Poll: Who Should Be Leader of HM Most Loyal Opposition? This poll is closed. |
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Jeremy Corbyn | 95 | 18.63% | |
Dennis Skinner | 53 | 10.39% | |
Angus Robertson | 20 | 3.92% | |
Tim Farron | 9 | 1.76% | |
Paul Ukips | 7 | 1.37% | |
Robot Lenin | 105 | 20.59% | |
Tony Blair | 28 | 5.49% | |
Pissflaps | 193 | 37.84% | |
Total: | 510 votes |
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Lightning Lord posted:Who in loving hell is Paul Cattermole and why do half of the posters in this thread have redtext about him? You don't remember S Club 7? Shameful. Was a guy on another forum I posted on who was convinced that Rachel Stevens from S Club had put out the best pop album of the '00s. He was otherwise quite reliable on liking good music. Regarde Aduck posted:That sounds really scary to those of us unlikely to be able to leave. I don't see anywhere in Europe as particularly enticing and while I have a degree it's not STEM or in demand so the chances of getting a job or being head hunted is low-impossible. Am I going to die? If the best course of action is to literally flee if you can what the gently caress is going to happen to us that can't? You're giving me a panic attack. Ach, it'll not be that bad. I'd leave if I could but no qualifications, no foreign languages & no money is a bit of a hurdle. But that's more because Britain is a depressing burning trash heap & I'd maybe not be so deeply invested in the politics of another country if I lived there. But if you're that worried, maybe you can phone up the Russian Embassy & ask if they are still offering land in the Far East. Assuming you are white. Although it really wasn't very much land from what I remember, it'd probably be a pretty rubbish life. And I bet internet speeds in rural Primorsky Krai or Amur Oblast are shite. March 11th, 1708. Last time a British monarch vetoes legislation, as Queen Anne refuses to give royal assent to Scotch Militia Bill. forkboy84 fucked around with this message at 20:58 on Mar 11, 2017 |
# ? Mar 11, 2017 20:51 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:51 |
forkboy84 posted:You don't remember S Club 7? Shameful. Was a guy on another forum I posted on who was convinced that Rachel Stevens from S Club had put out the best pop album of the '00s. He was otherwise quite reliable on liking good music.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 20:57 |
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forkboy84 posted:But if you're that worried, maybe you can phone up the Russian Embassy & ask if they are still offering land in the Far East. Assuming you are white. Although it really wasn't very much land from what I remember, it'd probably be a pretty rubbish life. And I bet internet speeds in rural Primorsky Krai or Amur Oblast are shite. Are they really trying to restrict it to whites only, I thought they were targeting British in general? loving lol if they're going to stop a British East Asian person getting land in Kamchatka. Canada has more generous land grants anyway and there's the whole Commonwealth and Not Being Russia thing/
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:02 |
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Guavanaut posted:It's like two acres or something, but I think you're able to log and hunt in the surrounding common land too. I think it was open to Europeans, which lead to some obvious insinuations of racism but seeing as nothing was reported about it after the initial press release 18 months ago or wherever I never heard more on it. I just remember looking at it & realising the area granted was loving piddly compared to stuff like various American Homesteading acts, despite the Russian Far East obviously being both massive and empty. Quickly decided it was far more effort than reward so never looked into it any further despite being a bit of a Russophile (in the sense of the people, their culture & history rather than the current government). Also, I'm far too lazy to be good at living off the land. forkboy84 fucked around with this message at 21:11 on Mar 11, 2017 |
# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:09 |
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How do you actually go about doing it? Moving abroad that is. By hook and crook I am actually possessed of 20 years experience of technical stuff that is well employable pretty much everywhere I guess but if you are the hiring manager in a town in Ecuador and one of the CV's you receive is from a bloke who is currently in Essex and cant speak Spanish you arent putting that to the top of the list are you. Face to face interview would be a bit problematic as well wouldn't it.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:22 |
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:25 |
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Seaside Loafer posted:How do you actually go about doing it? Moving abroad that is. By hook and crook I am actually possessed of 20 years experience of technical stuff that is well employable pretty much everywhere I guess but if you are the hiring manager in a town in Ecuador and one of the CV's you receive is from a bloke who is currently in Essex and cant speak Spanish you arent putting that to the top of the list are you. Face to face interview would be a bit problematic as well wouldn't it. The simplest way is a company that has operations in both the UK and the country you want to move to. But if you genuinely do have marketable skills the best way is just to save up, move over to the new country and apply for jobs there. If you're applying for IT jobs it might be easier to do it remotely, but just change your LinkedIN profile / resume to have an address in your new locale. If you back yourself, you have to take a chance, but if you have enough money for 3 months at least in the new place then that should be ample time to find some sort of job. Having english is also a big marketable skill.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:31 |
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loving lol
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:33 |
and i must meme posted:How bad is it really going to get? Like is everyone just overreacting or is this really going to be as bad as people are implying? It has the potential to be a disaster, an unprecedented act of economic suicide for a mature western democracy. There is no aspect of our national life that will not be impacted by Brexit. There is no outcome that will be better than the status quo. The Government hasn't even began to grasp the scale of the task ahead of them, and the Civil Service who will be tasked with the gigantic amounts of work needed is not remotely capable of carrying all that work out in any timely fashion. The resources just aren't there. So that's all good.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:37 |
TheHoodedClaw posted:It has the potential to be a disaster, an unprecedented act of economic suicide for a mature western democracy. There is no aspect of our national life that will not be impacted by Brexit. There is no outcome that will be better than the status quo.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:39 |
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https://twitter.com/KTHopkins/status/840322323622350848
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:39 |
lmao
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:40 |
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I like this.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:40 |
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TheHoodedClaw posted:The Government hasn't even began to grasp the scale of the task ahead of them I'm not sure this is accurate. My take is that the Govt is starkly aware of how hosed they are and are busy publically ostriching and dead-catting to avoid having the red-tops ask just when May will be ready to give Jerry and Francois a good kicking.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:40 |
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jBrereton posted:There are outcomes that would be better than the status quo, which is mediocre training and stagnant/falling wages for a lot of British workers, especially young men. Certainly further education could do with some improvement and a perception that we might have to train people properly instead of just importing them could help with that. I mean, it's technically possible that Brexit could be better, but do you think there's any realistic chance of that happening unless the cabinet gets hit with an asteroid and the entire government is replaced, by freak technicality, with the unliving corpse of Clement Atlee or something?
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:43 |
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JFairfax posted:If you back yourself, you have to take a chance, but if you have enough money for 3 months at least in the new place then that should be ample time to find some sort of job.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:47 |
spectralent posted:I mean, it's technically possible that Brexit could be better, but do you think there's any realistic chance of that happening unless the cabinet gets hit with an asteroid and the entire government is replaced, by freak technicality, with the unliving corpse of Clement Atlee or something?
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:48 |
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jBrereton posted:I have literally no idea, and it depends quite heavily on whether Tess May as PM can give up on a bad idea like grammar schools and redirect attention to properly training people for the trades, including the middle class kids who have been steered violently away from it for the last couple of decades when uni attendance was the target rather than an actually useful society with capable people in it, as might be just fuckin necessary after Brexit depending on how hard, poached, or scrambled with bits of smoked salmon it is. So "No", then.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:51 |
jBrereton posted:There are outcomes that would be better than the status quo, which is mediocre training and stagnant/falling wages for a lot of British workers, especially young men. Certainly further education could do with some improvement and a perception that we might have to train people properly instead of just importing them could help with that. I hope you are right. Losing tarriff-free access to the gigantic market on our doorstep isn't exactly going to help with the wages aspect though.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:54 |
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Seaside Loafer posted:Never seem to get to that point. I've earned loads and payed poo poo loads of tax over the years but between supporting my ex and our kid and paying the loving rent I never seem to get ahead. Just stop paying child support and alimony. I mean you'll be leaving the country anyway so they won't be able to get you.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:54 |
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Seaside Loafer posted:How do you actually go about doing it? Moving abroad that is. By hook and crook I am actually possessed of 20 years experience of technical stuff that is well employable pretty much everywhere I guess but if you are the hiring manager in a town in Ecuador and one of the CV's you receive is from a bloke who is currently in Essex and cant speak Spanish you arent putting that to the top of the list are you. Face to face interview would be a bit problematic as well wouldn't it. Maybe I'm missing something here but why the hell would you move to South America? And Ecuador, on top of that. If I didn't have family in SA I would just forget its existence entirely.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:57 |
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JFairfax posted:Just stop paying child support and alimony.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:58 |
kingturnip posted:I'm not sure this is accurate. My take is that the Govt is starkly aware of how hosed they are and are busy publically ostriching and dead-catting to avoid having the red-tops ask just when May will be ready to give Jerry and Francois a good kicking. They are certainly starting to realize, I think, with some of the bigger ticket items. Something like the Euratom agreement seemed to be complete news to them, and there'll be thousands of knotty problems buried deep in the last four decades worth of legislation.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 21:59 |
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Yeah I don't understand how you move without getting headhunted. I probably could get some job but i'm not valuable enough to get head hunted so I have no idea how to get the foot in the door.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 22:00 |
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Pochoclo posted:Maybe I'm missing something here but why the hell would you move to South America? And Ecuador, on top of that.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 22:03 |
TheHoodedClaw posted:I hope you are right. Losing tarriff-free access to the gigantic market on our doorstep isn't exactly going to help with the wages aspect though.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 22:03 |
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Regarde Aduck posted:Yeah I don't understand how you move without getting headhunted. I probably could get some job but i'm not valuable enough to get head hunted so I have no idea how to get the foot in the door. you make poo poo happen. do your research, find a company with overseas locations and apply for jobs with them. it's a lot easier to do an internal company transfer, and there are lots of companies with international operations.
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 22:04 |
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jBrereton posted:I have literally no idea, and it depends quite heavily on whether Tess May as PM can give up on a bad idea like grammar schools and redirect attention to properly training people for the trades salmon it is. They literally just pushed ahead with grammar schools. It was the first budget since the referendum and it was their opportunity to start reprioritising, and preparing the UK for independence and strengthening our negotiating position. We didn't get investment to make the UK more self-sufficient, we got grammars and Hammond burying a bunch of money in case we need some later What's this about salmon anyway. The Norwegian gravlax model?
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# ? Mar 11, 2017 22:28 |
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hopefully they get to the bit where they nail her to a large piece of woodwork soon
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# ? Mar 12, 2017 00:13 |
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baka kaba posted:They literally just pushed ahead with grammar schools. It was the first budget since the referendum and it was their opportunity to start reprioritising, and preparing the UK for independence and strengthening our negotiating position. We didn't get investment to make the UK more self-sufficient, we got grammars and Hammond burying a bunch of money in case we need some later
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# ? Mar 12, 2017 01:20 |
jBrereton posted:We'll see what happens with regards to everything in due course. Wouldn't throw yourselves on a calamity that hasn't happened yet, though, bad for your health. The Tories in Parliament aren't fully on board at all. There's a handful in the Commons who've already rebelled, and more who would do so if there was a chance that a Govt motion could be defeated. But that is contingent on there being a majority against. That stupid oval office Corbyn whipped *for* the Government position. It really is the perfect storm of idiocy. It's all David Cameron's fault though. A Prime Minister in control of his own party - and he had a decade to do so - would never have allowed such a daft open ended referendum. A rich boy, playing the game of politics as a game, and playing it badly. drat him.
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# ? Mar 12, 2017 01:24 |
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^^^ they didn't even rebel to vote for the amendments they were publicly calling for, you think they'd have voted for total political suicide?Namtab posted:Apparently Theresa is mad about the grammar schools going into the budget because she thinks there's other priorities. Which seems weird considering one would expect she'd see the budget early what with living next door to the guy who wrote it. Really? Maybe she's just mad they're making people even more annoyed about the budget - she was sure in favour of them before and it's not like much has changed. She came into the job with the UK canoe heading for Brexit Falls and she was still hella about them grammars baka kaba fucked around with this message at 01:28 on Mar 12, 2017 |
# ? Mar 12, 2017 01:25 |
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baka kaba posted:^^^ they didn't even rebel to vote for the amendments they were publicly calling for, you think they'd have voted for total political suicide?
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# ? Mar 12, 2017 01:30 |
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Oh well in that case, good
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# ? Mar 12, 2017 01:31 |
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TheHoodedClaw posted:But that is contingent on there being a majority against. That stupid oval office Corbyn whipped *for* the Government position. It really is the perfect storm of idiocy. gently caress off. Article 50 had no chance of being blocked regardless of the whipping position of Labour. The amendments had Labour support and the Tories didn't rebel on them in any significant numbers.
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# ? Mar 12, 2017 01:37 |
I'm sceptical purely because at PMQ's before the budget she was leading questions about school funding and selective schools with comments about the opposition waiting to see whats in the budget. This seems like some after the fact attempts to distance herself from the unpopular budget without appearing to have bowed to public pressure over the NI rise.
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# ? Mar 12, 2017 01:39 |
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Jesus and Mary are different people?
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# ? Mar 12, 2017 02:07 |
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Mail and Telegraph both with front pages hostile to the government again tomorrow.
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# ? Mar 12, 2017 02:07 |
jabby posted:gently caress off. Article 50 had no chance of being blocked regardless of the whipping position of Labour. The amendments had Labour support and the Tories didn't rebel on them in any significant numbers. A government with a narrow majority needs to be opposed (or at least held to account) robustly. Every day, every vote, every TV slot, every radio slot, every attack countered, every position analysed. Oh sorry, I forgot; the London oval office student debating society are in charge, preening themselves in an ideological mirror, loving up for actual working class people.
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# ? Mar 12, 2017 02:12 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:51 |
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TheHoodedClaw posted:A government with a narrow majority needs to be opposed (or at least held to account) robustly. Every day, every vote, every TV slot, every radio slot, every attack countered, every position analysed. Would these be the actual working class people who backed Brexit a hell of a lot more than the 'London oval office student debating society' did? And you claimed that more Tories might have rebelled if Corbyn had whipped against Article 50, a clearly false claim since hardly any rebelled on the amendments which were fair more likely to pass, and you have no idea how many Labour MPs would have defied the whip if Corbyn tried to block Brexit.
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# ? Mar 12, 2017 02:29 |