Home › Forums › Chat Forum › Forum House of Commons vote on air strikes in Syria – which way will you vote?
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Forum House of Commons vote on air strikes in Syria – which way will you vote?
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jivehoneyjiveFree Member
As well as the direct cost, the avoided cost of injured servicemen and associated compensation and rehabilitation probably make air strikes quite cheap in comparison.
Isn’t that what charities funded by the general population such as Help for Heroes and Royal British Legion are for?
How well does the state support people injured in the course of duty?
Are there any contributions from the arms industry in support of those killed and injured?
nickcFull MemberHave you a link Jamby? can’t find it anywhere apart from a mention in an article about Hollande?
Besides, the Germans have never sent troops abroad on offensive missions since the end of WW2, I can’t imagine for a minute that the country taking more Syrian refugees than most European countries will join in in any attacking capability.
nickcFull Member£300k is about how much it costs to run the NHS for about 4 seconds. A proverbial drop in the ocean.
Ever needed to get to an NHS dentist but couldn’t find one? to run a 365day urgent care dentist cost £630,000 a year, (when I used to run them) so about the cost of a sorties worth of weapons (tornadoes fly in pairs)
jimjamFree Membernickc
Ever needed to get to an NHS dentist but couldn’t find one? to run a 365day urgent care dentist cost £630,000 a year, (when I used to run them) so about the cost of a sorties worth of weapons (tornadoes fly in pairs)
That’s just the cost of the ordinance though. I’ve seen figures bandied about in the news that it costs approx £1million per plane, per sortie.
Then again, if the fighter jets and the pilots and the weapons and the fuel just happen to be there they might as well go blow shit up. Otherwise they’ll just gather dust and get rusty. Do bombs have a best before date?
bailsFull Membereven weapons and ammo have a finite shelf life, so ultimately stocks have to be rotated and if not used would have to be disposed of in training or safe decommissioning or disposal, which costs a fortune.
We should spend money dropping bombs on Syrians because otherwise we might have to spend some money NOT dropping bombs on Syrians.
Killing people because it avoids us having to do stock rotation FFS…
I suppose the £300K cost of the missiles needs to be balanced alongside the potential costs of achieving the same result through ground based forces.
I just wrote “Down with ISIS” on a Post-it note. That achieved roughly as much as a few more airstrikes will, and it cost much less than £300k.
nickcFull Memberit costs approx £1million per plane, per sortie.
yes, heard that as well, seems to be the accepted going rate…There have been approx 5000 USAF missions so far…
Ain’t austerity a bitch…
wobbliscottFree MemberI didn’t realise Dentists were so cheap – not even 3/4 of a million pounds for a 24/7 emnergancy dentists service? That barely covers the annual salary of a handful of dentists. OK i’m being pedantic and i’m sure the figure is accurate, but it is a bit of a pet annoyance of mine when the media throws figures around without any context. £300k sounds like alot to the average layman on the street, but in the grand scheme of things it’s not alot at all. Our whole military budget is only a mere 2% of GDP and given security is the number 1 priority of any government, that seems great value to me. The company I work for contributes 2% of the UK’s GDP alone, so one company is effectively funding our whole military budget.
JunkyardFree MemberEU law states they must assist
SOURCE you have said this a number of times and i have never heard this except from you – can you cite a source please?
jimjamFree Memberjivehoneyjive – Member
Money well spent!!
I see 20 jihadi/ISIS sympathizers in those pictures, so clearly the current weapons aren’t effective enough. For £1million quid a pop I’d want all those
peopleterrorists vapourised.jivehoneyjiveFree MemberMaybe we should give binners the red button for Crimbo…
Apparently thermonuclear explosions do wonderful things with desert sand.
Life imitates Art, after all, old chap.
I just hope there’s some work left over for old Fatty Soames to make a pretty penny:
brFree Member£300k sounds like alot to the average layman on the street, but in the grand scheme of things it’s not alot at all.
Average earnings in the UK is circa £28k, with tax/NI at £6k.
So it takes 50,000 of us, a year, to pay enough tax/NI for that £300k…
wobbliscottFree MemberNice one Jive Honey – no idea what photo’s i’m looking at there. Horrendous devastation for sure. Are they the result of RAF bombing? Al Qaeda or ISIL bombing? Assad’s army bombing a local town, earthquake or what? I could post up images of terrorist attacks on the UK or in Paris, not sure what it would prove other than to unhelpfully whip up human emotions. Also with all the ordnance being dropped on Iraq and Syria at the moment (hundreds of bombs every single day) then presumably the overwhelming majority hit their target without any collateral damage. Again, context is everything.
jivehoneyjiveFree MemberAll images from airstrikes on Raqqa, which is the main focus of the proposed vote.
wreckerFree Member> So it takes 50,000 of us, a year, to pay enough tax/NI for that £300k…
Can that dentists serve 50,000 people?
mattjgFree Memberknow what, cancel my posts above, one again I ignored the first rule of Singletrack which is “only use the bike forum”. should know better.
sorry. as you were.
nickcFull MemberCan that dentists serve 50,000 people?
No, I ran 3, they operated 8am-8pm 365 days a year and had about 12,000 unique pts/ practice, that lot costs nearly £2 million a year to run. so you’d need 4 of them to hit that number of patients.
the price of 2 and a bit sorties, but with less destroyed building and orphaned kids, obvs…
epicycloFull Memberjimjam – Member
…Do bombs have a best before date?Depends on which end you’re at…
D0NKFull Memberthen presumably the overwhelming majority hit their target without any collateral damage.
that sounds like a pretty big presumption to me
konabunnyFree Membereven weapons and ammo have a finite shelf life, so ultimately stocks have to be rotated and if not used would have to be disposed of in training or safe decommissioning or disposal, which costs a fortune.
Does the UK military have a lot of projectiles that are coming to the end of their shelf life? There’s been constant war since late 2001 (in practice if not in law).
bigjimFull MemberThis has probably been covered but I’ve not read the entire thread, though I see people are talking about how war makes people very rich
Cheney’s Halliburton made nearly $40billion from the Iraq War
Contractors reap $138bn from Iraq war
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7f435f04-8c05-11e2-b001-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3t15tQSibjivehoneyjiveFree MemberYep… Hence my pic of Nicholas ‘Fatty’ Soames…
Being as we’re on a fresh page, here’s another:
He is chairman of Aegis Defence
In Iraq, Aegis is under contract (worth $293 million over three years) to the United States Department of Defense
In 2011, Aegis was awarded a $497 million contract by the U.S. Department of State for assuming security forces operations at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan
Soames is a long time friend of Prince Charles, and served as his equerry in the early 1970s, which meant he knew about Charles and Camilla’s early trysts.
When Diana first accused the Prince of Wales of adultery with Camilla Parker Bowles, Soames told the BBC that the accusation, and Diana’s fear of being slandered by her husband’s courtiers, stemmed merely from Diana’s mental illness, and “the advanced stages of paranoia
What he knew of Charles’ relationship with Jimmy Savile and Lord Mountbatten at that time (and if he met Justice Goddard, the chair of the inquiry into child abuse when she was married to Camilla’s close friend) has yet to be disclosed.
He is also said to have threatened Diana shortly before her death, likely in relation to her work attempting to ban landmines.Where Nicholas Soames is Aegis Chairman, Aegis chief executive is former Major General Graham Binns, who served in the Prince of Wales’s Own Regiment of Yorkshire
ctkFull MemberYou don’t need to construct a tangled web to see that many of the people that make money out of war also have a say in whether we go to war. Bloody basturds the lot of them!
jambalayaFree Member@br the top 1% pay 27% of the taxes so let’s assume it’s the rich that are paying for all this military stuff.
@nickc a number of references on BBC, FT, Telegraph plus German site dw.com
JY I saw the first comments on this the day after Hollande used the language “at war” by a commentator explaining why he’d used that term very deliberately. There is another blog with a more detailed piece, I’ll recall it from my history later
jambalayaFree MemberBlog posting here link – Is EU are war with IS
They have other pieces which reflect my views, partcocularly the EU incompetence over migration policies
ernie_lynchFree Member@br the top 1% pay 27% of the taxes so let’s assume it’s the rich that are paying for all this military stuff.
Even if those figures were true it very clearly shows that the rich don’t pay “for all this military stuff”.
27% falls well short of 100%
By 73% in fact.
wanmankylungFree Member@br the top 1% pay 27% of the taxes so let’s assume it’s the rich that are paying for all this military stuff.
How much should they be paying though?
jambalayaFree MemberI just quoted that as I assume the 27% covers the £60bn we spend on defence. So assume for the sake of argument the rich pay for defence and everyone else pays for the other stuff.
ernie_lynchFree MemberSo assume for the sake of argument the rich pay for defence and everyone else pays for the other stuff.
So the rich don’t pay for education, health, the environment, policing etc ?
What a disgrace.
EDIT : Btw the claim that 1% pay 27% is meaningless drivel, all you can deduce from that (if it’s true) is that the 1% are incredibly wealthy. Because even if they pay 99% tax on their income what the 1% contribute shouldn’t represent anywhere near 27% of total taxation.
jivehoneyjiveFree MemberYou don’t need to construct a tangled web
I’d far prefer it was simple, but it is indeed a tangled web…
From the Aegis Defence wikipedia page
On 27 October 2005 a number of “trophy” videos showing private military contractors in Baghdad firing upon civilian vehicles with no clear reason discernible from the footage itself sparked two investigations after they were posted on the internet. The videos were linked unofficially to Aegis Defence Services. Both the US Army and Aegis conducted investigations into the video; while the Aegis report is closed for client confidentiality reasons, the US Army enquiry concluded that the contractors involved were operating within the rules for the use of force. More4 News broadcast extracts of the videos in March 2006. The video showed Matthew Elkin (former U.S. Army Ranger and lead security contractor) denouncing the contractors and ordering a cease fire.
On 6 April 2006 More4 News reporter Nima Elbagir identified disaffected former Aegis contractor Rod Stoner as responsible for posting the videos on the website. Aegis would not confirm that its contractors were involved in the incidents shown in the videos, but obtained a High Court injunction to have Stoner’s website closed down.
In the same More4 program, Labour MP Jeremy Corbyn insisted that the Pentagon’s contract with Aegis Defence Services should be suspended until the matter had been properly investigated and fully reported upon.
Also worth bearing in mind it was Nicholas Soames, long time friend of Prince Charles (as was Jimmy Savile) that recently called for Tom Watson to apologise regarding Leon Brittan.
The late Leon Brittan is still under investigation over several allegations of child abuse from multiple victims.
The same investigation is looking into allegations of abuse on military bases, involving high ranking members of the military and intelligence services…
jivehoneyjiveFree MemberBefore I’m accused of straying off topic, here’s a cartoon about similar action in Iraq:
NorthwindFull MemberJunkyard – lazarus
SOURCE you have said this a number of times and i have never heard this except from you – can you cite a source please?
Refers to article 42.7 of Lisbon.
Mutual defence clause (Article 42.7 TEU)
If a Member State is the victim of armed aggression on its territory, the other Member States shall have towards it an obligation of aid and assistance by all the means in their power, in accordance with Article 51 of the United Nations Charter. This shall not prejudice the specific character of the security and defence policy of certain Member States.Commitments and cooperation in this area shall be consistent with commitments under the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, which, for hose States which are members of it, remains the foundation of their collective defence and the forum for its implementation.
A brilliantly terribly worded article that doesn’t really seem to mean anything at all, since there’s no definition of what we’re supposed to aid and assist with. Interpretations seem to vary wildly with hawkish people basically treating it as a blank slate for an attacked state to demand pretty much anything they want. But in the absence of a state of war it’s messy- France isn’t at war with Syria or Iraq.
The main argument of those using it to justify an armed response is that we’re supposed to attack the source of the attacks. Which I’m pretty sure means we have to invade Belgium and France.
Article 222 was actually designed for this job but hasn’t been invoked. Opinion on why seems split; it’s an EU rather than member state response so needs the whole edifice to act rather than individuals, seems to be the main reason cited. But also, it actually sets out expectations of response and they fall short of attacking Syria.
DrJFull Memberjimjam – Member
…Do bombs have a best before date?epicyclo – Depends on which end you’re at…
LOL
Kryton57Full MemberI’d just like to say I haven’t read any of the above.
But in reaction the the news I just heard that states we may be bombing syria by the end of the week, why bring any more trouble to our shores than there already is? Against.
roneFull MemberVictims of terrorism W.Europe and percieved threat with 1970-2015 chart.
http://m.huffpost.com/uk/entry/8670458?ncid=fcbklnkukhpmg00000001
Appears to me terrorism works.
jambalayaFree MemberCosts. Yes of course there will be a substantial cost as there is economically when we suffer from terrorism. Also weapons do have a use by date, I would also imagine replacements could well cost less as the original batches need to cover R&D costs, newer versions may be available which are better.
My guesstimate (Jambabolix 😀 ) for the majority was 75 but BBC is quoting 120. If true a 1 day debate is ample as the vote is very clearly for airstrikes.
[off topic]
@jive Leon Brittain is not under investigation for any child abuse and in reality he NEVER was as the most cursory initial checks of the allegatations showed them to be baseless. Let’s discuss this on the Rotherham thread and the fact the police and justice system are now finally bringing action against the perpetrators of those hideous crimes. None of whom have any link to senior politicians and thus the case is of no interest to you or your “journalist” source as he’s only interested in institutional / establishment stories. There quite simply never was a “Westminster peopophile ring”, it may well be individuals where involved illegal behaviour but there was not any kind of ring or indeed any cover up.
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