It was the usual suspects, a demo against the Tory win followed by desecrating the WW2 women's memorial statue in Whitehall. Funny how 'socialists' can't accept democracy...
The vast majority of the last Labour government's spending after 2008 was in propping up the banks. Hundreds of billions of pounds to the very paragons of capitalism that caused the crisis through pure greed in the first place. Does anyone seriously think that the Tories would have let their friends the bankers go to the wall? The only thing Labour did was not immediately try to get the rest of us to pay for it by cutting services. And of course the bankers have gone on cheating, trying to fix currency exchange rates, developing tax evasions schemes, ever since. There are very strong economic arguments backing up the argument that the leap into austerity in 2010 prolonged the recession by a couple of years.
I am no fan of the Blair/brown governments, but the Tory campaign played a blinder in convincing large chunks of the electorate that it was all Labour's fault, and Miliband et al were misguided (from 2010 onwards) in trying to distance themselves from their predecessors and avoid discussing what actually happened.
I have to tell you that I was overseas last week and was just after info, not particularly to start another riot on here! Mods feel free to merge, close or leave as you see fit.[
Great post. It remains a mystery to me why Labour declined to take on the Tory lie of 'Labour's recession'.
Perhaps this thread should be merged with Election thread?
The vast majority of the last Labour government's spending after 2008 was in propping up the banks. Hundreds of billions of pounds to the very paragons of capitalism that caused the crisis through pure greed in the first place. Does anyone seriously think that the Tories would have let their friends the bankers go to the wall? The only thing Labour did was not immediately try to get the rest of us to pay for it by cutting services. And of course the bankers have gone on cheating, trying to fix currency exchange rates, developing tax evasions schemes, ever since. There are very strong economic arguments backing up the argument that the leap into austerity in 2010 prolonged the recession by a couple of years.
I am no fan of the Blair/brown governments, but the Tory campaign played a blinder in convincing large chunks of the electorate that it was all Labour's fault, and Miliband et al were misguided (from 2010 onwards) in trying to distance themselves from their predecessors and avoid discussing what actually happened.
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Great post. It remains a mystery to me why Labour declined to take on the Tory lie of 'Labour's recession'.
Perhaps this thread should be merged with Election thread?
I have to tell you that I was overseas last week and was just after info, not particularly to start another riot on here! Mods feel free to merge, close or leave as you see fit.
Would have been just the same for Labour mate. Their big promise was reducing the deficit, I have no doubt that they will have a good go at that. Manifestos/ pre election promises are 'directional' at best.
The Labour Government were right up the bankers's arses too. One of the biggest banking disasters was Sir Fred Goodwin of RBS, who if I remember rightly was knighted by the Labour Government in the early 2000's. Neither a Labour nor a Tory government could afford to let the banks go to the wall - it had nothing to do with banking friends - the whole system could have collapsed if the general public lost faith that their money would be safe in high street banks.
Labour didn't cause the banking crisis, but they have admitted they made it worse by relaxing the regulatory system, and Labour's spending was imprudent and out of
hand (something that Lord Mandelson has admitted in terms post-election) . Miliband's failure to admit this was one of the reasons why the public lost faith in him.
As to austerity prolonging the recession, you will always find some economist to argue this. This was essentially the Ed Balls argument that has now been widely discredited.
So Brown and Darling were right to bail out the banks then.
Labour have admitted that they were wrong to relax banking regulation, but the Tories remain largely unchallenged about the fact that they were saying at the time that deregulation hadn't gone far enough.
Pils, in the south, most fracking is in the southern counties, and the Tories would be brave to try and push that through. Can't see it happening given all the fuss that's been made so far when any fracking is suggested.
Losing your job is covered by employment laws which won't be affected by Human Rights amendments. More likely to be a terrorist caught trying to stick a bomb on the Tube, who argues he can't be deported because he owns a cat in the UK (sorry for the cynicism).
I do accept however that certain sections of society, for example the genuinely disabled, will be fearful as you say, and the government must do all it can to reassure them that their welfare will not be cut
Selective quoting does nobody any good - least of all you.Pils.If your local area gets fracked into oblivion and the value of your house plummets to zero or your employer sacks you 'cos he can get someone else to do your job for half the salary and you have no comeback as the Human Rights Legislation has been repealed would you like anybody to come on here and tell you to get over it?
People are fearful Chaz and rightly so.......................a little empathy perhaps or are you really that devoid of feelings for your fellow man?

It's rare for me to be quite so malicious but in Galloway's case I hope he loses big time and is financially crippled by the results. But doubtless the cowed and bullied membership of 'Respect' will be paying for his latest vanity project.It seems George Galloway is taking legal action to challenge the result in his constituency because his opponent had made 'false statements' that affected the result.
On that basis we could have to re-run the whole election.
The foxes belong here
The immigrants dont
I had one Welsh grandparent, one Irish and a Danish great grandparent. Am I ok to stay? Or do I need to pack my bags? Just wondering if there is a qualifying list of boxes people need to tick.
PS he majority of foxes don't tend to be shot or ripped apart from the hunts, they tend to die from heart attacks brought on from the stress
Oh and just so you know
https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/news-articles/1114/051114-economic-impact-EU-immigration