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Off Topic General Election Special

Discussion in 'Hull City' started by Chazz Rheinhold, Dec 8, 2019.

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  1. City Man

    City Man Well-Known Member

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    Sorry to completely sidestep your question Leon, but I think the whole thing is a crock of ****.
    No PM of this country ( of whatever party) should ever be doorstepped in this way, it's ****ish in the extreme.

    Since when did we become a country that disrespects the office of PM and demands he/she show instant compassion/ grieving (ref, Teresa May at Grenfell) on demand? And then trumpets it as if it i as proof of callousness if the salty tears don't fall down the cheeks?

    Used to be the country of stiff upper lip, now it's the country of quivering lower lip, and cynical opportunist manipulators.


    Going back to the original question, it doesn't bother me overmuch. So much made up news, spin, trivial superficial **** filling the vacuum in the run up to the vote.

    Question for you : do you find the personality cult of the Corbynistas bizarre or uncomfortable?

    Many serious thinkers on the Left must be be very sceptical of the silliness or transience of it all.
     
    #1321
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  2. Leon T Trout AFC

    Leon T Trout AFC Well-Known Member

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    There is arguably 'Corbynism' but I have seen no cult - cult is just used as a pejorative.

    What happened was a break, a break from 20 years of Labour neoliberalism and a return to older Labour values.

    It's not radical, only radical compared to the **** we've had pushed on us for decades. I mean, people talk about Corbyn as some sort of communist when he/they haven't even tried to reinstate Clause IV.

    A lot of people, particularly younger people became enthused by his leadership. However, he is painted, however he is smeared and no matter how few qualifications he has, he represents a return to some semblance of fairness.

    I like Corbyn. But I'd support whoever if they offered something similar and I could trust them.
     
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  3. Sir Cheshire Ben

    Sir Cheshire Ben Well-Known Member

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    29th?
     
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  4. City Man

    City Man Well-Known Member

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    I tried to use the word 'cult' neutrally.

    Seems creepy to me that middle aged adults should chant his name (any politician's name)to a rock song, it's just not in our political lexicon.

    It reminds me almost of unassuming Brian in The Life of Brian, worshipped as the Saviour by his followers.

    I remember those pix of Noel Gallagher schmoozing at no. 10 with Blair when it seemed he was the Messiah after Major's grey years., and how now Gallagher vilifies him.

    Maybe if I was young with no political experiences/history I would give him a clean sheet and the benefit of the doubt, but as I said earlier he is not smart or energetic enough to walk the walk.

    I think win or lose this election, his days are numbered as Labour leader.
     
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  5. Amin Yapusi

    Amin Yapusi Well-Known Member

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    Even earlier sadly.

    15th-22nd I think.

    Sometime around those dates anyway.
     
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  6. Leon T Trout AFC

    Leon T Trout AFC Well-Known Member

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    I think the chant is borne from humour as well as defiance - the odds stacked against him.

    Alternatively, always think it must be easy as **** in a Tory government - the easy easy ride given by the media vis a vis what they do to Labour. The current cabinet are by and large ****ing terrible. If they were Labour MPs they'd be crucified. Probably the worst of the current crop must be Matt Hancock, Liz Truss, Dominic Raab and James Cleverly.

    Gove is the most intelligent out of them. But has made many high profile ****-ups too.

    Also, I think Gallagher is still well up Blair's arse, all these years later.
     
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  7. originalminority

    originalminority Well-Known Member

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    Corbyn has got a radical agenda, probably the most radical since Thatcher and after about 30 years of fairly safe centrist government I think voters will be scared of his radical spending plans.
     
    #1327
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  8. Leon T Trout AFC

    Leon T Trout AFC Well-Known Member

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    Scared mainly because of the right-wing media’s hyperbole and the Conservatives’ false claims.

    How many people truly understand the economics of the situation? Yet all too often are happy to parrot out a line fed to them by the media or CCHQ.

    We always find money for wars, think Iraq and Afghanistan cost something like 20-30 billion pounds (perhaps more).

    Why not invest in our people instead?
     
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  9. City Man

    City Man Well-Known Member

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    Johnson's bungling, u turns, dodginess seems to be well documented enough and reported in the Press.

    Just a shame this is all focussed on 2 deeply flawed individuals, as it accustoms young voters to a binary/superficial view of the political panorama.

    Agree re Raab, Hancock and co, not cabinet material. Gardiner and Ashworth and co are as bad on the other side.

    Think the wilier long term players on both sides are biding their time in the shadows, allowing the hotheads to crash and burn in the Brexit/non Brexit meltdown.
    I'm talking Hilary Benn and Dominic Grieve and co
     
    #1329
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  10. Off The Line

    Off The Line Well-Known Member

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    Foodbanks in the UK

    2004 - 1
    2008 - 22
    2011 - 100
    2012 - 252
    2019 - 2,030

    Do the right thing.
     
    #1330

  11. Leon T Trout AFC

    Leon T Trout AFC Well-Known Member

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    Agree to a certain extent on BJ, but he gets away with a lot compared to what he has said and done compared to Corbyn.

    I'm surprised you mention Grieve and Benn - can't imagine either gaining much traction within their respective parties in the next decade. Grieve obviously independent at the minute anyway, but the Conservatives have reconfigured to the right - despite the One Nation banner Johnson claims - though time will tell.

    Same deal in the Labour Party. The PLP don't hold the cards, the members do, and I can't see Benn being a popular choice anytime soon.
     
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  12. Edelman

    Edelman Well-Known Member

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    With borrowing at such low costs would it be the catastrophy that the media claim ?
    There seems to be money available to channel for the likes of HS2 !
    What will the final cost of that be ?
    Crossrail us also seeing money pumped into its bottomless pit !
     
    #1332
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  13. City Man

    City Man Well-Known Member

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    Can't see Johnson or Corbyn lasting very long at all, too many foes and skeletons in the closet. The Benn act basically halted Brexit- does that not gain him respect in his remainer party?

    Gove could take over - with Starmer on the other side.

    Both sides fighting civil wars for many months to come.
     
    #1333
  14. originallambrettaman

    originallambrettaman Mod Moderator
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    I think they’ll mainly be scared by them being utterly appalling ideas.

    Many of us still remember the 70’s, when nationalised industries stumbled from one disaster to another and massively increased tax rates generated less revenue than the lower tax rates they replaced, as everyone avoided paying them.

    Nationalising WIFI ffs.
     
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  15. Off The Line

    Off The Line Well-Known Member

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    Seems to be working OK in Ireland from what I hear.
     
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  16. City Man

    City Man Well-Known Member

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    #1336
  17. Leon T Trout AFC

    Leon T Trout AFC Well-Known Member

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    Opinion polls demonstrate a broad support re-nationalising our utilities and broadband.

    https://fullfact.org/economy/do-public-want-railways-renationalised/

    https://www.politicshome.com/news/u...n/news/108015/yougov-snap-poll-reveals-public

    Many more sources I could link you to too.

    Data I've seen from the Labour Party also confirms it is popular on the doorstep, no matter what the vested interests say.

    I don't understand that if you're proudly British, that you wouldn't want us to run our own services. In Ireland for example, it's not radical, their utilities are nationalised.
     
    #1337
  18. Leon T Trout AFC

    Leon T Trout AFC Well-Known Member

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    Interesting counter point with regard to Benn but I don't think he's largely trusted (remember he also orchestrated a coup).

    But time and people's experiences can change minds.
     
    #1338
  19. City Man

    City Man Well-Known Member

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    Because the Unions held successive governments to ransom and overplayed their hand, and to future-proof against that, the industries were privatised.
    I referred earlier in this thread to the winter of 73/74 and the power cuts inflicted on the population because of strikes. Ted Heath's govt was brought down and a dangerous precedent was thereby set.
    .
     
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  20. Leon T Trout AFC

    Leon T Trout AFC Well-Known Member

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    I could point you to hundreds of failings of privatisation, and millions of examples of failings of capitalism. Saying that something failed in the 70s does not wash as a reason to not do it.

    Why not trust Britain to run its own services and utilities. British jobs and the money staying in Britain.

    Isn't that in the spirit of Brexit?
     
    #1340
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