Nope. I'm pretty centrist overall as far as left-right for the US. Moderately conservative fiscally, and moderately liberal socially.
So somewhere between Geb(d) Bush and Arnie?
Nope. I'm pretty centrist overall as far as left-right for the US. Moderately conservative fiscally, and moderately liberal socially.
Trump is a twat no doubt. Unfortunately he is also a bully. He and Putin should get on well!!..............
Peoples opinion of Brexit is very divided........just as the vote to leave was when you include NI and Scotland.........In England and wales the votes were not split but voted heavily for splitting with Europe. Just bare in mind neither of the political parties actually wanted to leave. So the Brexit vote came from all fronts, left, right and centre!! I can understand why some of the younger element are concerned, nobody can predict what is likely to happen in the future. You can only guess according to your point of view. Going back to the 50's and 60's when we kept applying to join the market De Gaulle kept putting the knife in and as a consequence we weren't allowed to join. Although eventually we managed it. I voted against joining then as I was fearful of it turning into a political arena, rather than just a trade agreement, as has proved, although granted it was very gradual. I don't know if it is the right or wrong thing to do in this day and age. I do know though as a result of our being in the EU to a certain extent we have lost our British way of life. Everything we do or say is governed by non elected people..... Even our very own courts can be over ruled!! That for me that is not the way to go.........but hey what do I know...........
The most noteworthy was the famous “It’s the Sun Wot Won It” in 1992 after the paper’s campaign turned what looked like a narrow Labour win or hung parliament into a 21 seat majority for a John Major. The Election Day headline was the equally famous “If Kinnock wins today will the last person to leave Britain turn out the lights.”
I can’t recall any specific headlines but there was a constant drip feed of biased stories and editorials, either supporting or against the government of the day. The Callaghan government was particularly targeted, and Margaret Thatcher championed in opposition, until she won in 1979. The Dirty Digger’s other papers had their share of duty tricks of course, culminating in the phone hacking scandal at the News of the World, which so embarrassed Murdoch that he shut the paper down, while at the same time promoting the former editor Rebekah Brooks, who was of course a close friend of David Cameron.I remember that Chilcs, but that was the 90s, I’d just learned to read! I thought there was some 70s stuff.
Clearly there were some headlines back then as the guys mentioned them. I’d love to know what they were about. I was born in 69, so 70s headlines passed me by.
I remember the “turn the light out” one and some of the 80s ones (I think they did the light out one in the 80s too) but I was not questioning the validity of the affect, but enquiringly about the 70s ones particularly. This is simply because I was in single figures in the 70s and was interested what people remembered as it was the 70s specifically mentioned and Inwas too young. So far, nobody has delivered, just 80s and 90s...
All media does it And it was my number one objection when Cameron said, “Vote for me, I’ll give you an EU referendum.” Never should decisions like that go to the people for the very reason we are having this discussion.
Trouble is if you don't go to the people with decisions like that which ever political party makes those decision would be in for a hiding for ever and a day. Just as the argument is today it is a sure way for political parties to say ............"thats what the people wanted" All our major political parties wanted to stay in Europe, the people did not, especially in England. You cant blame any of the newspapers in my view, people believe what they want to believe in, they act on those beliefs.
Thats where freedom of speech and thought comes into its own. Why would you want to take that away from them??
Trouble is if you don't go to the people with decisions like that which ever political party makes those decision would be in for a hiding for ever and a day. Just as the argument is today it is a sure way for political parties to say ............"thats what the people wanted" All our major political parties wanted to stay in Europe, the people did not, especially in England. You cant blame any of the newspapers in my view, people believe what they want to believe in, they act on those beliefs.
Thats where freedom of speech and thought comes into its own. Why would you want to take that away from them??
Surely you want decisions of vital importance to the country's future taken by people who are qualified to take them based on a genuine knowledge and experience? i.e. our elected representatives.
Your comment about people believing what they want to believe - presumably on the basis of prejudice rather than informed understanding - illustrates exactly why the electorate should not be asked to decide on specific issues that our elected leaders are better qualified to make.
The people vote for their leaders. The leaders govern, guided by the manifesto on which they were elected. If the people don't like the way the leaders govern, they remove them at the next election. That's how representative democracy works, and imo should work.
The alternative - letting the people decide on everything, regardless of wether they are sufficiently well informed to do so - is anarchy.
The Scottish referendum proves otherwise.No mate it isn't anarchy to let people make decisions according to their conscience.
We wouldn't be having this discussion had the Brexit vote gone the other way.
I agree that we vote for politicians to make decisions for us. Sometimes though even politicians need to be guided by how the majority feel about things. I'm not going to argue whether the Brexit is the wrong or right decision.
The Scottish referendum proves otherwise.
No mate it isn't anarchy to let people make decisions according to their conscience.
We wouldn't be having this discussion had the Brexit vote gone the other way.
I agree that we vote for politicians to make decisions for us. Sometimes though even politicians need to be guided by how the majority feel about things. I'm not going to argue whether the Brexit is the wrong or right decision.
I think there was one about our Wallace brothers coming from the Planet Zygon or something similar...but stand to be corrected!What were the headlines about gents - I was a bit young then![]()
I agree, the uk would have voted against Brexit if the politicians came up with the plan like in Scotland.If you mean by this that the politicians wanted Scotland to have its independence, but the people didn't you are so right. Thats why occasionally they have to go direct to the people. Same I guess over the Brexit vote..........
Thats why I wanted AV.Your comment
The people vote for their leaders. The leaders govern, guided by the manifesto on which they were elected. If the people don't like the way the leaders govern, they remove them at the next election. That's how representative democracy works, and imo should work.
Whilst you are correct in the main,unfortunately most of the people can only vote for those who've been put on the ballot paper.and I hear what you're about to say but we have very little choice in reality.
Do they ever follow their manifesto anymore btw?
Course it would, you'd be able to rank issues and still elect the main party you want without throwing your vote away, demonstrating the desire for leaving Europe and showing the politicians what they need to do to win votes far better than the current system.Wouldn't change much!