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I take some solace in that they are by-elections and they seem rather more prone to producing upsets. Indeed, upsets that are often rectified at the next general election.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 07:00 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 03:58 |
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Regarde Aduck posted:We're all meat animals. I bet people in this thread taste great. All those waitroes diets. Such rich delicate flesh. You'd have to scrub some of them pretty well before cooking though.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 07:05 |
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mrpwase posted:You'd have to scrub some of them pretty well before cooking though. Those are the organic, free-range ones, they have that unique archeological dig site terroir.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 07:16 |
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XMNN posted:It's official, we have our first UKIP MP. Now that UKIP and the Greens have an equal number of MPs, will we see equal coverage of them on the Beeb?
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 07:27 |
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Party Boat posted:Now that UKIP and the Greens have an equal number of MPs, will we see equal coverage of them on the Beeb? Clacton, what hath thou wrought? Ebola can't come fast enough, and I'm keeping the TV off, as I can't bear to see Farage wanking himself into a purple fury.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 08:44 |
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Party Boat posted:Now that UKIP and the Greens have an equal number of MPs, will we see equal coverage of them on the Beeb? Indeed, five minutes of every hour on BBC channels will now be devoted to praising UKIP to balance out all that lefty bias the corporation has. If a second UKIP MP is elected a weekly half hour primetime show will feature Nigel delivering a lecture from a pub that culminates in an immigrant being sacrificed to the Volcano God thus fixing all of Britain's problems for the week.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 08:52 |
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ReV VAdAUL posted:Indeed, five minutes of every hour on BBC channels will now be devoted to praising UKIP to balance out all that lefty bias the corporation has. If a second UKIP MP is elected a weekly half hour primetime show will feature Nigel delivering a lecture from a pub that culminates in an immigrant being sacrificed to the Volcano God thus fixing all of Britain's problems for the week. Will they also burn a few gays to stop this drizzle?
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 09:06 |
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I live near Clacton. It is a terrible place.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 09:13 |
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What lovely news. We're gonna get some sort of unholy trinity of a Tory/LibDem/UKIP coalition aren't we?
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 09:17 |
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I'm been trying to figure out for ages who Farage and Carswell remind me of standing together and I've decided it's muppets. Not in the sense of calling them idiots or whatever, I mean they physically resemble Jim Henson's beloved puppet characters made flesh. Either that or Canadians from South Park, with their big split mouths and gigantic foreheads.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 09:32 |
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Quite unlike Red Ed's noble, handsome mien.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 09:42 |
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Saki posted:Quite unlike Red Ed's noble, handsome mien. Or the delightful Chief Secretary to the Treasury who is absolutely not Dr Honeydew Bunsen's colleague.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 09:58 |
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Saki posted:Quite unlike Red Ed's noble, handsome mien. Oh no! Saki! You got him, right in his centre-right Labour-loving heart!
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 10:01 |
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forkboy84 posted:Or the delightful Chief Secretary to the Treasury who is absolutely not Dr Honeydew Bunsen's colleague. I hear Danny has a very nice personality.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 10:08 |
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It's hard not to feel sorry for a man with literally no bones in his face
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 10:14 |
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Seaside Loafer posted:Why are the greens being touted as 'not - genuine', they have a lots of bollocks i know but if you are a lefty its gotta be closet to your worldview surely. being a party member im kinda biased though. no i dont believe in homeopathy and could give a gently caress about how painfully meat animals die. Really I think left /right is a bit of a trite statement these days. I'm talking real political alternative that is born from the occupy movements etc. quite suprised nobody is cooking anything up. I don't mean to sound offensive but the Green Party feels like a polluted brand (pun intended tho) to the general public. Don't see them ever being viable in the eyes of say Mondeo Man
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 10:16 |
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CareyB posted:Really I think left /right is a bit of a trite statement these days. I'm talking real political alternative that is born from the occupy movements etc. quite suprised nobody is cooking anything up. I don't mean to sound offensive but the Green Party feels like a polluted brand (pun intended tho) to the general public. Don't see them ever being viable in the eyes of say Mondeo Man The Occupy movement actually highlights how important traditional political organisation is. The movement's lack of clear goals and allergy to any kind of leadership or organisation allowed people like Justine Tunney to gain prominence and publicity from the Occupy brand. Who is Justine Tunney? If you've missed the hilarious threads in D&D and YOSPOS this Gawker article will have to suffice: Why Does Google Employ a Pro-Slavery Lunatic?. Tunney is notable for her continued insistence that Google CEO Eric Schmidt should be appointed While offshoots of Occupy have engaged in genuinely beneficial actions such as helping people fight foreclosure and engaging in cleanup and community support in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy its lack of overarching organisation means there is no real response from Occupy to her hijacking of the Occupy twitter account and use of her Occupy connections to promote truly despicable views. Certainly Labour gave Mosley his start but it was also in a position to robustly oppose him and the BUF when he became a fascist.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 10:46 |
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Agreed completely. I've only recently started following occupy properly and it was a bit wtf to see the same already debunked image coming onto Facebook 2 or 3 times.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 11:20 |
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Saki posted:I live near Clacton. It is a terrible place. I went there once, but never ever again holy poo poo.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 11:20 |
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Clacton's my parent's constituency and my dad voted for UKIP. I think it's mostly because he likes Carswell though, apparently he's pretty charismatic. He insists he's 'not that bad' whenever I bring up how he wants to privatise the NHS...
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 11:41 |
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Umiapik posted:I don't believe any more that the Ukip vote is going to vanish come the general election. This is supposed to be a Labour safe seat!
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 11:50 |
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Clacton is poor. People have had thirty years of no good jobs, lovely, low-paid part time work and a general sense of being ignored. The real value of wages has been eroding fast and somewhere like Clacton, which starts from a low base, isn't exactly well-placed to weather that. They've been fed a poo poo sandwich for three decades while watching the richer half of London soar away into the stratosphere, and when the haves even bother to notice the have-nots it's to sneer at them for being racist provincial idiots. Now the entire political establishment is clutching its pearls because they've had the temerity to vote for UKIP. I don't want UKIP to do well, but it's immensely pleasing watching the big parties (and especially Labour, jesus christ) getting a series of repeated bloody noses. Maybe they'll finally start paying attention to the people who they were literally founded to represent.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 12:02 |
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I posted the 14 words on HYS in response to someone prattling on about the rights of BRITISH CHILDREN. Got up voted very nicely until someone caught on and got it pulled
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 12:07 |
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Zephro posted:I don't want UKIP to do well, but it's immensely pleasing watching the big parties (and especially Labour, jesus christ) getting a series of repeated bloody noses. Maybe they'll finally start paying attention to the people who they were literally founded to represent. They already have been paying attention to those people, with finely crafted scaremongering and scapegoating. UKIP just ran with it harder. If they'd won based on promises to invest in the area and help people you could be optimistic, but like that article points out, when you show people what UKIP's policies actually are and how they're not in the voters' interests, they say they don't care. That's a recipe for more right-wing politics, not less I suppose one thing Labour can't emulate is UKIP's anti-establishment gimmick, so it'll be harder to compete unless they can make big promises that connect with people, and trade on their ability to actually win power and enact them. Given their track record though I can see them doubling down on the right-wing rhetoric, since they seem committed to being Tory Lite instead of offering an alternative vision baka kaba fucked around with this message at 12:32 on Oct 10, 2014 |
# ? Oct 10, 2014 12:22 |
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Yeah, UKIP's success is based on the prevailing media narrative of 'all the nation's woes are due to X external enemy'. There is no sense in which this move is positive. It simply raises the spectre of the major parties chasing for the extremist vote.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 12:30 |
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Sky News headline: "IS UKIP THE PARTY FOR ALL BRITONS?" One would think a cursory analysis of the facts would provide the answer, which is "No, just the white ones who were born here".
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 12:32 |
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baka kaba posted:They already have been paying attention to those people, with finely crafted scaremongering and scapegoating. UKIP just ran with it harder. Face it, the media would give Labour a huge bollocking if they didn't keep to the narrative of "this shows the British public have run out of patience with immigration and/or the EU, when will the major parties finally do something about this" yadda yadda. There is no room for alternative visions.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 12:36 |
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I'm striking on Monday! Although given the level and organisation of the unions at my workplace itll probably be more 'showing up to work later and hoping legal protections actually mean something'.....
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 12:36 |
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Jedit posted:Sky News headline: "IS UKIP THE PARTY FOR ALL BRITONS?" One would think a cursory analysis of the facts would provide the answer, which is "No, just the white ones who were born here". Nationalism is parlor room racism.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 12:38 |
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Isn't that the difference between BRITONS and British People? When talking about people, Britons tends to be used in the thinly veiled racism sense of 'indigenous', whereas British tends to be used in the sense of 'citizen'. (Is there a version of with that gently caress Griffin crying on it?)
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 12:38 |
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namesake posted:I'm striking on Monday! Although given the level and organisation of the unions at my workplace itll probably be more 'showing up to work later and hoping legal protections actually mean something'..... What union/sector (if you don't mind me asking)? This is us at the moment, though I doubt it'll come to strike in the end.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 12:55 |
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Bobstar posted:What union/sector (if you don't mind me asking)? This is us at the moment, though I doubt it'll come to strike in the end. Unison/healthcare. Little bit nervous because the other parts of my team are away and no one knows I'm a union member so the chances of my managers being unhappy are quite large. I'm not in a hospital though so no one will die. Have you contacted any of the Ritzy staff in Brixton? They've been striking over pay just recently although I don't know the final outcome of that.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 13:03 |
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^^^ good luck!Fangz posted:Face it, the media would give Labour a huge bollocking if they didn't keep to the narrative of "this shows the British public have run out of patience with immigration and/or the EU, when will the major parties finally do something about this" yadda yadda. There is no room for alternative visions. That's accepting they've won though - and yeah, they pretty much have, but that's with Labour's complicity. If they even challenged anything the government says or does (and there's a lot of public backing for things like defending the NHS from 'efficiency savings' and reorganisation) it would open up space for alternatives to be discussed. But they pretty much accept what the government says, vow to do it slightly less, and just make contrarian noises that everyone recognises as opposition politics at work. To the point where interviewers can hoist them by their own petard just by asking for more detail beyond the crafted statement, and you get to watch a Labour politician struggle to keep on-message because their party's actual position is similar to the government's. It's transparent and painful to watch and makes them look like opportunists, so it's no wonder people are so disenchanted. UKIP's unfiltered honesty about all their lovely opinions is probably a refreshing change for a lot of people But yeah, the media would give Labour a tough ride but they'd at least find it hard to avoid reporting what the party says and does. A real opposition would mean holding the Tories to account and advancing an entirely different vision than austerity and privatisation. They'd build support just by publicly advocating it. Right now it's more like accepting and following the Tory line but hesitating in the execution, which makes it easy for the Tories to paint them as just a weak and irresponsible knockoff
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 13:09 |
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Jedit posted:Sky News headline: "IS UKIP THE PARTY FOR ALL BRITONS?" One would think a cursory analysis of the facts would provide the answer, which is "No, just the white ones who were born here". Unless they're women, young, poor, or any combination that doesn't add up to bald/ing red faced fat white man.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 13:21 |
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There's still just under seven months before the election. Official campaigning hasn't even started, and the debate(s) could change everything. A Labour victory doesn't look as clear cut as you'd expect. I mean, I hope they win (as far as I really hope the Tories and UKIP lose), but it's not close to finished yet.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 13:27 |
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baka kaba posted:They already have been paying attention to those people, with finely crafted scaremongering and scapegoating. UKIP just ran with it harder. quote:I suppose one thing Labour can't emulate is UKIP's anti-establishment gimmick, so it'll be harder to compete unless they can make big promises that connect with people, and trade on their ability to actually win power and enact them. Given their track record though I can see them doubling down on the right-wing rhetoric, since they seem committed to being Tory Lite instead of offering an alternative vision
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 13:40 |
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namesake posted:Unison/healthcare. Little bit nervous because the other parts of my team are away and no one knows I'm a union member so the chances of my managers being unhappy are quite large. I'm not in a hospital though so no one will die. I only heard this second hand, I'm a lodger and my landlord is a shop steward for his union so he was following the strike pretty closely, and boycotting the Ritzy while the strike was on. Apparently they're back to work, they were striking for a London Living Wage and I don't think they were offered that, but they did get some sort of pay increase.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 13:45 |
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I do find it fairly ridiculous that speculation on Farage being included in the leadership debates has begun with no mention of the Greens being included. I would vote green if they weren't so absurdly anti science and wanking off over shutting down perfectly safe nuclear.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 13:53 |
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Oh God are UKIP going to want to be in on the debates? poo poo.
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# ? Oct 10, 2014 13:54 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 03:58 |
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Zephro posted:The thing is, Labour was founded as an anti-establishment party. There's plenty of space on the left to start opposing the cosy oligopolies and old-boys networks that make up the establishment in modern Britain. The Labour party as it currently exists - a bunch of assembly-line Oxbridge androids who just parrot the received wisdom whenever you pull their cords - would struggle to, but the historical Labour party wouldn't. e: Lord Twisted posted:I do find it fairly ridiculous that speculation on Farage being included in the leadership debates has begun with no mention of the Greens being included. I would vote green if they weren't so absurdly anti science and wanking off over shutting down perfectly safe nuclear. LemonDrizzle fucked around with this message at 14:04 on Oct 10, 2014 |
# ? Oct 10, 2014 14:00 |