition parties are in total chaos - not bad judgement on her part then? Plus all the boxes ticked if the Conservatives win on 9th June, which all those in the know reckon they will:

1 - The tory rebels silenced
2 - The opportunity to sort the budget shambles out by next autumn
3 - "Wee Nippy" up in Edinburgh silenced

On the other stuff?

The NHS has always been "disintegrating", I've never known a time that it wasn't irrespective of how much money or resources are thrown at it. The care system is and has to be part and parcel of this in conjunction with the citizens of this country who believe it or not do have responsibilities to themselves and to their families.

Same goes for education although I think the present government are on the right track.

Oh yes, there are plenty of signs of strength, stability in the vital areas that matter for the country as a whole and just think it could be one hell of a lot worse if we had Corbyn and Labour in charge we'd have been knocking on the door of the IMF months ago. Just off-hand I cannot think of a single Labour policy that has been run out that has the endorsement of the Party as a whole - at the moment they cannot even agree on the usual empty rhetoric.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Greg F.
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 01:23 PM

Another blow to Brexit has been Trumps intention to put Europe before the U.K. as far as trade deals.

Now wait just a durn minute, pardner! I thought that's what the Brexit Crusaders blamed OBAMA for and thus favored Trump???


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 01:52 PM

and just think it could be one hell of a lot worse if we had Corbyn and Labour in charge

I thought you didn't do speculation, Teribus.

:D tG


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 02:02 PM

I should like to remind you of what you are very keen on reminding me about, that we have had a Tory government for just two years. Also, SHE appointed Hammond, and Cameron resigned despite promising that he would stay on even if he lost the referendum, having also vacuously promised to trigger Article 50 the very next day. The Tories andLibDems were the architects of the fixed-term parliament setup which has now been demolished on tbe slightest of opportunist grounds. Your post is a list of excuses. She has called this election so that she'll get, she hopes, a big enough majority of toadies to see off her own right wing. It's all about the Tories and nothing about the best interests of this country. By the way, Labour did a lot of things wrong apropos of the NHS, failing to get to grips with its top-heavy bureaucracy and allowing in creeping privatisation for example, but when they left power there was no massive crisis in A&E departments, no bed-blocking and very little failure to meet 18-week waiting times. By their fruits shall we know them, old chap, but please don't let the facts get in your way on this fine spring day.


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Subject: RE: BS: UK General Election
From: Nigel Parsons
Date: 30 Apr 17 - 02:41 PM

Three Hundred


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