Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: punkfolkrocker Date: 03 Feb 20 - 10:56 AM anyways, for all his bluster and lies.. we need to hope boris keeps the tory far right nasty nutters at bay, and actually delivers some positive results for all of us... |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: punkfolkrocker Date: 03 Feb 20 - 10:53 AM not forgetting the Nissan Dorma - very popular with opera singers touring on a tight budget.. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Stilly River Sage Date: 03 Feb 20 - 10:41 AM Nissan is a well-respected brand here in the US, in status and reliability coming in above the US car makers Ford, GM, and other imports like Kia, Mitsubishi, etc. And I love my Pathfinder; I can fill it full of people or stuff. It does have more plastic than it used to, but it gets better gas mileage that way. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: peteglasgow Date: 03 Feb 20 - 10:41 AM to be honest i think i would prefer a justin bieber gig to martin carthy - he has got very dreary in the last decade or 3. i wouldn't pay for either, mind you |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Iains Date: 03 Feb 20 - 10:35 AM In a discussion about oranges, why introduce apples? |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Dave the Gnome Date: 03 Feb 20 - 10:12 AM World rankings are no measure of quality. I'm pretty sure that Justin Bieber is more popular worldwide than Martin Carthy. Does that make him better? |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Iains Date: 03 Feb 20 - 10:02 AM A spiffing speech from Boris. Very symbolic to hold it on the prime meridian very close to one of Licolnshire lad Harrison's chronometers. These two items enabled accurate navigation and concomitant explosive growth of International trade. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e0Tg7jFSwQM |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Iains Date: 03 Feb 20 - 09:33 AM All Nissan have to do now, then, is to stop making shitmobiles... Nissan rank no 6 in the world in terms of market share. That puts them well ahead of BMW, Mercedes, Kia, Chevrolet and Hyundai. Some obviously write shit! Fact dear boy, fact! |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Backwoodsman Date: 03 Feb 20 - 07:51 AM Johnson dropping it out in his speech this morning that he’s looking for “A Canadian-style, or even Australian-style“, trade agreement with the EU. Errrrrmmmm... Australia don’t have a trade agreement with the EU, they have a few ‘facilitation arrangements’ but no full-blown trade agreement. So, despite having repeatedly claimed during the GE campaign that he was determined to get a trade-deal with the EU, today he effectively quietly slipped in a suggestion that he’ll be perfectly happy with, or is even aiming for, a No-Deal Brexit. Precisely the thing he denied was his aim before the election. Now Brexiteers, repeat after me...”Johnson is a serial liar, he cannot be trusted - ever!”. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Steve Shaw Date: 03 Feb 20 - 05:24 AM All Nissan have to do now, then, is to stop making shitmobiles... |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Iains Date: 03 Feb 20 - 05:10 AM Nissan has drawn up a plan to pull out of mainland Europe if Brexit leads to tariffs on car exports — but to double down on the UK, where the Japanese company believes it could sell one in five cars.This would see Nissan close its struggling Barcelona van facility and stop manufacturing in France. The Sunderland plant in the UK would be maintained to grab market share from other carmakers. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: DMcG Date: 03 Feb 20 - 02:11 AM Thank you Nigel. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Nigel Parsons Date: 02 Feb 20 - 06:26 PM The abhorrent Norwich poster demanding residents speak English or leave, and accusing them of "infecting this once great land" . I hope everyone here agrees the police are right to investigate this and bring charges if possible. Leave voters have often been accused of racism. This is a chance to clearly reject that. Yes, the message in that poster was abhorrent. The police are investigating. I hope a prosecution will follow for inciting racial hatred. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Steve Shaw Date: 02 Feb 20 - 05:51 PM Not bothered, Maggie. Just leave it where it is. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Backwoodsman Date: 02 Feb 20 - 04:33 PM Will Hutton, in today’s Guardian suggesting that the threat to Johnson will come, not from the opposition parties, but from within his own Tory party. That his deal with the devil, in the form of the vicious and powerful ERG grouping will be source of his undoing. Fingers crossed - it can’t come soon enough. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Stilly River Sage Date: 02 Feb 20 - 01:52 PM If you want the contents of that other short-lived UK political thread (Hilary Benn) transferred over here let me know. The political rancor has to be confined to one place, otherwise it drives away users from the site. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Backwoodsman Date: 02 Feb 20 - 06:16 AM ”The hate message on the poster is composed of ungainly and often ungrammatical English, contains two extraneous words, is missing essential punctuation after "choice" and lacks a necessary apostrophe in "Queens." Some irony there, I'd say, considering the supposed intent of the message.” Hardly surprising though, when you consider that the writers of the message are precisely the same kind of people who exhorted us to ‘Take Are Cuntry Back’ during the 2016 Referendum campaign. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Steve Shaw Date: 02 Feb 20 - 06:08 AM The hate message on the poster is composed of ungainly and often ungrammatical English, contains two extraneous words, is missing essential punctuation after "choice" and lacks a necessary apostrophe in "Queens." Some irony there, I'd say, considering the supposed intent of the message. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Iains Date: 02 Feb 20 - 05:33 AM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rcjOjiUGwwQ How we arrived where we are. A very articulate presentation. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: DMcG Date: 02 Feb 20 - 05:19 AM The abhorrent Norwich poster demanding residents speak English or leave, and accusing them of "infecting this once great land" . I hope everyone here agrees the police are right to investigate this and bring charges if possible. Leave voters have often been accused of racism. This is a chance to clearly reject that. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Backwoodsman Date: 02 Feb 20 - 05:00 AM Tom Peck’s view in The Independent of the nonsense in Parliament Square on Friday night... |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Iains Date: 02 Feb 20 - 03:51 AM What I am certain of is that those are the questions that matter, and not what was written some three centuries ago in a treaty. I seriously doubt many others share your certainty! Good to see you support project fear! Seen any fire and brimstone yet? |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: DMcG Date: 02 Feb 20 - 03:12 AM We know that the people of Gibraltar voted overwhelmingly to stay in the UK and overwhelmingly to stay in the EU. Anything beyond that is speculation, whoever says it. Any international treaty can be rescinded if the parties involved agree. So there are only really two fundamental questions: 1. Is the EU solidarity with Spain sufficient it will move to a no deal if it comes to it? 2. Is the UK desire for a deal greater than its desire to retain Gibraltar? I do not know the answer to either question and nor, at this stage, does anyone else. What I am certain of is that those are the questions that matter, and not what was written some three centuries ago in a treaty. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Mossback Date: 01 Feb 20 - 09:29 PM "This has been a historic week for self-destructive politics. Like turkeys voting for Christmas, the British government celebrated its withdrawal from its biggest trading relationships just as Republican senators celebrated their own castration. Both sets of magnificent morons claimed they were acting for their imaginary friends in the future: a future where Britain will once again bestride the ocean, and presidents will once again lead the free world feeling free from the fear of partisan impeachment." https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/jan/31/republicans-impeachment-trump-richard-wolffe |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: peteglasgow Date: 01 Feb 20 - 05:31 PM whatever..... |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Iains Date: 01 Feb 20 - 05:24 PM obviously the folk on gibralter care and would prefer to stay in the EU - so obviously that makes more sense than ancient treaties. bit like scotland really The reality: In Gibraltar, where the Remain vote was more than 96 per cent, the Remoaners have moved on from the referendum with scarcely a backward glance at the European Union. Chief minister Fabian Picardo told a Commons select committee at Westminster that Gibraltar’s Remain vote had less to do with any attachment to the EU than a fear Spain would capitalise on Brexit by pursuing its ambition of reclaiming the Rock. Since the referendum, Spain has, indeed, offered to keep Gibraltar inside the EU if it allows Madrid to share sovereignty over it with London. In 1967 The result of the Gibraltar referendum was an overwhelming vote by its inhabitants to retain their links with Britain. Of the 12,762 Gibraltarians qualified to vote, no fewer than 12,138 voted to remain with Britain. Only 44 opted for the transfer of the Rock to Spanish sovereignty. They voted again in 2002 when the result of another referendum with 98.48 per cent wishing to remain with Britain. “We are not looking to remain as part of the European Union as being partly Spanish,” Picardo said. “The only way that somebody could describe that offer as generous would be to be entirely disingenuous. “This is the generosity of the predator that thinks that its prey is finally prone and it’s going to take the price it’s been seeking to extract for the past 300 years,” he said. “Neither the people of the United Kingdom nor the people of Gibraltar are a prey that is on its knees, seeking any generous offer from the people of Spain.” The Spanish have previous form: During the 18th century, despite suffering three separate sieges at the hands of Spain, Gibraltar remained British. Blockaded by land and sea and faced with death by starvation, Gibraltar did not give in. During World War II, our entire civilian population was evacuated from Gibraltar out of fear of a Spanish-assisted German invasion. We survived. Fast-forward to September 1967. Spain, then ruled by a fascist dictator, Gen. Francisco Franco, presented the Gibraltarians with a choice, the fundamental element of which is similar to the choice touted today: to pass under Spanish sovereignty. Knowing full well what the consequences would be, our hands did not tremble at the ballot box. Armed with a paper and a pencil, Gibraltarians voted 99.6 percent to remain British. In retaliation, Franco closed the border, families were separated, terrestrial links to Spain were torn, and labor, food, and hospital supplies had to be sourced from Morocco and elsewhere. This modern-day siege lasted more than 13 years. Spain refused a formal offer from the U.K. in 1966 to settle the question of Gibraltar’s status at the International Court of Justice. One can only infer why that was the case. Spain’s sophistic arguments over the isthmus could also have been resolved then. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Backwoodsman Date: 01 Feb 20 - 04:54 PM Everybody, please...don’t interact with him, don’t speak to him or about him, don’t respond in any way - just ignore him and leave him to it. Pretty please... |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Steve Shaw Date: 01 Feb 20 - 03:42 PM Is that what he said, Dave? I don't even read his posts. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: punkfolkrocker Date: 01 Feb 20 - 03:31 PM Boris sends Warships full steam to Gibraltar... .. the Falklands worked a treat for Maggie... |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Dave the Gnome Date: 01 Feb 20 - 03:29 PM "Utter tosh from the Prosecco kid" isn't exactly in keeping with "everyone has to stop the name calling" is it? Stick to the rules and the thread may just stay open. Keep on breaking them and you ruin it for everyone. I cannot make it more simple. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: peteglasgow Date: 01 Feb 20 - 03:22 PM obviously the folk on gibralter care and would prefer to stay in the EU - so obviously that makes more sense than ancient treaties. bit like scotland really |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Iains Date: 01 Feb 20 - 12:47 PM "As an EU member state, the UK had been able to resist Spanish claims over the territory but Madrid will now have the full support of the other 26 countries in the bloc." (from your piece). No more veto! Utter tosh from the Prosecco kid! Spain's legal claim to Gibraltar is weak. It does not dispute the Treaty of Utrecht of 1713, the document which formally ceded the Rock to the British "in perpetuity" and therefore it is undisputed British sovereign territory. To further argue it is a colonial relic calls into question the status of contemporary Spanish North Africa: Spain's two autonomous cities: Ceuta and Melilla, plus other minor territories (plazas de soberanía) The Canary Islands There is already a territorial dispute with Morocco. The Independance movement in the north could well be reinvigorated by any move on Gibralter. The law of unintended consequences could kick in. Be nice to see the European court of justice be given a good drubbing by the UN, should they decide to side with Spain. This would of course lead to questions being asked about the French presence in Gabon and Cameroun and the CFA currency - it has a healthy whiff of colonialism in all but name.(I saw plenty of French troops in Port Gentil when I worked there.) |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: punkfolkrocker Date: 01 Feb 20 - 12:29 PM Mods - please delete my post "Date: 01 Feb 20 - 03:13 AM" since the latest posts cull, it now looks like I'm having a laugh at the wrong target [DtG]... cheers... |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Dave the Gnome Date: 01 Feb 20 - 12:15 PM We have had a request that "everyone has to stop the name calling." Personal abuse will, quite rightly be removed. If there is to much of it the thread will be closed. You know who you are. I would also ask people to not respond to such abuse or to flame bait. Responses to trolling make the moderation team's task a lot more difficult Thank you. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Steve Shaw Date: 01 Feb 20 - 12:02 PM ...And that does NOT make me a slow reader - I was following Liverpool's magnificent 4-0 victory over Southampton at the same time! |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Steve Shaw Date: 01 Feb 20 - 11:53 AM 24 minutes! |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Steve Shaw Date: 01 Feb 20 - 11:53 AM Blimey, sorry about that, John! The 14-minute gap between our posts was me reading the article wot I'd found in the Guardian. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Steve Shaw Date: 01 Feb 20 - 11:51 AM "Brexit, the most pointless, masochistic ambition in our country's history, is done" [Ian McEwan in today's Guardian] A brilliant polemic. I won't bother picking bits of it out. It's a spiffing good read and it's the sword of truth. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Backwoodsman Date: 01 Feb 20 - 11:27 AM It’s all summed up perfectly in this article by Ian McEwan. Never have so many been made fools of by so few. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: punkfolkrocker Date: 01 Feb 20 - 09:54 AM If just one of our mudcat conservatives would publicly disown Iains and tell him to STFU, we might start getting somewhere towards healing divisions, and trying to work together positively and pragmatically towards making the best of a shared future post brexit... |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Steve Shaw Date: 01 Feb 20 - 09:47 AM Yep. And we can expect a lot more of this: "As an EU member state, the UK had been able to resist Spanish claims over the territory but Madrid will now have the full support of the other 26 countries in the bloc." (from your piece). No more veto! Perhaps our little band of crowing brexiteers could explain how this represents our "taking back control." Oh, and perhaps they have something to say about our "sovereignty"... |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: DMcG Date: 01 Feb 20 - 08:41 AM It looks like Gibraltar could be the first sacrificial victim Still, they voted strongly to remain, so what's the problem? |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Iains Date: 01 Feb 20 - 08:11 AM And no one can dispute the logic of equating 63% of the country not wanting or not caring for the referendum to most of the country having no passion for it so they revert to changing the subject of abusing people. I see you have the same problem with logic as you do with numbers. Labour has the exact same problem! As a result, like you, they can be safely ignored for the indefinite future. No numbers equals no influence. Numeracy rules! |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Stanron Date: 01 Feb 20 - 07:20 AM It says "This is what loss looks like". Who's lost what? The EU has lost it's second largest financial contributor and the UK has lost it's largest non productive financial outlay. That's before we start looking at what we have gained. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Steve Shaw Date: 01 Feb 20 - 06:41 AM Cheers! At least it worked when I tried it. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Backwoodsman Date: 01 Feb 20 - 06:38 AM Here ya go Steve... |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Steve Shaw Date: 01 Feb 20 - 06:30 AM I can't manage links but try this. If you have tears, prepare to shed them now. https://twitter.com/rogershistory/status/1223390135183708163?s=12 |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Dave the Gnome Date: 01 Feb 20 - 06:19 AM And no one can dispute the logic of equating 63% of the country not wanting or not caring for the referendum to most of the country having no passion for it so they revert to changing the subject of abusing people. |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: Backwoodsman Date: 01 Feb 20 - 05:47 AM Some cheer for those feeling a bit sad about Brexit... |
Subject: RE: BS: UK politics From: DMcG Date: 01 Feb 20 - 05:24 AM I just went to bed: around 10:45 which is a little on the early side for me (11:30pm.is more common.) At 11pm there was what sounded like a cannon shot - new year is often sounded like that round here - then nothing. No fireworks, no cheering, just the normal night time sounds like our resident owls. |