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Jeremy Corbyn
 

Jeremy Corbyn

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"Corbyn has never had a job"

Ah, I see you've been studying at the Jambalaya School of Historical Revisionism. 😆

"He IS the establishment as much as Theresa May is"

😆 Good god. You really are funny sometimes.

"And difficult to point to your business achievements, when you've never started so much as a small fire, never mind a business, and wyou spent all those decades on the backbenches achieving the sum total of **** all!"

Remind me again of your business success?

Corbyn's the leader of the largest political party in Europe. Who are you again?

http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/staggers/2016/04/six-months-jeremy-corbyn-already-one-historys-great-opposition-leaders


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 1:15 pm
 dazh
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The Brexit/Trump vote was a vote/expression of rage against the establishment. its independent of political leanings.

It's all just semantics. I agree that the definitions of left vs right are now less clear and that instead it's about the 'establishment' vs 'the people', but the divisions can still be broadly described by left vs right, haves vs have nots, rich vs poor or whatever. The question I have though is if you think the establishment is the problem, why do you still cling to centrist labour party politicians like Andy Burnham as being the answer? Seems to me he and his ilk are the very personification of what you say people are against.


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 1:28 pm
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Remind me again of your business success?

Eh? Whats that got to do with owt?

I colour things in for a living. I'm not asking anyone to put me in charge of running the country.

I know my limits. These are usually 'keep the felt tips inside the black lines'

Jeremy's limits are sitting at the back of the room scowling and saying [b]NO![/b] to everything the grown ups suggest, and occasionally nipping out to get some excitable sixth formers all worked up with a bit of collective virtue signalling

Corbyn's the leader of the largest political party in Europe.

and Coldplay are the biggest band in the world.


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 1:59 pm
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dazh - Member

The Brexit/Trump vote was a vote/expression of rage against the establishment. its independent of political leanings.

It's all just semantics. I agree that the definitions of left vs right are now less clear and that instead it's about the 'establishment' vs 'the people', but the divisions can still be broadly described by left vs right, haves vs have nots, rich vs poor or whatever. The question I have though is if you think the establishment is the problem, why do you still cling to centrist labour party politicians like Andy Burnham as being the answer? Seems to me he and his ilk are the very personification of what you say people are against.

Agreed, Trump is both Left and Right, rhetoric is very right, his policies mostly left - you could call him a populist, but is that such an insult for a public servant.

You would find a lot of people who share a lot of his opinions in any working man’s club 20 years ago, distrust of foreigners, distrust of the establishment, hatred of rich people avoiding tax. Anti-Globalisation, Pro Domestic Industry - jobs, jobs jobs rather than wealth, wealth, wealth.

The big question is whether it will work, can he really reverse a 30-40-year trend, he's got a good chance IF he wants to, as, he's as far as I can gather self-funded his appointment, he made no deals for funding, no favours to pay back – but the same can’t be said about the senate who need to ratify everything.

More importantly that all that though, on the face of it he seems a deeply unpleasant Man who will say and do anything to get what he wants, do we expect a Man who lies so easily, with such conviction to start being honest and fulfilling his promises? I doubt it, I can see a quick return to type, tax cuts and avoidance laws for people just like him, more globalisation as it’s more profitable, more suffering for the common man.


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 2:17 pm
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The big question is whether it will work, can he really reverse a 30-40-year trend

Assuming what he said during the campaign is what he actually believes or wants to do. I am not sure he really gives a shit about poor disaffected middle class Americans now he's had their vote.


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 2:22 pm
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"Corbyn has never had a job"

Ah, I see you've been studying at the Jambalaya School of Historical Revisionism

If you can find me what 'job' he's had outside politics, that'd be great please Fred? As looking into his background, there aren't any references to any anywhere. Maybe someone has doctored his wiki page to remove all reference to his time spent as a welder in the Glasgow shipyards?

He's a career politician. Just as much as Blair or Cameron.

And we all know how high a regard they are held in. Like I said, the idea he can present himself as a Trump like outsider is laughable. I know there is a lower level of proof required in the common room, where it can get a bit emotional with all those adolescent hormones bouncing around, but still....


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 2:36 pm
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Remind me again of your business success?

I have a lot of respect for those that try, even if eventually they don't make it.

Far less for those who have never tried and don't know what they are trying to make very cheap points about.


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 2:43 pm
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If you can find me what 'job' he's had outside politics, that'd be great please Fred?

Is being an MP not a job then? By all accounts he's good at it.


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 3:05 pm
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Good at it?

Are you basing that on his totally anonymous 3 decades on the backbenches, his becoming labour leader by mistake during a post-modern prank that went wrong, or taking labour into the electoral wilderness with the lowest poll ratings in their history?


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 3:13 pm
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Are you basing that on his totally anonymous 3 decades on the backbenches

No, reports of how he represents his constituents. That's what back-benchers are meant to do, after all.


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 3:14 pm
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"If you can find me what 'job' he's had outside politics, that'd be great please Fred? "

I assume this is aimed at me, as you've quoted from my post.

Corbyn's been a journalist, union official and political activist and campaigner. Not entirely sure why it's essential for anyone to have had a wide range of jobs throughout their life, if they are dedicated to a particular vocation. You contradicted yourself when you said 'Corbyn has never had a job, and has been an MP for 30 odd years'. Not only are you wrong, but you're also dismissing the work he has actually done. Regardless of whether you value his work or not, it's simply incorrect to say he's 'never had a job'.

"Eh? Whats that got to do with owt?"

You're criticising someone who is not a businessman, for not running a business. That's a bit like criticising someone who is not a bus driver, for the bus being late.

And you're so dismissive of someone else's efforts, when that person has achieved far more than you have in their lifetime.

"I have a lot of respect for those that try, even if eventually they don't make it."

Depends on their motives. Trump 'tries' to make lots of money for himself, and gain power to sate his massive ego. I have zero respect for that.

"Far less for those who have never tried and don't know what they are trying to make very cheap points about."

I agree. Hence my defence of Corbyn, with Binners. JC has worked bloody hard his entire career, to fight for better lives for others. To dismiss this as 'never having had a proper job' is just utterly disrespectful.

"Is being an MP not a job then? By all accounts he's good at it."

According to the many constituents of his I've met, he is very good indeed. Must be why they keep voting for him...


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 3:32 pm
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To dismiss this as 'never having had a proper job' is just utterly disrespectful.

How about 'he utterly failed in achieving anything in his job'? 🙂


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 3:33 pm
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Corbyn's been a journalist, union official and political activist and campaigner.

He wrote a weekly column for the 12 readers of the Morning Star and waved some placards?

the point being made, and disputed here Fred is the idea of Corbs presenting himself as some Trump-esque outsider, stood with the common 'blue-collar' worker against the establishment?

What I'm sayingg is that, given his background as a lifelong Westminster insider, this is an absolutely laughable proposition

According to the many constituents of his I've met, he is very good indeed. Must be why they keep voting for him...

To be fair, you could paint a cows arse red in that constituency and it'd get elected


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 3:38 pm
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"the idea of Corbs presenting himself as some Trump-esque outsider, stood with the common 'blue-collar' worker against the establishment?"

I don't think he is. He makes no pretence about being middle class. He's not positioned himself as a 'workers' hero' at all. I think he would describe himself as a 'bleeding heart liberal', if pushed on the subject. I think you're thinking of Nigel Farage.

Do you have an issue with middle class people from privileged backgrounds, dedicating their work to helping others?


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 3:47 pm
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the point being made, and disputed here Fred is the idea of Corbs presenting himself as some Trump-esque outsider

But most other people seem to consider him the outsider candidate. He's been outside government all his life - how outside do you want him to be?

I have a lot of respect for those that try, even if eventually they don't make it.

Like Corbyn is trying to make the country a better place? Even if he's failing?


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 4:24 pm
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From what I can see, he's expended an awful lot of time and effort in keeping Jeremy Corbyn as the leader of the labour party, but as his casual, disinterested nonchalance during, and since the Referendum, its increasingly difficult to fathom to what end?


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 4:31 pm
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From what I can see, he's expended an awful lot of time and effort in keeping Jeremy Corbyn as the leader of the labour party

Because he believes in the democratic process, and he did have the most votes. If you'd won an election in a landslide, and then a few dozen people told you you were rubbish - what would you do?

It's not cut and dried. I'm sure you'd be first in line to ridicule him for campaining, winning, then giving up. And what would his successor do with most of his party membership not wanting him?

Life is simple when all you have to do is rant on the internet.


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 4:34 pm
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Because he believes in the democratic process, and he did have the most votes. If you'd won [s]an election[/s] a popularity contest in the sixth form by a landslide, and then [s]a few dozen people[/s] 80% of your parlimentary colleagues, and the entire the electorate told you you were rubbish - what would you do?

FTFY


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 4:39 pm
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You'd really turn round to all those party members and say 'sorry guys' and then give up?


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 4:43 pm
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Because he believes in the democratic process, and he did have the most votes. If you'd won an election a popularity contest in the sixth form by a landslide, and then a few dozen people 80% of your colleagues, and the entire the electorate told you you were rubbish - what would you do?

He put his name forward to be leader of the labour party. The labour party voted for him, twice. If other members of the labour party don't like it, they are free to leave.


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 4:44 pm
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@dazh tbh I thought Corbyn at least had something to say which made some sense, as for passionate delivery and energy he has never had that and he never will. It's just not him

Is being an MP not a job then? By all accounts he's good at it.

MP is a well paid and he has a £1.6m pension pot so I think that counts as a job. As for whether he is good at it I'd say by a [b]minority[/b] of accounts he is good at it.

Trump wants to cut taxes, abolish free trade deal with Mexico, build a wall, deport millions, subject all muslims to intensive vetting pre visa and invest heavily in infrastructure. So the cross-over with Corbyn is pretty limited I'd say.


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 6:52 pm
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"So the cross-over with Corbyn is pretty limited I'd say."

Trump's whole economic policy is pure Corbynomics.

They're both anti-trade deals, they're both lukewarm on NATO, they've bothr successfully pitched themselves as anti-establishment outsiders. They're part of the same wave of anti-liberal consensus backlash. Trump's pretty much proved what Corbyn supporters have said - poll tell us nothing - if Trump can win so can Corbyn.


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 7:20 pm
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the point being made, and disputed here Fred

Glad someone else is thinking that.....


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 7:23 pm
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if Trump can win so can Corbyn.

Well all I can say is please carry on with "the project" then


 
Posted : 10/11/2016 7:25 pm
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if Trump can win so can Corbyn.

he really can't

Trump was always within touching distance of Clinton, within a margin for error

Despite the best efforts of the Tory party to look like a bunch of clueless, incompetent buffoons, while handling the most important issue in this countries recent history, Corbyn trails them in all the [url= http://www.ukpolitical.info/General_election_polls.htm ]polls by double digit percentages[/url]. And somewhat unbelievably his ratings are getting progressively worse!

Latest polls have Labour 16 points behind the Tory's. That would be electoral armageddon if there were an election tomorrow

By anyones standards that is one hell of an achievement!


 
Posted : 11/11/2016 10:32 am
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They're both anti-trade deals, they're both lukewarm on NATO, they've bothr successfully pitched themselves as anti-establishment outsiders. They're part of the same wave of anti-liberal consensus backlash. Trump's pretty much proved what Corbyn supporters have said - poll tell us nothing

And a sixth point: alongside the brexit vote they both make me question my grip on reality. I mean **** it, I've been wrong about everything else, maybe the useless old poser can get elected?


 
Posted : 11/11/2016 10:55 am
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Corbyn and Labour trail the Tories by miles and the Tory party haven't even been attacking him/them. The Tories are very happy with what Corbyn is doing and they are letting him get on with it. Just imagine the carnage of an election campaign.

Corbyn is nothing like Trump. Trump isn't anti-NATO (or pro nuckear diasrmament) he wants the other members to spend more money on defence and/or compensate the US directly. Corbyn offically campaigned Remain, you won't catch Trump doing the EU any favours nor Mexico.

The anti-establishment vote in UK has been for Brexit and NOT for more EU and the Marxism espoused by Corbyn and McDonald.


 
Posted : 11/11/2016 11:09 am
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Its just been on Five Live that Jezza is going to make a speech this afternoon. He might possibly have remembered he's actually meant to be the leader of the opposition? Who knows?

Anyway.... the subject of the Speech? Comparing Donald Trump to the Tories.

Dear god! If ever you needed any evidence that the bloke is still mired in the left/right politics of the 70's/80's then this is it. FFS! He's ****ing clueless. This demonstrates, along with his muddled, ambivalent attitude to the Brexit vote, that he clearly has not the slightest comprehension about the forces at work, and the new dangerous populist politics that are so rapidly taking shape.

The MP's he's trying to get de-selected are the northern ones who are starting belatedly to get a handle on why their former voters have now moved, en masse, to UKIP. Why they're angry. And why they feel the labour party doesn't even understand, let alone care about their concerns. He wants to replace them with liberal, lefty, Islington-friendly versions of himself.

If he succeeds in doing this, then he may achieve what no Labour leader has managed, and lose absolutely rock-solid northern, Labour seats to the Tories or UKIP


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 11:43 am
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Yes heard about this. What JC needs to understand is that "these people" have been voting UKIP in Labour constituencies, that was the warning to Labour and they ignored it. Deselecting moderate Labour MPs will move the party in the opposite direction to these voters wishes. He is right to identify the issue what he has failed to grasp is the solution they seek is not the one he has been supporting.


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 12:11 pm
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people will have learned from the mistake of choosing Clinton over Sanders and ending up with Trump

Corbyn's never been in a stronger position..

Sorry breadheads and fascists and the fearful and forlorn and other foolish types, but as I've said before.. your beloved mafia's grip on society is crumbling.. The oldboy networks and their obnoxious and condescending schemes are no longer enough to fool the children of the revolution


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 12:20 pm
 dazh
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The MP's he's trying to get de-selected are the northern ones who are starting belatedly to get a handle on why their former voters have now moved, en masse, to UKIP.

Are they? From where I'm standing all they're offering is more of the same 'party of aspiration' rubbish with a bit of added anti-immigrant nonsense. That's if they can bring themselves to actually talk about policies, rather than harping on about trots and marxists who don't exist.


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 12:22 pm
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the solution they seek

what is the solution they seek?


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 12:24 pm
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Morning Yunki.

Saunders would have fared worse, Democrats knew that which is why Clinton was their overwhelming choice as deeply flawed as she was.

Corbyn is certainly in a strong position within Labour, his and Momentum's Stalinist purge is alive and well. Our point is the stronger he is the weaker Labour will be electorally by 2020. As and when the Tories turn their attention to Labour in terms of a general election it's going to be carnage for them.

added anti-immigrant nonsense

You are right in saying that's not enough to win them back. What Diane Abbot et all showed is ignoring the issue cost a lot of votes


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 12:28 pm
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naaaaaaaah

you wish that were true as it would make reality more palatable for you..

but it ain't


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 12:29 pm
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You are right in saying that's not enough to win them back

So how do you win back people who believe immigration is an issue and the answer is to stop it if you know that immigration is not an issue and it would be silly to stop it - do you just lie about it?


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 12:43 pm
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Kerly the issue is (was) uncontrolled immigration in UK (vs illegal immigration is the US) with a better argument and evidence as to why it's not bad for those people. Pointing to national GDP is not a good answer for someone with a poor job and undermined wages. All Labour have done is blame the Tories and skated over the fact that we had a Labour government from 1997-2010 who introduced the minimum wage and what did they do for these voters who have now turned to UKIP ?

Mefty posted this in the EU thread but it's just as relevant here. IMHO it's well worth the time to read

http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/uk/2016/11/closing-liberal-mind


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 1:00 pm
 dazh
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So how do you win back people who believe immigration is an issue and the answer is to stop it if you know that immigration is not an issue and it would be silly to stop it - do you just lie about it?

You don't need to lie. The thing with immigration is that most people who are against it are not racists. They don't take much convincing that it's not an issue if done in the right way. You do however have to address the other reasons for their discontent, which is an economic system which is rigged against them in favour of the rich and the corporate establishment. To date the labour party has not been doing this (it's starting to though), which leaves a vacuum which allows UKIP and the tories to blame immigrants.


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 1:04 pm
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Kerly the issue is (was) uncontrolled immigration in UK

I am talking about real issues not made up ones. So how do you convince them, and you, that immigration is not the issue for their problems? What can be said to you/them that they will believe and understand.

What if they/you don't want to believe it and would rather comfort yourselves that it is the immigrants fault whatever anyone says?


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 1:06 pm
 dazh
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Actually the easiest way to show people that immigrants are not the devils portrayed by UKIP et al is to get them talking to each other. Do that an people quickly realise that they are no different to themselves.


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 1:08 pm
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Actually the easiest way to show people that immigrants are not the devils portrayed by UKIP et al is to get them talking to each other. Do that an people quickly realise that they are no different to themselves.

To us wealthy types immigrants are an opportunity to make more money and spend less of it. At the other end of the scale immigrants are competition.

Now try to convince people concerned about immigration that it's not a problem. Race is a complete red herring. A bit obvious when the immigrants they want to control are predominantly white and culturally christian.


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 1:13 pm
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Seriously @jambayla..you really do peddle lies and use emotive language for your own ideology...."Uncontrolled immigration in UK" (a complete lie)...FFS stop using language that stirs up hatred and racism...you should be ashamed of yourself.


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 1:15 pm
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A general election ?

Onwards to [s]hiding behind a glass door[/s] victory comrades!


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 1:35 pm
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Onwards to [s]hiding behind a glass door[/s] victory comrades!

Only difference I see between him and the present/last leader of the blue team is that he doesn't have a brace of suited heavies with earpieces to get rid of the journalist and a blacked-out Rangie at hand to escape in.
These days you can't expect much when you [s]ambush[/s]put any politician on the spot, I wouldn't expect any different from May, nether would I judge her for refusing to comment and not launching into some carefully scripted response as she would if interviewed on telly.


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 2:19 pm
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I remeber when that guy - COOK was it - who used to ambush folk in restaurants and at home about things had it done to him on an evening out with his wife- he went absolutely mental

As they said no questions, the reporter was pushy they repeated their point and its all Corbyns fault

Momentum's Stalinist purge is alive and well
Jambyland is truly delusional

Do you actually know what the word purge means in that context?- it generally referred to as the great terror now FWIW and over 1 million people lost their lifes- really this is waht he is doing

FFS has anyone even been expelled from the party for opposing him never mind killed? get a grip you make the DM look rational, liberal and sensible.

Its like me accusing israel of a holocaust in terms of offensive though of course its a lot less true than that claim.


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 2:40 pm
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Actually the easiest way to show people that immigrants are not the devils portrayed by UKIP et al is to get them talking to each other. Do that an people quickly realise that they are no different to themselves.

Ah, you mean by delibaretly encouraging mass immigration in order to rub the rights nose in diversity and render their arguments out of date?

Another Labour Party policy[url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150423154939/http://www.standard.co.uk/news/dont-listen-to-the-whingers--london-needs-immigrants-6786170.html ]*[/url] that worked out well, eh?


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 3:09 pm
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@eden that's the approach that lost the referendum and made polls misleading as people just keep their views to themselves and express them at the ballot box. When someone expresses a genuine and legitimate concern and they are called a racist etc from being intimidated they say FU and don't come back. We have firm data from Germany, €750m a year in unemployment benefits to non-German EU citizens. That's why Germany is passing a law which says no benefits for 5 years.


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 4:53 pm
 dazh
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Another Labour Party policy* that worked out well, eh?

WTF are you talking about? Funny how in places where there are lots of immigrants, it's generally not seen as a problem, yet in places where people are mostly white, for some reason everyone's very concerned about it. I wonder why that is?


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 7:36 pm
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racism is about fear not facts and no one does an absence of facts [ or immigrant based fear] to the levels of he.


 
Posted : 12/11/2016 7:51 pm
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Sam Harris on Trump and "The Left" in the US. Lessons for Labour here IMHO. Junky you really should take this onboard and work out way of confronting it. Your and many others Plan A is not working.


 
Posted : 13/11/2016 2:48 pm
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Nature of the Beast, or Dennis Skinner the Movie 🙂

They are looking for funding to get it finished

http://dennisskinnerfilm.co.uk


 
Posted : 13/11/2016 10:49 pm
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I'm surprised nobody picked up on the video of John McDonnell talking in 2012 that surfaced earlier this week. One bit that really hit me was this:

"someone written a slogan on a wall"

Whose wall? A wall of a private individual or company? A wall of a public building? Who is he suggesting should pay to clear it up? Does he think there should be increased state funded wall cleaning for increased vandalism or does he think that random individuals and businesses should clear it up? He really needs to provide a lot more detail.

Also he said that the establishment would be retaliating by locking people up and the imprisoned people should be supported. Does he really think that the Judiciary exists to get revenge? Isn't it equally (more) likely that people in prison have broken the law? If he thinks the judiciary is currently so utterly corrupt, why isn't he saying so more clearly?

If he gets in to power will he expect the judiciary to behave as some kind of revenge squad for people *he* doesn't like? Or will they stop doing it if he's in power.


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 11:18 am
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When someone expresses a fake and illlegitimate concern and they are called a racist etc

order is restored - anecdotes aside, the concerns were neither genuine not legitimate, hence the only conclusion is that they are driven at the very leasr by xenophobia and perhaps beyond that racism. There is not other logical answer to people ignoring the facts.


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 11:31 am
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"the concerns were neither genuine not legitimate,"

Remind me how well that line of argument worked for the Remain campaign?

You have to make the case. You have to go to the village dwarfed by a 5000 house new development in what used to be fields and explain to them that growth is good because their area is now 30 times richer than when it was fields.

...and if you can't you might have to accept that growth isn't good for everyone.

Let's take Antarctica. Economically 300,000,000 people moving there would be terrific. Would you support that? Why not? Are you racist?

It's a completely false dichotomy that you have to be either in favour of economic growth or racist. There's a good case for remaining in the EU as it is. If remainers had simply made the case instead of ducking the whole thing and needlessly peddling logical fallacy after logical fallacy then the required 2pc might well have voted the other way and this **** would never have happened.


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 11:55 am
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That's quite some deviation from the topic at hand/what I said?

The concerns about [b]immigration [/b]is what I am talking about - all of which were easily falsified.

Yes, it worked out badly for Remain - people prefer false solutions and lies. Have you missed what is currently going on in the world?


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:03 pm
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I've noticed that you make a lot of claims for this and that in several different threads from time to time, thm, but you never back them up with any evidence.

Why is this?


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:06 pm
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It's not a deviation.


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:09 pm
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Feel free to pick me up on them Woppit, because that is untrue. I have posted the facts with links on this issue multiple times - just bored with the xenophobes who dont want to/cant face the truth

Try the Nasty Tories thread today and the ONS labour market stats....


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:09 pm
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It is - you have created a different debate about growth and "argued" against that. I didn't even mention the word - ergo, a deviation

anyway whats this got to do with old Jezza? His twitter account is more focused on blocking abusive tweets


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:10 pm
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It is - you have created a different debate about growth and "argued" against that. I didn't even mention the word - ergo, a deviation

Your argument was that because positive net immigration brought growth the only reason to oppose it was racism.

The concerns about immigration is what I am talking about - all of which were easily falsified.

Go on then. I'll provide one immigration concern and you debunk it for me. Immigration concern: Positive net immigration increases population.


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:21 pm
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Your argument was that because positive net immigration brought growth the only reason to oppose it was racism.

No it wasnt - so I see why you are confused


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:28 pm
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Immigration. We are in tough times and have been since 2008. More and more people is making the situation worse not better. I think a big part of the Leave vote recognised that whilst controlling/reducing immigration may not make things better it would stop them getting worse. Immigration was perhaps 1/3rd of the Referendum issue.

@outofbreath - No one is really paying attention to Labour, I watch and read a lot of news and tbh when McDonnell comes on I just get up and do something else. He is irrelevant. Corbyn is a bit better but also largely a side show


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:31 pm
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Have we done The Sun making up lies yet again?

[img] [/img]

[i]“I’ve seen a bit of action and that annoys me when somebody tries to make fun of something like this, I take it very seriously I lost good friends and good colleagues in the war and like me Jeremy Corbyn takes it very seriously.

“It’s absolute nonsense. I was with him all the time and I never saw nothing like that at all. If they try to blacken his name at least do it legitimately don’t make farce of something like that. I think it’s pretty awful.

“I was with Jeremy when he lay the wreath and I was his companion at the Cenotaph so I know everything he’s done today because I was there.”[/i]

-George Durack, 92, veteran of WW2.


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:31 pm
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Immigration. We are in tough times and have been since 2008. More and more people* is making the situation worse not better.

That is a lie - pure and simple (*assuming that this is linked directly to immigration)


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:34 pm
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"the concerns were neither genuine not legitimate, hence the only conclusion is that they are driven at the very leasr by xenophobia and perhaps beyond that racism"

Hmmm


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:34 pm
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Did you spot the word growth? Was it next to the picture of wally?


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:37 pm
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"Immigration was perhaps 1/3rd of the Referendum issue."

0pc in my area, IMHO.

Nobody wants any more people, but nobody thinks leaving the EU will make any odds. Most people in my area think the UK is addicted to using population growth to create economic growth, it's a pyramid scheme no government wants to stop.


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:39 pm
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Most people in my area...

Are so this is where it came from? Quite different.

Nobody wants any more people,

Actually, I do. To offset our poor demographic trends and ageing population.


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:42 pm
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teamhurtmore - Member
Feel free to pick me up on them Woppit

OK. This one and, er, the other one. Both of them this morning...


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:42 pm
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are you going to be precise woppit?

actually dont bother...


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:44 pm
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@clodhopper: We need to sort the press/media out. I have no idea how.


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:46 pm
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"Actually, I do. To offset our poor demographic trends and ageing population."

That's a very different argument to saying there are no non-racist concerns about immigration.


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:48 pm
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"Nobody wants any more people,"

Actually I do too. So forget about speaking for others.

Largely because I don't want to live on an island full of jingoistic, xenophobic, insular ****s. The more 'foreigners', the better chance of social progression. I'm sure THM can find some statistics to back up the argument that migration to and from an area is economically beneficial. 😉

Meanwhile, I'll continue to enjoy all the benefits of a wonderfully diverse society, rich with the effects of migration. As I read stuff using the Latin alphabet, work out sums using Arab numerals, in the decimal system, in a city where the sheer number of migrants makes it such an enjoyable place to live.

I might have a Lamaçun for lunch...


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:50 pm
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teamhurtmore - Member
are you going to be precise woppit?

Do your own research. 😆


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:51 pm
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That's a very different argument to saying there are no non-racist concerns about immigration*.

Correct. Keep it up.

[*but again that's not what I said either]

I'm sure THM can find some statistics to back up the argument that migration to and from an area is economically beneficial.

Correct x 2


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:56 pm
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I might have a Lamaçun for lunch...

That better be good, British Lamaçun rather than foreign muck


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 12:59 pm
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"the concerns were neither genuine not legitimate, hence the only conclusion is that they are driven at the very leasr by xenophobia and perhaps beyond that racism"
Hmmm


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 1:06 pm
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"That better be good, British Lamaçun rather than foreign muck"

😆

"Correct x 2"

So come on then!


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 1:08 pm
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keep going, it will get clearer...

clue: start with what were the two key concerns...


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 1:09 pm
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The "dancing" thing is pretty incredible tbh. Did you see how the Sun responded? "Jeremy Corbyn forced to deny he was dancing". Their headline about being caught out lying - and lying about Remembrance Day- was still an attack on Corbyn. This is just how it works now. I don't know what an appropriate and proportionate response is- firebombing possibly.

(the person who first came up with "forced to deny" is an evil genius tbh)


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 1:16 pm
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Dont buy the Sun - its crap - probably the best response


 
Posted : 16/11/2016 1:17 pm
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