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Liz! Truss!
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onehundredthidiotFull Member
I’m old I tend to undersell the amount of time that has passed. Tipperary and Cork are much improved through being part over Europe since I was there an unspecified number of years ago greater than 25.
CougarFull MemberYou can express your views and be civil about it. This has far more impact than spewing bile and venom. That does absolutely nothing of value, for readers on either side.
You can never change anyone’s mind by pissing them off. Ever.
You’re assuming that that’s what posters are trying to do, rather than just venting in frustration.
I’ve tried it. I tried different methods for years from 2016 until it was simply too late and I’m far from the only one. Minds changed: tending towards zero. You might as well be asking a fundamental Christian if they’ve heard the good news about Islam.
Harry_the_SpiderFull MemberHas a new Minister for Brexit Opportunities been announced, or has the position quietly disappeared?
kerleyFree MemberI think all the opportunities have now been realised. Turned out great didn’t it.
molgripsFree MemberYou might as well be asking a fundamental Christian if they’ve heard the good news about Islam.
Ok so you can state your views without driving people away. This isn’t supposed to be a clique, and is the worse for being one.
CaherFull MemberLot of people in Ireland have the surname Coffey, but people can be disowned.
ElShalimoFull MemberMr Coffey is very disappointed in his distant cousin. I’m glad he’s no longer here to see how badly she turned out
CaherFull MemberThe economy in Ireland was certainly booming during the Celtic Tiger period (98-2000) but as one popular economist at the time pointed out there were more BMW’s in Dublin than in Munich but most were not paid for.
Similarly having lived in Switzerland, Ireland has a very long way to go as regards infrastructure. If you haven’t a car, bus/coaches are the only way to get from city to city. And rural towns traffic are a nightmare due to little public transport.BillMCFull MemberTrees Coffey? When the chips are down she will show herself to be very self-serving.
tjagainFull MemberIll give an example of the cognitive dissonance that ime many tory voters exhibit.
I have a relative who is true blue tory brexiteer and thinks johnson and rees mogg are great. Her husband collapsed and she had to wait 6 hours for an ambulance. I pointed out that this is what she had voted for in that long waits for ambulances is a direct result of tory policy. She just got really angry and would not accept that at all
tjagainFull MemberI was not just referring to Ireland but two things struck me about Ireland. Far less overt poverty visible and people are much less angry.
I dont think people there die of starvation like they do in the UK
martinhutchFull MemberHas a new Minister for Brexit Opportunities been announced, or has the position quietly disappeared?
There is too much good news to announce, so they’ve left it to other ministers.
???? Great news – trade barriers have been lifted in Mongolia for British poultry and fish exporters with our farmers now supplying chicken to @KFC Mongolia!
?? This offers exciting opportunities for our farmers to sell into a £10 million market.#GlobalTrade #GlobalBritain pic.twitter.com/5ZM0rMuMqA
— Ranil Jayawardena (@ranil) August 14, 2022
dissonanceFull MemberI don’t think that even the majority of Tory MPs have any faith in them.
General Election by March.
There is a big difference between a lack of faith and tory MPs voting for a GE since most would fancy retaining their seats. Replace the leader sure but not go for a GE (its one good argument about not having a new PM triggering a GE since that would reduce massively the chances of a useless PM being given the boot).
There is a possibility that she would be booted out after a year to give her replacement a year prior to the GE.
However it would be a really risky move for her replacement since if they lose the GE thats their career finished. Better to let her lead the party into defeat and take over then.CaherFull MemberBack on track, these Tories are the most right wing ever in power. They are a long way from Ken Clark and Rory Stewart.
stevextcFree MemberBack when my kid was in primary school they had a talent competition….
Some kids actually had some “real talents”***they had spent years developing like playing Rachmaninoff etc. but my kid decided he was going to enter anyway.Given he couldn’t take his best talent (one he had done some work/practice) into an assembly hall he decided he was going to just go up and tell jokes… his mother (who worked at the school) was horrified but he calmly explained (sic) “the talent show is decided by voting – its got nothing to do with actual talent only how many people vote for you and if I make people laugh instead of feeling jealous they’ll vote for me”.
***I’m not saying making people laugh isn’t a real talent… it’s just something he could walk up and do without any actual work or prep
So yeah … Boris the clown followed by Truss… it’s like Boris had to work at being a clown to cover his incompetence and avoid actually doing any work or actually reading or understanding anything.
Truss is just a natural… she’s hilarious and I don’t think she even needs to try.
it’s amazing, she’s so out there incompetent you even get laughs just by pretending to agree with her….molgripsFree MemberI have a relative who is true blue tory brexiteer and thinks johnson and rees mogg are great. Her husband collapsed and she had to wait 6 hours for an ambulance. I pointed out that this is what she had voted for in that long waits for ambulances is a direct result of tory policy. She just got really angry and would not accept that at all
It appears to me that a certain amount of cognitive dissonance is required, if you are a non-rich Tory voter. I honestly think many of that group don’t really understand how things work. Change my mind..?
ernielynchFull MemberI have a relative who is true blue tory brexiteer and thinks johnson and rees mogg are great. Her husband collapsed and she had to wait 6 hours for an ambulance. I pointed out that this is what she had voted for in that long waits for ambulances is a direct result of tory policy. She just got really angry and would not accept that at all
It is hardly surprising that she got angry, no one voted for “6 hours” ambulance wait. And however much you might want to rubbish the ambulance service I am sure that a 6 hour wait in response to someone collapsing isn’t the norm, so she had every reason to be dissatisfied. Was this in Scotland?
Obviously exceptions exist:
https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/eight-minute-emergency-ambulance-takes-25513273
But I would still expect people to be justifiably angry if they had to wait an unacceptable period of time. Telling them that they ‘voted for it’ is unlikely to calm them down and bring them round to your way of thinking.
I suggest that you try a different tactic on your true blue relative instead of trying to wind her up.
pondoFull MemberWas this in Scotland?
A true blue Tory brexiteer? Doesn’t seem likely.
I suggest that you try a different tactic on your true blue relative
Like what?
ernielynchFull MemberLike what?
Perhaps something less confrontational?
Telling someone who is justifiably angry about something that it’s all their fault doesn’t seem like a particularly good tactic. And by TJ’s own admission it apparently spectacularly failed.
13thfloormonkFull MemberA true blue Tory brexiteer? Doesn’t seem likely.
Visited Perthshire recently? 😂
boomerlivesFree MemberAnd however much you might want to rubbish the ambulance service I am sure that a 6 hour wait in response to someone collapsing isn’t the norm, so she had every reason to be dissatisfied. Was this in Scotland?
In Yorkshire in early summer I was at a kids Rugby festival.
One lad was injured, a neck injury. St Johns were on site and said he needed to be immobilised and an ambulance. Ambulance wait was 5 hours. They asked if they should bring him in in their vehicle and were told that moving him would be dangerous.
When we left two hours later he was still on the floor.
It’s not really calling the ambulance service to say there are massive issues with it. But saying it’s all fine is to deny reality.
ernielynchFull MemberThere was something on the telly yesterday about long waiting times for ambulances in Scotland, which is why I asked.
ernielynchFull MemberIt’s not really calling the ambulance service to say there are massive issues with it. But saying it’s all fine is to deny reality.
The link that I posted was to show that all is clearly not fine. However to tell someone that they voted for it, when they clearly didn’t, isn’t likely to get the response that you might have hoped.
cookeaaFull MemberHas a new Minister for Brexit Opportunities been announced, or has the position quietly disappeared?
Does anyone want it?
Having a non sequitur as a job title is hardly going to look good on the CV.Perhaps most amusingly “Levelling Up” is still a position, Lucky old Simon Clarke gets to put that on his CV…
JRM has been given Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, Braverman has the Home office so I fully expect the pair of them to be sending young offenders, prisoners and Asylum seekers to work in Victorian style coal mines and mills, if they die on the job they’ll be liquefied and their juices used for fracking…
Kemi Badenoch gets international trade, probably a tougher brief given the UK’s international standing and she’s probably been given it to keep her busy and out of the way having shown a bit too much promise in hustings…
stevextcFree Memberernielynch
Perhaps something less confrontational?
Telling someone who is justifiably angry about something that it’s all their fault doesn’t seem like a particularly good tactic. And by TJ’s own admission it apparently spectacularly failed.
No way to know if it failed or not until she votes next time…
kelvinFull MemberI go for…
“Well, I didn’t vote for this, did you?”
To which, the answer is obviously “no”… hopefully followed by a thoughtful pause.
The gap between what people hope their vote is for, and what it actually delivers, needs to pointed out sometimes. You can vote for a more prosperous country, better services, a better life for everyone you know… but if that isn’t delivered… that should be thought about, often, before voting again.
stevextcFree MemberMolgrips
It appears to me that a certain amount of cognitive dissonance is required, if you are a non-rich Tory voter. I honestly think many of that group don’t really understand how things work. Change my mind..?
On one hand it’s the same mentality as the “pro-life/pro-capital punishment/pro guns”
On the other hand what makes you think they are not voting for what they BELIEVE is in the best interests of the country if not themselves? (Or would you say anyone “rich” that is voting for labour has “a certain amount of cognitive dissonance”)tjagainFull MemberShe is way down south. I think rees mogg is a tually her mp
Long ambulance waits are a direct and deliberate consequence of tory policy so yes she did vote for it. She knew damn well the tories especially rees mogg want to get rid of the health service. Apart from anything else i had had that debate with her pre election.
Its just an example of the cognitive dissonance.
tjagainFull Member(Or would you say anyone “rich” that is voting for labour has “a certain amount of cognitive dissonance”)
No. Id say they had a social conscience
jambourgieFree Membertj you talk some absolute drivel sometimes. Does that mean all Labour voters are war-mongers cos they voted for illegal wars.
molgripsFree MemberAnd however much you might want to rubbish the ambulance service I am sure that a 6 hour wait in response to someone collapsing isn’t the norm, so she had every reason to be dissatisfied.
I had significant chest pains on holiday in North Wales, enough for me to call am ambulance at about 12am having read about heart attacks on here. I was told it was an 8 hour wait. So I think it very much normal now.
Perhaps something less confrontational?
Like…?
Make it clear that it’s the current Tory government at fault. People bristle and push back when you make them angry with personal attacks – and yes, ‘it’s your fault’ is personal. If you can convince them that the Tory government is the problem, not themselves, it is much more likely to make them think twice about voting for them.
BillMCFull Member‘But Labour would have been worse.’
People are lazy thinkers by default, stereotypes, conspiracies and prejudice are convenient responses when you’re surrounded by DM ideology. Playing on fears and three word slogans (produced very expensively for the govt by an agency the civil service has had to buy into) does the trick.dissonanceFull MemberDoes that mean all Labour voters are war-mongers cos they voted for illegal wars.
The same wars the tories supported full heartedly whereas, at least, some Labour MPs were opposed.
Those wars?jambourgieFree MemberThe same wars the tories supported full heartedly whereas, at least, some Labour MPs were opposed.
Those wars?Yes. those wars. Do I need to name them specifically?
ernielynchFull MemberLong ambulance waits are a direct and deliberate consequence of tory policy so yes she did vote for it.
Long ambulance waits might well be the consequence of voting Tory, but no one goes to the polling station with the intention of voting for a government which they hope will bring long ambulance waiting times.
So pointing an accusing finger at them and telling them that they voted for it seems daft. I don’t understand why you appear to be surprised that your relative got “really angry”.
To reiterate the point.
CougarFull MemberIt is hardly surprising that she got angry, no one voted for “6 hours” ambulance wait.
Sure they did. This is how the conversation went time and time and time again:
“There’s too many foreigners and that’s a drain on the NHS, I can’t get a doctor’s appointment.”
“The NHS employs a higher-than-average number of migrant staff, a greater percentage work in it than use it. If we reduce immigration or ‘send them back where they came from’ then waiting times will get longer not shorter.”
“Project fear / we knew what we were voting for / we won you lost shut up and get over it.”
🤷♂️
If they weren’t warned then I’d agree with you. But they were, repeatedly, and just wouldn’t listen. They absolutely voted for this and probably will again.
I grant you though, “well it’s your own fault” when someone’s upset about their partner collapsing is hardly the most tactful or empathic of responses…
tjagainFull MemberThats actually more like the conversation went molgrips
Jambougie
Nice personal attack and look a squirrel
Long ambulance waits are a direct and deliberate result of tory policy.
MoreCashThanDashFull MemberIt appears to me that a certain amount of cognitive dissonance is required, if you are a non-rich Tory voter. I honestly think many of that group don’t really understand how things work. Change my mind..?
Caught up with extended family at the weekend, my mums cousins, all born 1930s/40s, brought up in poor terraced areas round Leeds, all done well for themselves as teachers, accountants etc, happily retired, blue tory brexit fans, no filter for casual racism, the plight of modern day poor people, or understanding why, for example, their daughter daughter who is a nurse rolled her eyes when they were moaning aboutthe NHS
Their lived experience has been totally different to mine, I get that, but they are so blinkered by it.
As are some on tbe left, of course.
jambourgieFree MemberI grant you though, “well it’s your own fault” when someone’s upset about their partner collapsing is hardly the most tactful or empathic of responses…
You reckon? 😂
Or the most effective. If I was his relative I’d make sure to vote tory from there on in even if I didn’t want to. Got to, for the sake of karma. Pious, puritanical hectoring gets you nowhere.
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