Home Forums Chat Forum Jeremy Corbyn

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  • Jeremy Corbyn
  • thestabiliser
    Free Member

    I’ll do it

    binners
    Full Member

    JC: Would anybody press the nuclear button?

    Hi!

    dragon
    Free Member

    9/11 wasn’t a state sponsored war though, so it’s a silly argument. USSR overrunning Germany might be a more sensible comparison and nukes were useful in the Falklands. Nukes are for the UK a defensive weapon against state aggression towards the UK or NATO members in general.

    Don’t you ever think it odd how none of the Arab countries have invaded Israel yet?

    useless against the enemy we’re now facing

    Trident isn’t about the now it’s about the future which is unpredictable.

    dragon
    Free Member

    Ah the SNP’s favourite american

    thestabiliser
    Free Member

    And the product of that union

    DrJ
    Full Member

    I prefer to agree with Varoufakis (at least on this point) since it is an inaccurate description of current policy.

    Of course, but who will vote for the Tories if they call it by its proper name?. “Grind down the lower classes” doesn’t win votes outside Eton.

    DrJ
    Full Member

    You know sometimes something makes you uncomfortable but you are not really sure what it is … ya, that feeling.

    Have you wet your pants again?

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    What I don’t understand is how countries such as Sweden, Japan, Brazil, and Canada, manage perfectly well without nuclear weapons.

    They must save a huge fortune by not having nuclear weapons and the £billions spent on them having to be found.

    If only we knew how they did it perhaps we could do the same ?

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Ernie – balance of power. Surely you must be aware of these concepts?

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    jambalaya – Member

    Trident. More chaos with Corbyn ruling out using it

    One of the many benefits of Jeremy Corbyn being elected leader of the Labour Party is that Trident replacement is now an actually an issue, whereas before it was a complete nonissue outside Scotland.

    People like jambalaya quite understandably find it irresistible to attack Corbyn over Trident which of course results in people discussing the merits or otherwise of Trident.

    And we know from the experience in Scotland that when nuclear weapons/Trident becomes a political issue which is openly discussed people invariably tend to end up against nuclear weapons.

    So may I personally thank you jambalaya for making sure that Trident remains an issue by constantly attacking Corbyn over it. I’m certain I speak for many when I say that those who yearn for a nuclear weapon free world are grateful to you.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    jambalaya – Member

    Corbyn saying nuclear weapons didn’t help the US on 9-11. This oast comment will provide critics an easy to target to say Corbyn doesnt understand the difference between various threats to a countries security.

    Certainly some dishonest people will twist his words that way. But that’s the thing about dishonest people, they can twist pretty much anything you say into something completely different. So you either end up saying nothing, or you get on with it.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Yes molgrips, if we can manage to establish how that was achieved then perhaps we could follow the example of say Canada which withdrew all its nuclear weapons from deployment in the 1980s.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    jambalaya – Member

    Corbyn dodged any debate or decision on Trident as we can clearly see why.

    Interesting. Epicyclo made the same deliberately disingenuous comment by posting this pic :

    In my response to him I said : “I doubt that even jambalaya would make such as crass comment”.

    Oh how I underestimated you jambalaya.

    dragon
    Free Member

    What I don’t understand is how countries such as Sweden, Japan, Brazil, and Canada, manage perfectly well without nuclear weapons.

    Because Sweden, Canada and Japan are covered by the USA. Brazil did undertake to build its own weapons and allegedly could have one ready within 3 years if required. (NB: Sweden did start a nuclear weapons program post WW2 but abandoned it. Japan also considered it, but are banned under the post WW2 agreement, on the understanding USA will provide cover.)

    ninfan
    Free Member

    Yes molgrips, if we can manage to establish how that was achieved then perhaps we could follow the example of say Canada which withdrew all its nuclear weapons from deployment in the 1980s.

    Canada has never owned nuclear weapons, they did host US ones though, however they remained under joint US operational control.

    Ukraine on the other hand did own them, post the breakdown of the Soviet Union, and unilaterally disarmed – I’m sure you would agree that that was a good move on their behalf and has not affected their long term security… Oh 😳

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Sweden, Canada and Japan are covered by the USA.

    And I thought we had a “special” relation with the USA…..Bashtards!

    Sweden did start a nuclear weapons program post WW2 but abandoned it

    Yeah that’s the point. The interesting word in that sentence is “abandoned”, just like Canada abandoned its nuclear weapons, and the UK should also abandon its, in fact the whole world should.

    And btw there is no chance of Brazil developing nuclear weapons – South America is a nuclear weapon free zone. Plus for their nuclear technology Brazil relies on its partnership with Argentina which is much more advanced than Brazil in nuclear technology.

    Rockape63
    Free Member

    Yeah that’s the point. The interesting word in that sentence is “abandoned”, just like Canada abandoned its nuclear weapons, and the UK should also abandon its, in fact the whole world should.

    I disagree….the more countries who have them, makes the world a safer place, not more dangerous.

    MSP
    Full Member

    Ah yes the NRA proposition only with bigger guns.

    binners
    Full Member

    AlexSimon
    Full Member

    I disagree….the more countries who have them, makes the world a safer place, not more dangerous.

    Is that why we went to war due to a country that wasn’t allowed them being alleged to have some? I’m confused – did them potentially having them make the world safer, or was it our declaration of war that made the world a safer place?

    dragon – Member

    JC doesn’t get the nuclear deterrent at all, see when asked about whether he would push the button he replied.

    JC: Would anybody press the nuclear button?

    But that’s not the point, the point is for it to work people have to believe you would.
    Of course he ‘gets’ it, he just thinks it’s complete nonsense. he doesn’t think it’s effective as a deterrent, so doesn’t want to invest in it, and doesn’t want to press the button, or threaten to. He is entirely consistent.

    You talk as if it’s a ‘proven’ system that has been shown to be effective. As if someone was hovering over the button but at the last moment though “I’d annihilate 10s of millions of people which I’m happy to do, because they deserve it, but then they’d launch on me and I’d be dead (along with my whole country), so maybe I wont after all.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    ninfan – Member

    Ukraine on the other hand did own them……..blah, blah, blah

    And the Ukraine example shows just how powerful the case against nuclear weapons is. Ukraine has no regrets about abandoning it nuclear weapons.

    The Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko less than 10 months ago :

    “Believe me that the strongest security in the modern world in the 21st century is supply, but not nuclear power”

    Ukraine has no ambitions to become nuclear power again – Poroshenko

    dragon
    Free Member

    Yeah that’s the point. The interesting word in that sentence is “abandoned”, just like Canada abandoned its nuclear weapons,

    On the basis that the USA provided cover, so they didn’t give them up without some backup. I guess we could do the same, however, all would do is result in the USA putting theirs on our soil. While annoying them at the same time, as they want us to maintain ours as part of the US-UK agreement.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    ninfan – Member

    Ukraine on the other hand did own them, post the breakdown of the Soviet Union, and unilaterally disarmed – I’m sure you would agree that that was a good move on their behalf and has not affected their long term security…

    You think that Ukraine would have excalated that situation to a nuclear level? No? Well then, no point in having a nuclear deterrant is there.

    I’m sure you think it’s a clever point but it just proves the futility of nuclear expenditure- the real threat that Ukraine faced couldn’t be dispelled with nuclear weapons, having them or not made no difference. The first essential criteria for a strategic nuclear deterrant to work in this situation, is that your opponent has to believe that you’re batshit mental enough to escalate a conventional dispute to a nuclear exchange.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    You think that Ukraine would have excalated that situation to a nuclear level? No? Well then, no point in having a nuclear deterrant is there.

    You think that Russia would have taken that risk?

    I’m sure you think it’s a clever point but it just proves the futility of nuclear expenditure- the real threat that Ukraine faced couldn’t be dispelled with nuclear weapons, having them or not made no difference.

    you don’t know that – as the situation which arose may never had arisen had they had them – maybe you could point to the nuclear powers that have been invaded to prove your point?

    The first essential criteria for a strategic nuclear deterrant to work in this situation, is that your opponent has to believe that you’re batshit mental enough to escalate a conventional dispute to armageddon.

    No, they have to believe that you just might be batshit crazy enough to do it – which seems to fit the Ukranian mentality quite well.

    BermBandit
    Free Member

    Best security proposition for us would be a unified European Defence force….however the response to this will demonstrate why its unlikely.

    dazh
    Full Member

    A lifelong peace activist admits on radio that he wouldn’t/couldn’t initiate an attack that would kill millions of innocent civilians. And the news here is what? Surely the question we should be asking is whether a willingness to be a mass murderer should be a prerequisite qualification for the prime minister of a supposedly civilised and democratic country? I think I know what I would prefer.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    A lifelong peace activist admits on radio that he wouldn’t/couldn’t initiate an attack that would kill millions of innocent civilians. And the news here is what?

    Well the news here is that he’s recently become leader of Her Majesty’s Most Loyal Opposition.

    I think we can all agree that the Labour Party not being led by a potential warmonger is newsworthy.

    AlexSimon
    Full Member

    I think we can all agree that the Labour Party not being led by a potential warmonger is newsworthy.

    Ha! If it weren’t so unbelievable serious, it’d be hysterical.

    AD
    Full Member

    I love reading this thread. It’s like being back in the sixth form again. Keep up the good work 🙂

    cheekyboy
    Free Member

    Best security proposition for us would be a unified European Defence force

    Go on then explain why.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    AD It gets funnier everytime you say it

    I liked this quote

    A tank is more than a weapon system – it also makes a statement. And when you’re trying to reign in another country, it helps to be able to make a statement in this way. “

    We could replace tanks with nukes and invite him in for the debate

    He can join Ninfan on the Dr Stragelove benches

    epicyclo
    Full Member

    Just watched Corbyn on TV regarding the likely use of nuclear weapons if he was PM.

    Good man.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    If you knew the nukes were on their way, would you launch our own? Bad enough that our people will die, what’s the point in killing millions more?

    allthepies
    Free Member

    Yeah, but you don’t tell the other dudes that 😛

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    The brave new world of “straight talking, honest politics”. That lasted a long time and look at the spinning ^ already.

    If the tag line is true, then the result would be a straight admission of yes we have to address (properly) many areas of internal disagreement – Trident, tax, Syria, Welfare, EU, Heathrow, Nuclear power, HS2 etc. Instead confusion and spin already and to do this with deterrent is irresponsible.

    What a shabby mess UK politics is in – next up Europe….

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    You can have no nukes – tick (si solum)
    You can have nukes/deterrent and willingness to use – (awful) tick
    You cant have nukes/deterrent and no willingness to use – pointless

    ok – not nukes, but we indicated to our dear friends in the pampas that we would not use force to defend the Falklands. Hmmm, lessons from the Franks report????

    Fail to learn the lessons of history…

    molgrips
    Free Member

    That lasted a long time and look at the spinning ^ already.

    Clarify – which bit is spin?

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    😀

    stop it mol – we will all be getting giddy!

    😀

    TBF, we have had some straight talking..

    Ms Eagle told the BBC “I’m surprised he answered the question in the way that he did”,

    the antidote to hyperbole – may be that is what the tagline meant?

    When did the dirty digger buy the New Statesman?

    http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/staggers/2015/09/jeremy-corbyn-and-nirvana-fallacy

    molgrips
    Free Member

    That wasn’t rhetoric – I don’t know what you’re getting at.

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