|
Sekenr posted:As an outsider to UK politics, what struck me the most about pre election polls was that Boris is more prime ministerial. I was like "wtf does it even mean". On one hand you have an honest man with an uncompromised 20 year record of plain utilising power of government for the good of the people. And the other is lying cheating coward who hides in the fridge. How the gently caress is that prime ministerial? The answer is simple, british people are so thoroughly conditioned that they plain see honesty and benevolence is anti prime ministerial it scares them, and screwing you by your betters as right and proper British approach. The bar for being a respectable leader has been considerably lowered in recent years. If you can mumble through a speech without loudly sharting yourself or yelling racist slurs you've got a decent chance of getting elected. I mean, even that level might be a tad optimistic...
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 00:24 |
|
|
# ? May 19, 2024 15:25 |
|
Stoatbringer posted:The bar for being a respectable leader has been considerably lowered in recent years. What is respectable leader? How much respectability is from family or school?
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 00:31 |
|
Sekenr posted:As an outsider to UK politics, what struck me the most about pre election polls was that Boris is more prime ministerial. I was like "wtf does it even mean". On one hand you have an honest man with an uncompromised 20 year record of plain utilising power of government for the good of the people. And the other is lying cheating coward who hides in the fridge. How the gently caress is that prime ministerial? The answer is simple, british people are so thoroughly conditioned that they plain see honesty and benevolence is anti prime ministerial it scares them, and screwing you by your betters as right and proper British approach. The symbol for respectable authority in the UK is a posh british lad that went to Eton and, well...
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 00:48 |
|
Feldegast42 posted:The symbol for respectable authority in the UK is a posh british lad that went to Eton and, well... I read this in very chav accent for some reason. Pretend I am your mate Davy, the galaxybrain, "the glory or our nation, mate is not celebrating royalty mate but by bending them over."
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 01:05 |
|
Dance Officer posted:Lol okay boomer bless your heart, you still think like it is 2016, memes and all i refer you to courageous investigative journalist roberto saviano and other brilliant economists, who have long since concluded that the only reason london exists - and by extension the rest of the uk - is because it is kept afloat on an ocean of illegal profits funnelled through The City. saviano is not a man given to drama, yet he has said the UK is the single most corrupt country on earth. very sad, but very important to swallow these difficult truths about our rainy fascist shithole. gh0stpinballa has issued a correction as of 01:13 on Feb 2, 2020 |
# ? Feb 2, 2020 01:11 |
|
Sekenr posted:As an outsider to UK politics, what struck me the most about pre election polls was that Boris is more prime ministerial. I was like "wtf does it even mean". On one hand you have an honest man with an uncompromised 20 year record of plain utilising power of government for the good of the people. And the other is lying cheating coward who hides in the fridge. How the gently caress is that prime ministerial? The answer is simple, british people are so thoroughly conditioned that they plain see honesty and benevolence is anti prime ministerial it scares them, and screwing you by your betters as right and proper British approach. It's one of those things where our horrific press just unilaterally declare someone 'prime ministerial' or not, and thus is becomes reality. And the criteria as to whether you're 'prime ministerial' or not has nothing to do with your record, your acheivements, your personality or your conduct but whether you maintain suitably right-wing (and friendly-to-billionaires-who-own-newspapers) policies. So Jeremy Corbyn was never going to be 'prime ministerial' despite, as you say, a near-perfect record as a campaigner, politician and MP. So he was criticised for being 'scruffy' because he had a beard and because they took pictures of him when he was 'off duty' and had just been working on his allotment. He 'disrespected the memory of our war heroes' by wearing a slightly padded (and perfectly smart) jacket on Remembrance Sunday, despite being entirely appropriately dapper and well-presented. Meanwhile Johnson shows up with a Saville Row overcoat strained over his beer gut, looking generally pasty-faced and flabby-cheeked, with his hair askew and he lays his wreath upside down and...silence. The press always take a side and work backwards from there. Corbyn talked intelligently and with nuance and thus was 'arrogant' or an 'intellectual'. Johnson shambles around an interview and flings out lies, errors and racial slurs and is 'a straight-talker'. Had their personal styles been reversed the soft-spoken, considered Johnson would be 'an intellectual titan able to present complicated issues in a straightforward way' while slurry, hesitant, bumbling Corbyn would be a dumb leftie who can't even tie his own shoes (although they tried that attack line too, in between casting him as an ivory-towered North London intellectual elitist). Same with one of the press' most pressing concerns - a fash-like 'strong leader'. Corbyn was never going to satisfy them because his policies weren't suitable (for the press barons), so if he enforced the party whip, kept his MPs strictly on line with agreed policy and punished dissent he was a petty tyrant who was the reincarnation of Stalin, Mao and Hoxha simultaneously. If he allowed a multiplicity of viewpoints and divergence of opinion he was a weak, hopeless doddery old grandad. Meanwhile Boris sacks so many of his own MPs that he loses is parliamentary majority and he's Our New Churchill Taking The Tough Decisions And Ruling With a Rod of Iron. So a huge part of electorate has spent the last three years that Jeremy Corbyn is Not Prime Ministerial, and Boris has years, even before he became Tory leader, of being presented as some powerful everyman political giant. And round the circle goes - "Corbyn would be a terrible PM because I read in The Sun that he's a scruffy, shambolic, arrogant, stupid man. It must be true, it was in the papers".
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 01:31 |
|
https://twitter.com/demarionunn/status/1223666265946034178?s=20 https://twitter.com/demarionunn/status/1223671834916290570?s=20
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 01:50 |
|
BalloonFish posted:It's one of those things where our horrific press just unilaterally declare someone 'prime ministerial' or not, and thus is becomes reality. And the criteria as to whether you're 'prime ministerial' or not has nothing to do with your record, your acheivements, your personality or your conduct but whether you maintain suitably right-wing (and friendly-to-billionaires-who-own-newspapers) policies. Are you for real or so destitute that baiting Brown moses to hire you as a copyrighter? Where do you stand with this essay
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 01:55 |
|
remember when the boy said ulysses was his favourite book and the press took this as a diabolical outrage against workington man, who loves the simple things in life like drinking warm lager and beating his wife with a bag of sports direct footwear, no time for that student union "reading" nonsense
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 02:48 |
|
tories have very powerful chaos energy
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 03:24 |
|
gh0stpinballa posted:remember when the boy said ulysses was his favourite book and the press took this as a diabolical outrage against workington man, who loves the simple things in life like drinking warm lager and beating his wife with a bag of sports direct footwear, no time for that student union "reading" nonsense Lol no they didn't believe him because he obviously couldn't have been able to read Joyce as he didn't go to Oxbridge
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 03:27 |
|
Imagine being some EU bureaucrat having to negotiate any kind of deal with Britain in the coming year I would just quit my job and start a new career, I think
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 03:34 |
|
The UK is that one kid that all professors despise. The one who never shows up and asks for extensions to homework.
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 03:39 |
|
So what's going to happen to scotland? One guy I was speaking to (a racist, pro trump free market capitalist boomer/Gen x type) said it worked like this: They voted to stay with the UK. Now that the UK is leaving they're stuck with that and have to stick with the UK (even though scotland on its own wanted to stay with the EU). This logic is laughably inconsistent and dumb and in character for the guy. But can scotland jump ship back to the EU? And will the EU welcome them back?
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 04:00 |
|
Basically there's two ways for Scotland to leave, by election or by violence. BORIS already said they aren't authorizing another Independence referendum so that only leaves one option
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 04:03 |
|
gh0stpinballa posted:i think the mistake people are making is assuming that britain is "a country" or a "nation state" anymore. it isn't. it is a bunch of land that surrounds london, and london itself is not a city, it is a gigantic washing machine for billions of dollars of blood money that flows into it from gulf states and various oligarchs and organized crime groups all around the world. it is a ghost land where ghost acts stand in for real change. brexit, like the gulf war, did not really happen. this is why i am struggling to engage with the labour leadership race - until they recognize these facts about "the united kingdom", there is no hope. Good callback to that classic essay OP
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 04:04 |
|
Agean90 posted:Basically there's two ways for Scotland to leave, by election or by violence. BORIS already said they aren't authorizing another Independence referendum so that only leaves one option Where does Wales, Cornwell, Northern Ireland and Real Ireland stand if Scotland decides to gently caress off or get hosed up?
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 04:07 |
|
Outrail posted:Where does Wales, Cornwell, Northern Ireland and Real Ireland stand if Scotland decides to gently caress off or get hosed up? couldn't even begin to tell you. If the Scots decide to separate and has a real movement still backing it up (ie the year long delay of real brexit doesn't sedate everyone into apathy) then youre watching a country dissolve in real time, which will be unpredictable to say the least
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 04:14 |
|
twoday posted:Imagine being some EU bureaucrat having to negotiate any kind of deal with Britain in the coming year seems like it would be pretty easy though
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 04:16 |
|
SardonicTyrant posted:The UK is that one kid that all professors despise. The one who never shows up and asks for extensions to homework. oh, a bojo!
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 05:39 |
|
[https://www.ft.com/content/af7ac1d8-441a-11ea-9a2a-98980971c1ff could someone tell the financial times what Brexit means?
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 05:45 |
|
lol scotland's not leaving. the uk's just going to get shitter and shitter for the unfortunates who are trapped there
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 06:01 |
|
Outrail posted:So what's going to happen to scotland? One guy I was speaking to (a racist, pro trump free market capitalist boomer/Gen x type) said it worked like this: They voted to stay with the UK. Now that the UK is leaving they're stuck with that and have to stick with the UK (even though scotland on its own wanted to stay with the EU). This logic is laughably inconsistent and dumb and in character for the guy. It’s interesting how those sorts are always gleeful that Scotland is stuck with us. Like they know it’s bad for Scotland. Like they know it’s a sinking ship. Outrail posted:Where does Wales, Cornwell, Northern Ireland and Real Ireland stand if Scotland decides to gently caress off or get hosed up? Wales isn’t going anywhere. Reasons range from a depressed despondant populace to the more controversial such as there’s just too many old English retirees here now who just want wales to be England with cheap housing. Also everyone with drive leaves quickly. Cardiff might retain some talent but the rest of here is a wasteland of the old or sick. I guess Wales is like an entire country of those dying American towns you see on tv. The ones where everyone is always leaving and everything slowly closes. Regarde Aduck has issued a correction as of 10:08 on Feb 2, 2020 |
# ? Feb 2, 2020 09:59 |
|
Well, that didn't take long. Racist Brexit sign demanding tower block residents speak English reported to police
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 10:56 |
|
Outrail posted:Where does Wales, Cornwell, Northern Ireland and Real Ireland stand if Scotland decides to gently caress off or get hosed up? wales and cornwell both voted for brexit despite being some of the areas most dependent on EU funding and lol at boris keeping that up
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 10:58 |
|
Stoatbringer posted:Well, that didn't take long. I'm sorry but they would expect British people to learn to speak their language from where they came from so why shouldn't they have to learn English if they come to live here? Inside their own home they can speak any language they want but when speaking to a British person they should speak English. (USER WAS PUT ON PROBATION FOR THIS POST)
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 11:09 |
|
oliwan posted:I'm sorry but they would expect British people to learn to speak their language from where they came from so why shouldn't they have to learn English if they come to live here? Inside their own home they can speak any language they want but when speaking to a British person they should speak English. The flats are their own homes, you pillock.
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 11:13 |
|
oliwan posted:I'm sorry but they would expect British people to learn to speak their language from where they came from so why shouldn't they have to learn English if they come to live here? Inside their own home they can speak any language they want but when speaking to a British person they should speak English. British expats, noted for adopting the local language
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 11:14 |
|
oliwan posted:I'm sorry but they would expect British people to learn to speak their language from where they came from so why shouldn't they have to learn English if they come to live here? Inside their own home they can speak any language they want but when speaking to a British person they should speak English. That's not what the lovely fash letter says though (Also you have clearly never seen the horrid boomer ex-pat communities full of your racist granny living on the Costa Del Sol in nightmarish spots with nothing but other old white racist Brits who can't even manage to say "Por Favor")
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 11:17 |
|
jesus christ ops that is obviously a quote from the comments
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 11:20 |
|
oliwan posted:jesus christ ops that is obviously a quote from the comments Probably says something about the high calibre of your posting.
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 11:21 |
|
forkboy84 posted:(Also you have clearly never seen the horrid boomer ex-pat communities full of your racist granny living on the Costa Del Sol in nightmarish spots with nothing but other old white racist Brits who can't even manage to say "Por Favor") Can't wait to see these people beaten and deported, their english pubs burnt to the ground.
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 11:23 |
|
twoday posted:Imagine being some EU bureaucrat having to negotiate any kind of deal with Britain in the coming year I don’t know, I think seeing the realisation slowly dawn on the UK negotiators that this isn’t going to be “the easiest negotiation ever” and that their position is actually very weak could be quite enjoyable. As for Brexit being a disaster, don’t forget that Dear Leader is in favour of it.
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 11:24 |
|
therattle posted:I don’t know, I think seeing the realisation slowly dawn on the UK negotiators that this isn’t going to be “the easiest negotiation ever” and that their position is actually very weak could be quite enjoyable. You're making the mistake of thinking they a) want a deal and b) therefore care about anything other than looking strong at home
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 11:28 |
|
Jose posted:You're making the mistake of thinking they a) want a deal and b) therefore care about anything other than looking strong at home I think they do want a deal because they still look after business interests to a degree, but that may well conflict with your b, which is also a powerful factor. I think when it comes to China and the US we are going to be absolutely shafted.
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 11:35 |
|
therattle posted:I think they do want a deal because they still look after business interests to a degree, but that may well conflict with your b, which is also a powerful factor. They don't give a gently caress op, all the brexit decisions are made for short term domestic political concerns and personal greed. The people who funded Boris' leadership campaign actually want No Deal
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 11:39 |
|
therattle posted:I think when it comes to China and the US we are going to be absolutely shafted. And Brussels is to blame!
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 11:40 |
|
therattle posted:I don’t know, I think seeing the realisation slowly dawn on the UK negotiators that this isn’t going to be “the easiest negotiation ever” and that their position is actually very weak could be quite enjoyable. I highly doubt that the negotiators think it's going to be easy given they will all be career diplomats. It's the Tory partisans and leadership that would have to realise it, but instead they will blame the deep state and the perfidious EU.
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 11:52 |
|
Purple Prince posted:I highly doubt that the negotiators think it's going to be easy given they will all be career diplomats. absolutely.
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 12:03 |
|
|
# ? May 19, 2024 15:25 |
|
https://twitter.com/LondonEconomic/status/1223753626985926656?s=19
|
# ? Feb 2, 2020 12:16 |