Home Forums Chat Forum Farage comes to Scotland and gets a lock-in!

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  • Farage comes to Scotland and gets a lock-in!
  • Northwind
    Full Member

    konabunny – Member

    He added: “The anger, the hatred, the shouting, the snarling, the swearing was all linked in to a desire for the Union Jack to be burnt.”

    Suppose it’s distantly possible he believes it, too. Does he think that’s why the same thing happened to Iain Gray? All the evidence points to it being a cross-party, multi-national, anti-bawbag thing.

    His appeal is to people for whom the tory party aren’t big enough ****s. But we’ve all but wiped out the tories up here because they’re ****s, not because they’re not **** enough. So coming up here and being a double-**** to try and win over the tiny **** vote was never a great plan. But then that’s ****s for you.

    cranberry – Member

    Racists accuse someone of being racist.

    Where does the allegation that they’re racists come from? He’s not being barracked purely for being english (unless you have evidence that the mob then went on to do the same to random passing english people?)

    binners
    Full Member

    Northwind – May I just commend you on how beautifully you worded that! 😀

    StefMcDef
    Free Member
    duckman
    Full Member

    God, Farage v Eck? Eck would be like a cat torturing a bird. We can’t be complacent as we increasingly have a nasty element up here. The Scottish defence league have been raising their profile of late.And he must have thought it was worth his while or he wouldn’t be contesting seat(s) But an uber-Tory coming up here is never going to go well, even in Edinburgh. Maybe St Andrews next time?

    richmtb
    Full Member

    Well put NW

    The BNP got similar treatment last time they ventured north of the border.

    They had the idea they might pick up votes from some of the scummier Glasgow constituencies and areas where relatively large amounts of asylum seekers has settled.

    The locals only just stopped short of lynching them. Everytime they stood in the street in front of a microphone they were drowned out by jeers including one memorable moment, on Saracen Street of all places, when a passing cyclist stop in the street and started shouting “The BNP are Nazi’s. Don’t vote for the Nazi’s!!”

    retro83
    Free Member

    Bruce
    Full Member

    Is that a statue of Rab C Nesbit?

    bencooper
    Free Member

    What’s sad is that the English used to be strongly against his sort of rubbish too – read up on the Battle of Cable Street. Now Farrage is no Moseley, but where’s the popular protests against his views?

    konabunny
    Free Member

    What’s sad is that the English used to be strongly against his sort of rubbish too – read up on the Battle of Cable Street.

    They used to be for this sort of rubbish too hence the Battle of Cable Street!

    T1000
    Free Member

    [What’s sad is that the English used to be strongly against his sort of rubbish too – read up on the Battle of Cable Street. Now Farrage is no Moseley, but where’s the popular protests against his views?]

    no need to worry….. most folks are smart enough to realise UKIP’s success is a flash in the pan.. … folks need somewhere to register their protest and the usual crowd the for that the LibDems are in the coalition

    Northwind
    Full Member

    Retro83, is that not that one fat elf out of Lord of the Rings?

    slowoldgit
    Free Member

    Why is that statue in front of a pissoire?

    ononeorange
    Full Member

    EDIT. I thought twice.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    farage really is an idiot

    Can you imagine what he would do if in a EU referendum that one of the EU beurocrats – say form Belgium- came to Blighty to campaign for the Union – what would he or his supporters do?

    I also cannot imagine what goes on in his tiny mind that he leaves his country to campaign as a foreigner for a union only to return home to moan about a union as foreigners tell us what to do. What sort if rational is going on here?
    I also cannot believe that he thinks he can help the campaign tbh
    If i was the yes campaign I would hire him a bus and some adverts tbh

    athgray
    Free Member

    JY. Are you saying that political intolerance is acceptable?
    He would be a good advert for the No Campaign if he was attacked in an aggressive manner all the time. If the Yes Campaign are successful I hope political discussion in Scotland is not carried out with claw hammer in one hand and a megaphone in the other.

    bencooper
    Free Member

    If the Yes Campaign are successful I hope political discussion in Scotland is not carried out with claw hammer in one hand and a megaphone in the other.

    The way it is now? The Scottish parliament is much more democratic than Westminster – the whole reason Farrage gets any votes (on a tiny turnout) is that most people know Westminster is a total waste of time.

    athgray
    Free Member

    We will still have a successful parliament with a no vote.

    The thing I can’t get over is is Farage was not welcome why did the crowd make it so difficult for him to leave? If they were keen to see him off to his own “country” I don’t think surrounding taxi’s twice was the best course of action.

    I notice from BBC news interview with Salmond that he agrees with me by saying Farage should not be in Aberdeen because he doesn’t know what a Loon and Quine are! You have to love our dear leader. Priceless.

    ohnohesback
    Free Member

    At least the scots had the cahones to have a go. Cameron and Clegg seem to travel unmolested in england.

    piemonster
    Free Member

    Northwind, Ive just added you to my Christmas Card list

    konabunny
    Free Member

    All of this “you can’t say anything about Aberdeen of you don’t know what a bawbag is just goes to prove how parochial and small time Aberdeen and the people making the comments are.

    JY. Are you saying that political intolerance is acceptable?

    Political intolerance lol

    chewkw
    Free Member

    Demoncracy! Demoncracry!

    😆

    Nipper99
    Free Member

    I used to quite like Meerkats.

    bainbrge
    Full Member

    I also cannot imagine what goes on in his tiny mind that he leaves his country to campaign as a foreigner

    Thanks mate! I hope all you Scots are as welcoming to us ‘foreigners’ who speak (roughly) the same language, were born a couple of hundred miles south of a non existent border, who probably share 99.9999999% of your genetic makeup, who participate in basically the same legislative structure, and have a shared history going back to time immemorial.

    Farage is a tool, but he’s got every right to campaign within your ‘foreign country’.

    EDIT: just realised maybe you ain’t scottish… 😳

    gordimhor
    Full Member

    A man went to a pub, talked a lot of drivel. Some other people shouted at him. Police took 3 people away. The man didn’t want to talk about it the next day.
    Bainbrge come on up every body is welcome.:-)

    athgray
    Free Member

    Bainbrge , you can only come in if you know the meaning of glaikit.
    Don’t dare make any comment on politics if you don’t know the meaning of loon.
    These are the words of our Dear Leader

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    And it turns out that one of the two anti-English, rabid Scotsmen arrested by the police during these events is actually….

    English 🙂

    Northwind
    Full Member

    Har. Cheers for that!

    proteus
    Free Member

    As a Scot who has spent a significant part of his time down south, I’ve received a lot of anti-Acottish comment. Most of it I’d class as “banter”, but a fair proportion not so much…

    Anyhoo, quite glad Farage has been exposed for what he is. Nasty, nasty politics disguised (for some) behind a gormless grim.

    Scotland has more pandas that Conservative MPs and long may it continue…

    collinstiffee
    Free Member

    just to clarify for a few, some of us want independence not because we “hate” anyone not from Scotland, but because we simply want to be in charge of our own affairs. As a trait we seem to tend towards a more socialist point of view, but it’s hardly a done deal. Everyone is most welcome and should independence happen, regardless of what happens with currency, the EU or the military, everyone will be as welcome as previously. We haven’t just been polite because of the union, it’s how we are. like anywhere else, there are assholes here too and if you have had to deal with them, my apologies. In regard to Mr (F)Garage, he can come more often, he does a lot for the campaign for Scottish Independence.

    bencooper
    Free Member

    As a Scot who has spent a significant part of his time down south, I’ve received a lot of anti-Acottish comment. Most of it I’d class as “banter”, but a fair proportion not so much…

    Exactly. Just look what happens in pretty much any online discussion around Scottish Independence (or pretty much anything Scottish) – there a McGodwin’s Law where the conversation inevitably gets around to the usual stereotypes (bad weather, deep fried mars bars etc).

    gordimhor
    Full Member

    What cs said is the truth

    Northwind
    Full Member

    collinstiffee – Member

    just to clarify for a few, some of us want independence not because we “hate” anyone not from Scotland, but because we simply want to be in charge of our own affairs.

    I’d hope it’s most tbh. I know a lot of people want to think it’s just “little scotland” or anti-englishness but the bottom line we’re stuck with a massively unpopular UK government which we rejected utterly at the general election. 1 MP out of 59, and not for the first time. I think it’s perfectly rational to say enough is enough, hardly needs to be a matter of smallmindedness or racism or insularness.

    konabunny
    Free Member

    McGodwin’s Law – nice!

    convert
    Full Member

    we’re stuck with a massively unpopular UK government which we rejected utterly at the general election. 1 MP out of 59, and not for the first time.

    It’s splitting hairs – buts it’s 12 out of 59. This is a coalition government with 1 Conservative and 11 Liberal Democrat MPs representing Scotland in it.

    tiggs121
    Free Member

    Aye – 11 wanabees – there will be fewer next time!

    oldnpastit
    Full Member

    we’re stuck with a massively unpopular UK government which we rejected utterly at the general election. 1 MP out of 59, and not for the first time.

    But it was 39 out of 59 in 2005..

    And both the prime ministers (although the first one was only born in Scotland). Was that not good enough?

    convert
    Full Member

    But it was 39 out of 59 in 2005..

    And both the prime ministers (although the first one was only born in Scotland). Was that not good enough?

    Very true – in 2005 the shires and home counties (smaller land mass, similar populous) had a tiny representation in the labour government of the time. Did that give them a right to demand independent governance? Swings and roundabouts innit.

    gordimhor
    Full Member

    The first point is that any group of people have a right to campaign democratically for independence if they wish to. Those mps were elected by their constituents to represent their constituency on matters reserved to Westminster. The Scottish people voted for an SNP government twice since 2005 it was well known to all that the SNP were in favour of independence so it seems logical that we are now having this referendum.

    convert
    Full Member

    The Scottish people voted for an SNP government twice since 2005 it was well known to all that the SNP were in favour of independence so it seems logical that we are now having this referendum.

    Despite my points above, that seems to make perfect sense to me. I might not favour an independent Scotland, but the nation has spoken about its desire to at least have their opinion sought. If the electorate will go into this referendum fully informed of the pros and cons and capable of making a sophisticated decision about what will be a massive and lasting change (for better or worse) remains to be seen.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    It’s splitting hairs – buts it’s 12 out of 59. This is a coalition government with 1 Conservative and 11 Liberal Democrat MPs representing Scotland in it.

    Liberal Democrat policy on quite a few issues was significantly different to Tory policy before the last general election. The 11 Liberal Democrat MPs representing Scotland were not elected to support Tory government policy, something which Scotland has comprehensively rejected for 35 years.

    Only one person who honestly stood as a Tory in Scotland at the last general election won a seat. You have to be particularly dishonest to deny that Scotland has a long history of opposing Tory policies.

Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 117 total)

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