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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jambalayaFree Member
Interesting piece of what we bring to the operation against Daesh
What Britain brings: A little bombing, a lot of surveillance
mattjgFree Memberoh – judging from some of the comments here I thought it was more like: http://www.raf.mod.uk/history/bombercommandthethousandbomberraids3031may.cfm
konabunnyFree MemberLucy Allan MP of the fake death threats email discussed above: http://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/tories-rocked-by-new-bullying-storm-as-mp-lucy-allan-accused-of-vicious-abuse-of-sick-staff-member-a3139526.html
v8ninetyFull MemberSo apparently rumours are rife that Hilary Benn is to be sacked following his speech imploring labour MPs to vote for air strikes. Suits me, I thought it was a cynical and manipulative attempt to unseat Corbyn, and that putting petty party politics before matters of national importance and life and death was a pretty immoral move.
ninfanFree MemberSo it wasn’t a free vote then?
You can’t accuse Benn of playing party politics after Corbyn made it a free vote – There seems to be little point in announcing a free vote then effectively whipping it ex post-facto because it revealed Corbyns own weak grip on the leadership.
(Though at the same time, I hope he does sack him, as it will divide the party into two camps for the duration)
outofbreathFree MemberYup, looks like Benn will be taking a few years out of front line politics:
Corbyn has little choice, whatever anyone claims, the leader has to have a front bench he agrees with on big issues.
Tories will have similar problems albeit over one issue – Europe.
yunkiFree MemberWhat is it that you’ve got against the left again ninfan?
You seem like a pretty clued up guy so I’m guessing you have some rock solid reasons for your right wing stance..Or is it just that the tories are your ‘team’ and you’ll blindly defend them to the end?
ninfanFree Member@Yunki – A complete opposition to the unnecessary growth of state intervention in private life and its associated suppression of freedom, which IMO should absolutely be of the minimum possible level to maintain (the social construct which we call) society, and a belief that freedom and choice is always better than diktat. IMO this disagreement applies as much to the ‘patrician’ side of the Conservative party (which I don’t believe is right wing, certainly not in a libertarian sense) as the Labour party,
On balance I strongly, strongly believe that history tells us that through their commitment to collectivism ‘the political left’ are worse for this, and point to what happened under Blair (e.g. 90 days detention without trial, increasing restrictions on freedom of speech etc.) as being prime examples of creeping restrictions on personal freedom under the justification of ‘the benefit of wider society’ . This also defines how state intervention on a personal scale (eg. the state deciding that you cannot smoke dope or take E, in the face of clear scientific evidence of minimal personal harm, let alone wider harm – an argument that subsequently extends in a similar way to the effects of smoking cigarettes, and whether restrictions on smoking in pubs should be a matter of choice by landlord and customer, relying on free-market principles, rather than the state) can only lead us down one path, and ultimately leads to the moral justification of state intervention on a wider scale (bombing and invading countries to overthrow their leader).
edenvalleyboyFree MemberBenn’s speech was appaling and he should be sacked for that alone. He conveniently missed out the most recent army inventions (Iraq etc) which are the most similar to Syria and spoke about Hitler etc which has far less similarity to the Syrian stuff…Shocking display of bullshit baffling brains….
piemonsterFree MemberYunki – A complete opposition to the unnecessary growth of state intervention in private life and its associated suppression of freedom, which IMO should absolutely be of the minimum possible level to maintain (the social construct which we call) society, and a belief that freedom and choice is always better than diktat. IMO this disagreement applies as much to the ‘patrician’ side of the Conservative party (which I don’t believe is ri
You don’t set people free by chaining them to the state.
Shame no political party of any colour, in any parliement, seems to want to do anything other than keep the poor poor and/or dependent on the state.
JunkyardFree MemberYou can’t accuse Benn of playing party politics after Corbyn made it a free vote – There seems to be little point in announcing a free vote then effectively whipping it ex post-facto because it revealed Corbyns own weak grip on the leadership.
Are you suggesting Corbyn is the only leader in politics to remove those who disagree with him from key positions?
Its hardly a novel approach from a leader in any position is it?
As for your sensible post i think the freedom from state intervention in personal/private matters is more libertarian v authoritarian and splits the typical political divide and I am a very libertarian person. dave davies and Benn [ tony] agreed on much about personal freedom for example.
Where the left right matters is in whether you thing the state should intervene to help people and whether this approach can work.There are merits to each approach, Its true if the state intervened to the extent it gave us all 1 k a lot fewer of us would work However everyone, at many points, needs the help that can only come from state intervention be it healthcare, education, enough coppers etc
IMHO the state should help all citizens you probably think we should help ourselves and the state should leave us alone.
You only need to look at history to see how the lot of the average person was before massive state intervention and machinery. The state is the natural response to “freedom”. Its really only worth debating how much state.
BazzFull MemberIt’s all starting to look a little pointless to me this argument, apparently since the vote the RAF have carried out just 4 air strikes in Syria. I can’t see us needing those “70,000” any time soon at this rate.
jambalayaFree MemberBenn’s speech was an oitstanding display putting accross his firmly heald belief that airstrikes where the correct way forward. It had absolutely nothing to do with political posturing and trying to unseat Corbyn. Corbyn is a protest politician voting against his own party over 500 times. Now the boot is on the other foot he doesn’t like it one bit. His comrade Diane Abbott showed us what their version of democracy looks like when she refused to allow a Syrian to speak in favour of air strikes at a Stop The War meeting she chaired at Westminster. The reshuffle is a desperate act, its seems increasingly unlikely he won’t make it to the Scottish elections in May (my original belief), the SNP are going to up the temperature and Corbyn will be spending most of his time trying to combat their critisms.
Daesh is being pushed back increasingly quickly as airstrikes in Iraq and Syria really start to bite, it is the Russians, Americans and French who are doing the most. Our support is there if required and the fact we are not being called upon to deploy our weaponry is a signal that Daesh have gone to ground, without the ability to move freely they cannot respond to attacks on their positions and are unable to mount any effective attacks of their own.
DrJFull MemberBenn’s speech was an oitstanding display putting accross his firmly heald belief that airstrikes where the correct way forward.
Pffft!! Just 2 weeks before he had a firmly held belief that bombing was NOT the way forward!!
BazzFull Memberare unable to mount any effective attacks of their own.
Except the counter attacks in Ramadi and the attack last night on an Iraqi military camp near Tikrit that is.
I think that the truth is more that in an effort to avoid civilian casualties (a good thing imo) air strikes are proving to of limited benefit as IS are hiding amongst the population.
Now don’t get me wrong, IS are no longer sweeping across Syria and Iraq as once they were, but apart from pushing them away from Kurdish territory (mostly the Kurds efforts there) and the liberation of Ramadi (though not out of woods there I fear) all we seem to be doing is containing them, this is not what Cameron claimed plan (if you can call it that) was supposed to do.
NorthwindFull Memberjambalaya – Member
Benn’s speech was an oitstanding display putting accross his firmly heald belief
Good one.
chewkwFree MemberI really cannot see anything leadership quality in Diane Abbott and why people see her as leader I don’t know. I think they voted for the party rather than the person but get her instead …
This woman is a joke but given her the power she will play jokes on the people …
JC(not Jesus Christ) is just a typical character that is so determined to get his way he would side those that support him. Very sneaky character … ya, I see you coming … 😆
DrJFull MemberI really cannot see anything leadership quality in Diane Abbott and why people see her as leader I don’t know
Which people?
JunkyardFree MemberSo you still hate Corbyn and you still make simple errors.
A very very tabloid/fox news post jamby
kimbersFull MemberBenn’s speech was an oitstanding display putting accross his firmly heald belief that airstrikes where the correct way forward.
Pffft!! Just 2 weeks before he had a firmly held belief that bombing was NOT the way forward!!
Jambafact, innit
chewkwFree MemberDrJ – Member
I really cannot see anything leadership quality in Diane Abbott and why people see her as leader I don’t know
Which people? [/quote]
Those voted her as their MP … do you need me to narrow down the sample side for you or do you need some sort of statistical proof? How about reference to peer reviewed journals?
FFS! What use is your “Dr” if you cannot even comprehend a layperson?
What Dr are you btw?
edit: I assume you are a true ‘Dr’ rather than the DJ type “Dr” but if you are the latter then just assume there are plenty of shite music out there nowadays …
DrJFull Memberif you cannot even comprehend a layperson?
It’s true I have some difficulty comprehending you. I’m not sure I’m alone in that.
As for Diane Abbott, she is a Cambridge graduate despite humble origins, and was the first black woman to be elected as an MP. She has been an MP since 1987, being re-elected many times, so maybe her constituents know something you don’t?
jambalayaFree Member@bazz this is a long term war, many years. IS will be crushed by the Syrians, Iranians, Russians and Kurds on fhe ground. I don’t think for a second Cameron or anyone else made and representations they’d be major results after just a few weeks. I personally think there has been quicker progress than I expected. The Russian bombing of the tankers near the Turkish border has really put a big dampner on the IS trade with Turkey, thats probably more strategically significant than anything else which has happened in Syria (vs Iraq).
@DrJ Paris / Bataclan changed a lot for many people, not me as my views where already established but for many. The Bataclan was Europe’s 9/11.
ninfanFree MemberPffft!! Just 2 weeks before he had a firmly held belief that bombing was NOT the way forward!!
So, Benn was against action without a plan and UN support – then when there was a plan and UN support he backed action
Shocking behaviour!
Which people?
The people who voted for her as leader of the Labour Party in 2010?
chewkwFree MemberDrJ – Member
if you cannot even comprehend a layperson?
It’s true I have some difficulty comprehending you. I’m not sure I’m alone in that.[/quote]
That’s not a good response from a Dr with such speculative response innit? Not very different to mine if I can say so.
Well you would use the STW sample population to justify your views (you are not alone etc) but then I would just the voters that voted for Diane Abbot … question is what makes your sample population more valid than mine?
Two ways to interpret your response …
i) In the same click etc …
ii) Deliberate to confuse/reject etc …(Edit: FFS! Why am I having to justify sample size and research related shite about politicians I don’t know … must be the warm weather in the Toon)
As for Diane Abbott, she is a Cambridge graduate despite humble origins, and was the first black woman to be elected as an MP. She has been an MP since 1987, being re-elected many times, so maybe her constituents know something you don’t?
Crikey … Really? A response like this from a Dr? 😆 You’re DJ related Dr aren’t you? Like the Dr Fox bloke innit?
In the Far East we have politicians so extreme you would have thought they were ZMs but guess where they graduated from? Yeap! Cambridge, Oxford and top 5 UK Univs … We could not believe that when we were told the first time.
Oh ya … they are all brown in skin colour believing in other religions/ideologies and constantly got elected into power even when they openly threaten certain population. Ya, all humble origins etc … all the disadvantages you can think off they got them all. But given them the power that’s another story … they evolved into ZMs.
DrJFull Member@DrJ Paris / Bataclan changed a lot for many people, not me as my views where already established but for many. The Bataclan was Europe’s 9/11.
More jambabollocks – if you read the article I linked, Bataclan pre-dates his opposition to bombing:
“In the previous interview, given to the Independent on Sunday, Mr Benn had said the Paris attacks the previous Friday meant it was “even more important that we bring the Syrian civil war to an end” before considering strikes on Isis.”
DrJFull Member@chewy – I have no clue what the hell you are talkng about. Apparently that is because I am a disc jockey, or something of the sort. Whatever – it reminds me why I blocked you on Chrome.
piemonsterFree MemberI’m not sure I’m alone in that.
You’re not, rambling gobbledygook best sums it up.
chewkwFree MemberDrJ – Member
@chewy – I have no clue what the hell you are talkng about. Apparently that is because I am a disc jockey, or something of the sort. Whatever – it reminds me why I blocked you on Chrome.Of course you don’t understand … of course not. 😆
You are too high up in the cloud that requires everyone to speak in the “Dr” way? Such is the elitist views that see themselves as the high and mighty that with rights to brush other aside because they called themselves “Dr”.
… ya, such narrow views of the world but I must give it to you for being able to twist words.
A bit like me mates who insist on being called “Dr” because they got PhDs … ya, they have and some are even Professors! I called them matey!
What Dr are you? Bear in mind most are positivist on STW who are unable to comprehend beyond the confined … ya, please don’t interpret that coz you might just confused yourself.
When did I say you’re a DJ? I am just asking if you were one? You did not answer so I made the assumption but waiting for your confirmation …
Besides you never answered whether you are a “real Dr” or the assumed ones so what’s with playing the “victim”?
piemonster – Member
I’m not sure I’m alone in that.
You’re not, rambling gobbledygook best sums it up. [/quote]
Here comes the cavalry … 😆
What’s up piemonster?
Are you a “Dr” too?
🙄
DrJFull MemberSo, Benn was against action without a plan and UN support – then when there was a plan and UN support he backed action
Not just that, but UN support (which he hadn’t empasised before) and Cameron’s 70,000 ghost army were sufficient to provoke a 180 degrees turn within a few days, from saying that peace talks have to come before addressing the ISIS issue, to ranting about bizarre analogies with the Spanish Civil War.
Remarkable.
BazzFull Member@jamba, i don’t disagree with you on a long term war, however i am some what sceptical that they will be crushed, i think if recent history teaches us anything then it is that they will morph into another organization that may not have tanks/troops etc. on the ground as they do now but will be a loosely affiliated bunch of nut cases carrying out global jihad. Unfortunately i believe we are just repeating the same old mistakes over and over.
ninfanFree MemberUN support (which he hadn’t empasised before)
14th November:
Mr Benn said Labour would only consider backing air strikes in Syria if Mr Cameron had the support of the United NationsJunkyardFree Memberrambling gobbledygook best sums it up
Aye amazed anyone reads it let alone attempts to engage with it
I personally think there has been quicker progress than I expected
Careful now you almost showed yourself to be wrong .
chewkwFree MemberBazz – Member
Unfortunately i believe we are just repeating the same old mistakes over and over.Until such time as there is a magic solution I am afraid that is how the world works i.e. if the conflict is not started by this group then it would be by another group …
Sitting out and waiting for the conflict to solve itself may not work well for many.
You are caught between a rock and a hard place …
Assad should stay simple.
Junkyard – lazarus
rambling gobbledygook best sums it up
Aye amazed anyone reads it let alone attempts to engage with it[/quote]
What’s up Junkyard? My first response to you in 2016. 😛
Tempted to say “What’s up Doc?” but you are not a “Dr or Doc” and I might get sued by Looney Tunes. 😮
Just to let you know you are wrong Junkyard. 😆
DrJFull Member“Though lack of United Nations approval at the time was not the main argument that Mr Benn made against bombing Isis in Syria, he did say Labour would only support an extension of air strikes if it had been granted.”
As I said, he did not emphasise UN support so it is strange that it provoked such a volte face.
jambalayaFree Member1yr Anniversary cover for Charlie Ebdo published, rememberence events at Charlie Ebdo, Jewish supermarket and the site of the shooting of the policewoman (just round the corner from a Jewish school the intended target).
@bazz yes I agree its likely some elements of the extremists will morph into something else. I think this is a many generational conflict, the longer the oil price stays low tensions will rise as the better off Middle East nations start to feel real financial pain and public spending is cut.
– if you read the article I linked, Bataclan pre-dates his opposition to bombing:
DrJ, Ninfan explains my reference for you plus I imagine Benn was one pf the many MPs who listened to his constituents and local party members before voting and not just the shouty campaigners and Twitter trolls.
JunkyardFree MemberDo you believe the spin you write
I genuinely laughed at that rousing support for him and your tabloid dig…you missed out terrorist sympathisers though so I am disapoint.Its now become jambyfacts delivered like a tabloid headline writer
deadlydarcyFree Member1/70th of the number of moderate fighters waiting in the wings to deliver long and lasting peace once we’ve finished sorting things out from the sky.
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