prawnsambo wrote: » And there it is again. Since deleted and disavowed,
Hurrache wrote: » I read last night that a representative from Young Labour said they couldn't stop people tweeting abusive tweets from the Young Labour Account. What an awful crowd. But remember folks, there's people here insisting that this is all made up and doesn't exist.
c.p.w.g.w wrote: » Genuine question...is supporting Palestine deemed anti-Semitic?
prawnsambo wrote: » It's starting to look like I have an agenda here, but really I don't. It's just... well... words fail me. I feel like I've woken up this morning to an Orwellian landscape.
Leroy42 wrote: » I would say that to many, yes it is. Certainly IMO, that is the view that Israel takes.
prawnsambo wrote: » It's starting to look like I have an agenda here, but really I don't. It's just... well... words fail me. I feel like I've woken up this morning to an Orwellian landscape. Somewhere between Animal Farm and 1984.
c.p.w.g.w wrote: » Ok if that's the case many Irish people are anti-Semitic without knowing it.
hill16bhoy wrote: » Recall elections are a regular event in the US, most notably when California governor Gray Davis was recalled in 2003 and lost the subsequent election to Arnold Schwarzenegger. Likewise in the US, any representative can be primaried and effectively de-selected from within their own party. That's how Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez became the Democratic candidate in her district. Trump could theoretically face this in 2020. I don't particularly agree with the concept of allowing the recall of MPs (outside of the existing provisons to do so) but to say such a proposal is "Orwellian" is considerably overegging the pudding, in my view.
markodaly wrote: » Defined by whom, you?
Do you know when there was record real wage growth in the UK? Around 1985.
I don't disagree with the fact that wage growth of the 70's may be higher than now. That does not mean we should or even can revert back to that era and follow similar economic policy when the world is a vastly different place economically.
That is the danger of looking back, anyone can pick out a fact and claim that the past was great, and we should go back there. Economic data coming out of 1930's Germany was pretty impressive, does not mean we should advocate building up submarines and tanks today to improve unemployment and wage growth?
You didn't prove anything, you posted up something about wage growth as if that is the single metric that matters, as Moses himself stated its all that matters to make reasonable objective judgments on the past.
What about life expectancy? 1970 it was 71, today it is 81 What about death rates at work? There has been an 85% reduction since 1974 What about education levels? The average school leaver is 7 times more likely to go to University or a Polytech today than in 1970 What about women's place in the workforce? Do you think the '70s was a great time for them? What about if you were a minority or Gay, the latter was legally a fireable offence.
It does actually in the main but as you know there are caveats. Just because wage growth has stagnated, does not mean there are no benefits to Globalisation and free trade. Its the Brexit argument again, the EU is somewhat dysfunctional, so lets leave and revert to the 1970's (Corbynista's) 1950's (Tory Brexiters)
Only if you think that all and every metric of prosperity, growth, and progress can be encapsulated in one and only metric, of wage growth. If you really believe that.....
LOL, This is the same guy who raised tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminum and threatens a trade war with China? That free market fanatic? At least engage honestly.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trump_tariffs Trump is many many things, but a free market fanatic he is not. Trump is very pertinent to this question, as he was elected on a populism, much like how Corbyn hopes to be elected.
Harry Palmr wrote: » This thread will need a new title again, everything is pointing to three Conservative MPs quitting imminently.
prawnsambo wrote: » Aaaaand they're off.
Franz Von Peppercorn wrote: » Defined by capitalists or indeed modernists when they deal with economic growth since the capitalist era.
I doubt that graph,
This is all good stuff, but was all driven by and large by leftwing ideologies.
I think that Brexit is lunacy,
He has imposed Tariffs yes..
in fact there is a growing body of economic position that globalisation hasn't worked,
“Over the last 25 years, more than a billion people have lifted themselves out of extreme poverty, and the global poverty rate is now lower than it has ever been in recorded history. This is one of the greatest human achievements of our time,” World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim said
Harry Palmr wrote: » It's really exiting (god I'm a nerd)
prawnsambo wrote: » No mention of them joining The Independent Group that I've seen yet, but their Twitter account is now following the three of them, so maybe they are.
lawred2 wrote: » Are these numbers of defectors big enough to make any difference?
prawnsambo wrote: » But recall elections only go as far as state level. And the rules differ from state to state. Some have to pass judicial scrutiny. As for primaries, they are part of the elction process and therefore can only remove a sitting representative at the end of their term. Pretty much what can happen here or in the UK. Although it's very rare that a sitting TD would be removed from a constituency prior to an election. But it is possible. It may be a stretch to call it Orwellian, but I'm thinking of the pledge that's been going around social media recently as well. But the real issue is the notion that a party can 'own' a seat and therefore decide who sits in it and now is looking to increase that power to remove dissenters from them is stretching democracy to breaking point.
robinph wrote: » I thought Con+DUP only gave a majority of 2? So only needed one to jump ship to tip the balance.