Liam28 wrote: » OK, time to debunk some of these examples of democracies at war. Finland was at war with Russia in 1941, and Britain, as Russia's ally, did declare war on Finland. But by war, I mean a 2 way armed conflict with multiple casualties. Finland-Britain had none of these.
Liam28 wrote: » There has never been a war between two democracies.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » When it comes to democracies invading , it's mostly UK, US , India, or Israel. And yes the Brits bombed Finland during the war. But despite being at war with the Axis and Allies and standing alone against the Soviet Union , Helsinki was the only capital city of the combatants on the continent that wasn't invaded by a foreign army. ( In the case of Moscow it was just about to the suburbs. YMMV)
cdeb wrote: » Wasn't Hitler democratically elected? Or is it just that he had done away with democracy by the time war broke out?
Professor Moriarty wrote: » I know but it's actually a constitutional monarchy with the Queen as head of state.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » The UK despite all the guff about it has no written constitution, and besides thanks to the rules it wouldn't matter if it did. The effective UK constitution is three words long.Parliament is God. And the Parliament Act means the House of Commons can overrule the House of Lords, so in practice the lower house has no restrictions on it's power. Much as I hate Dev, having a constitution that the Dail can't change is a quite a good thing. One side effect is we've been able to get better terms from the EU because of it.
Riva10 wrote: » Light doesn't necessarily travel at the speed of light. The slowest we've ever recorded light moving at is 38 mph.https://www.nature.com/articles/17561
Franz Von Peppercorn wrote: » Parliament is supreme. Not God. To me a parliamentary democracy unencumbered by a codified constitution is a healthy thing. It’s much more flexible.The U.K. has a written constitution - the constitutional laws of parliament are written down. They are not oral laws. These laws are, however, not in a document to be changed by judicial interpretation, or worse frequent referenda. A Parliament encumbered with either an ancient text, a legal interpretation by an unelected Supreme Court or in cases like Ireland - the baying mob - is not really fit for purpose. And all American type systems have a major flaw which often leads to coups. The US hasn’t had one yet but I wouldn’t rule it out.
ohnonotgmail wrote: » Acts of parliament are not a constitution. The UK does not have a written constitution.
Fourier wrote: » And all American type systems have a major flaw which often leads to coups. The US hasn’t had one yet but I wouldn’t rule it out.
Are Am Eye wrote: » Sex is banned aboard the International Space Station.
Franz Von Peppercorn wrote: » Parliament is supreme. Not God. ... The U.K. has a written constitution - the constitutional laws of parliament are written down. They are not oral laws.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Those laws and traditions could be changed tonight should Parliament decide to do so. And thanks to the Parliament Act the House of Lords can't stop the House of Commons either, Most seats are safe seats so anyone wishing to hack an election only needs to concentrate on the marginals. We still don't know what ads the likes of youtube and facebook showed to targeted demographics during recent elections, so we don't even know if they were truthful or not. Did you know May was just 786 voters short of an Overall Majority ?
Curly Judge wrote: Sex in zero gravity is a bit difficult anyway.
RiderOnTheStorm wrote: » Challenge accepted....
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » RiderOnTheStorm wrote: » Challenge accepted.... Too late In 1999 the Uranus Experiment was made on one of the Vomit Comets, so called because puking is a fairly common reaction to zero-g.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Too late In 1999 the Uranus Experiment was made on one of the Vomit Comets, so called because puking is a fairly common reaction to zero-g.
jmayo wrote: » Johnny Cash was probably the first American to learn of Stalin's death. He was very adept at morse code while he was a radio operator in the Air Force and one of his jobs was intercepting Soviet radio traffic.
evolving_doors wrote: » May I step in and say that zero gravity is a myth... especially near any planets anyway. People often cite the ISS as having zero gravity (Dara O Brian for one :rolleyes:). If that were the case the moon would just float away as it's in 'zero gravity'. What is happening is that the ISS is continuously 'falling' around the earth.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » It's zero because the gravities and accelerations cancel out. It's like getting paid and all your money going out in debts and bills and living expenses. You aren't getting nothing, but you have nothing at the end of the week :mad: