Joe_ Public wrote: » I think the ira thing was done to death in 2017 tbh. Didnt really change much then and see no reason why it would have much effect now. Bigger problems for corbyn than that old attack line.
In 1984, Abbott said Ireland “is our struggle – every defeat of the British state is a victory for all of us. A defeat in Northern Ireland would be a defeat indeed. Marr questioned why, shortly before the 9/11 attacks, Abbott voted against proscribing organisations including al-Qaida and Lashkar-e-Taiba, which was responsible for the Mumbai attacks. Abbott responded that the list involved some organisations that should be seen as dissident groups, not terrorists. “What the legislation brought forward was a whole list of organisations some of which were not terrorist organisations, but dissident organisations,” she said. Marr read the list to Abbott – which also included Egyptian Islamic Jihad, the Armed Islamic Group, Harakat Mujahideen, the Tamil Tigers, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad Group, the Islamic Army of Aden, the Abu Nidal Organisation, the Kurdistan Workers Party – and asked which should not be proscribed.
Speaking in 2003 he said: "It's about time we started honouring those people involved in the armed struggle. It was the bombs and bullets and sacrifice made by the likes of Bobby Sands that brought Britain to the negotiating table. "The peace we have now is due to the action of the IRA. Because of the bravery of the IRA and people like Bobby Sands, we now have a peace process."
Reports said a dossier from anti-extremism group Mainstream revealed new details of Mr Corbyn’s parliamentary meeting with convicted IRA terrorists just days after the Brighton attack which had aimed to wipe out Margaret Thatcher and her Cabinet. Jeremy Corbyn has said he was present but not involved at a wreath-laying for individuals behind the group that carried out the Munich Olympic massacre, a partial admission that has led to a row with Israel’s prime minister.
Letwin_Larry wrote: » i watched the Joe Duffy doc on the Children killled in The Troubles and it really brought it home to me just how evil the IRA was. sickening atrocities. that and the young girl (now a mature lady) blinded in the Omagh bomb who was on the Gaybo tribute last evening. truly evil baastaards they were in case we ever forget.
gooch2k9 wrote: » Pictures from Conservative launch strangely reminiscent of Trump rallies. Podium set up with big crowd behind them.
hotmail.com wrote: » Trump didn't invent that.
quokula wrote: » It’s amazing how stuff like this gets minimal coverage while they go on calling Corbyn a Russian stooge. It’s like seeing 1984 play out before our eyes.
gooch2k9 wrote: » Who said he did?
hotmail.com wrote: » Oh I thought you were comparing Trump and Boris because of the people standing behind them when they speak.
Rjd2 wrote: » Oh yes and plenty of tme left, but the biggest obstacle to Brexit happening right now is Nigel Farage. He will have to live wit that if we get a second referendum next year.
gooch2k9 wrote: » I was. It's clear as day the style of presentation they're going for there. Blatantly transparent everything they are doing is from the Trump playbook. It's a distinctly American approach. Even some UK journalists were commenting on how American the whole thing was.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » theological wrote: » Although the UK economy is smaller than the entire EU. It is a large market in it's own right as the world's 5th biggest. The UK is due to slip down to 7th place in 2019.
theological wrote: » Although the UK economy is smaller than the entire EU. It is a large market in it's own right as the world's 5th biggest.
theological wrote: » I'm not convinced of your assumption that the EU will automatically negotiate better deals for the UK. This is because the EU has to negotiate on the basis of the priorities of 28 disparate countries rather than the needs of the UK alone.
theological wrote: » Firstly - the value of single market membership is not as big for a large economy like the UK as it is for a small country.
jimmycrackcorm wrote: » [ I personally know of a domestic helper who works in a Singapore home. Their monthly pay is €460. They only get allowed out on a Sunday and only then between 9am and 7pm. They have to be available and working from 7am until 11pm 6 days a week and stay in cramped conditions in the home. There are tens of thousands of domestic helpers in the same situation. This is the Singapore on the Thames that the Tories want to create by removing EU worker directives.
hotmail.com wrote: » Yes campaigning like the Americans is nothing new. Trump's campaigning was nothing out of the ordinary for Americans. This "playbook" thing gives Trump far too much credit.
Deleted User wrote: » That anecdote is just that, an anecdote. Anyone who knows anything about Singapore knows how successful that tiny country has been. What you're doing is just as absurd as me quoting a millionaire from Zimbabwe and then assuming that somehow Zimbabwe is a successful country for all. If I delivered an anecdote like that, you'd be the first down my throat.
gooch2k9 wrote: » I don't remember seeing that kind of stuff in 2017. Along with the social media advertising they are doing nowadays. Get the lie out there and then pull back. It would probably be more fair to call it Bannon's playbook, I believe he is involved in the UK too? Maybe I'm wrong but when I saw the pictures of Johnson et al this evening I immediately thought of Trump rallies.
Deleted User wrote: » Is this the future government we wish to see? I think not.
Letwin_Larry wrote: » he said about the tories "when they go low, we go high" or words to that effect, which struck a cord. the tories have really exposed themselves in the past few days (well many decades one might argue). JRMs' attitude to the Grenfell disaster was quite shocking, apart from being totally inept. really shows their utter contempt of the less-well off in society.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » How will Singapore style economics make life better for Joe Bloggs in post-Brexit Britain?
Deleted User wrote: » I didn't suggest that the UK should adopt a Singorean model; what I am saying is that if small countries can succeed, I have every confidence that the UK - the 5th largest economy in the world - can just as succeed. The idea the UK will sink into the depths of economic oblivion is a symptom of Project Fear Mark II. Europhiles have, and I suspect always will, harness economic fear to manipulate the "choice" that electorates make. Omnipresent throughout the EU's existence is a return to the ballot box when the electorates "make the wrong choice". Let's hope, with the passage of the Johnson Deal, that trend ends. Speaking of Johnson, his launch in Birmingham has proven to be electrifyingly enthusiastic, energetic, and infectious. That's what Johnson brings to the table - and long may that continue throughout this election.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » Okay, so will the UK be better off after Brexit? Will Joe Bloggs? If so, how and why?
Deleted User wrote: » If you ask Europhiles, the UK will be worse off. If you ask staunch Brexiteers, the UK will be better off. If you ask a moderate, they'll say that nobody knows. If you ask a realist, they'll say the UK will survive.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » And your opinion? And the facts supporting that opinion?
[Deleted User] wrote: » Speaking of Johnson, his launch in Birmingham has proven to be electrifyingly enthusiastic, energetic, and infectious. That's what Johnson brings to the table - and long may that continue throughout this election.
Deleted User wrote: » I believe that nobody knows. It's akin to the question of Does God Exist? Some say yes, some say no - some say the Universe began with a creator, others say the inception of the Universe was uncaused. The real answer is clear - nobody has a clue how it all started, and I say that as an atheist. The same type of argument is often true of economics and political reality. I believe in Brexit, but I have no idea what impact it will have economically. There are many metrics to consider, many political decisions to be made, many economic factors outside of the UK that determine how the UK economy will perform; that I simply do not have the arrogance to claim to "know", with any degree of certainty, how the UK will perform over the next decade. What I can say with some degree of certainty, is that the UK is likely - as the fifth largest economy in the world - to weather any storm that may present itself, and will not deteriorate into some third-world country where doom, gloom, and misery become the currency of the day. Of that, I am convinced. For many, though, the democratic return of powers mitigates against any GDP loss/gain here or there.
hotmail.com wrote: » I've been surprised at how unimpressive Johnson has been in his speeches. His attacks on Cornyn is the Theresa May strategy of 2017 and look how that went.
gooch2k9 wrote: » His constant use of rehearsed lines makes him ineffective on me anyway. Dither and delay.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » You said this: "what I am saying is that if small countries can succeed, I have every confidence that the UK - the 5th largest economy in the world - can succeed just as much, if not more." Can you explain how, post-Brexit, the UK "can succeed just as much, if not more" than Singapore? Can you explain how this success will impact on Joe Bloggs post-Brexit?