Still, your hysterical "MI5 is fixing the election" fantasy may have helped.
It didn't seem hysterical at the time. I'm still surprised that the referendum WASN'T fixed.
Still, your hysterical "MI5 is fixing the election" fantasy may have helped.
That's what hysterics always say.It didn't seem hysterical at the time.
That's what hysterics always say.
Never happen we're far too polite to say sh_t in public.The Brits want their country back from all those useless immigrants who slither into Britain to have the locals look after them.
With Canada's high immigrant ion rate, there will soon be a backlash against the immigrants here as well.
If there were no borders who would provide your welfare check ?
Oh I see. So if there's there's no borders and we're all Earthlings, then how can you constantly whine about how this land was stolen?
The Brits want their country back from all those useless immigrants who slither into Britain to have the locals look after them.
With Canada's high immigrant ion rate, there will soon be a backlash against the immigrants here as well.
He can't. Some immigrant got his job cleaning toilets at the Savoy.
We needed austerity after the masive debt that thirteen years of Labour Government saddled us with.
Interesting to see that the new Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Hammond, has said he will reverse many of Osborne's austerity measures. I'm not sure how he can do that without imposing more debt upon the country.
I'm sure patriots would be willing to pay more tax. Austerity is necessary in the face of debt, but it must be wise too. Certain key areas must never succomb to austerity: public education and trades and professional education for the underpaid.
Those are key investments that are essential even in the most austere of times short of an all-out war economy.
You don't create jobs by kicking the job creators out. You create access to the jobs that are omnipresent by raising people's qualifications. Don't blame immigrants for being more qualified than the locals.
Francis Fukuyama writes in a recent excellent essay in Foreign Affairs: “‘Populism’ is the label that political elites attach to policies supported by ordinary citizens that they don’t like.” Populism is a movement against the status quo. It represents the beginnings of something new, though it is generally much clearer about what it is against than what it is for. It can be progressive or reactionary, but more usually both.
Brexit is a classic example of such populism. It has overturned a fundamental cornerstone of UK policy since the early 1970s. Though ostensibly about Europe, it was in fact about much more: a cri de coeur from those who feel they have lost out and been left behind, whose living standards have stagnated or worse since the 1980s, who feel dislocated by large-scale immigration over which they have no control and who face an increasingly insecure and casualised labour market. Their revolt has paralysed the governing elite, already claimed one prime minister, and left the latest one fumbling around in the dark looking for divine inspiration.
The re-emergence of class should not be confused with the labour movement. They are not synonymous: this is obvious in the US and increasingly the case in the UK. Indeed, over the last half-century, there has been a growing separation between the two in Britain. The re-emergence of the working class as a political voice in Britain, most notably in the Brexit vote, can best be described as an inchoate expression of resentment and protest, with only a very weak sense of belonging to the labour movement.
Just as the Labour party took far too long to come to terms with the rise of Thatcherism and the birth of a new era at the end of the 70s, now it could not grasp that the Thatcherite paradigm, which they eventually came to embrace in the form of New Labour, had finally run its course. Labour, like everyone else, is obliged to think anew. The membership in their antipathy to New Labour turned to someone who had never accepted the latter, who was the polar opposite in almost every respect of Blair, and embodying an authenticity and decency which Blair patently did not.
Corbyn is not a product of the new times, he is a throwback to the late 70s and early 80s. That is both his strength and also his weakness. He is uncontaminated by the New Labour legacy because he has never accepted it. But nor, it would seem, does he understand the nature of the new era. The danger is that he is possessed of feet of clay in what is a highly fluid and unpredictable political environment, devoid of any certainties of almost any kind, in which Labour finds itself dangerously divided and weakened.
Labour may be in intensive care, but the condition of the Conservatives is not a great deal better.
The reasons are not difficult to explain. The hyper-globalisation era has been systematically stacked in favour of capital against labour: international trading agreements, drawn up in great secrecy, with business on the inside and the unions and citizens excluded, the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) being but the latest examples; the politico-legal attack on the unions; the encouragement of large-scale immigration in both the US and Europe that helped to undermine the bargaining power of the domestic workforce; and the failure to retrain displaced workers in any meaningful way.
more
https://www.theguardian.com/comment...h-of-neoliberalism-crisis-in-western-politics
Yes all poor people are dumbarsesIf they ain't thick, how come they're poor?
The Brits want their country back from all those useless immigrants who slither into Britain to have the locals look after them.
With Canada's high immigrant ion rate, there will soon be a backlash against the immigrants here as well.
I'm guessing you can also find Kosher food there as well as Ukrainian, Italian, Chinese, German, East Indian, Thai, and... well, you should get the picture.Speaking of immigrants, I noticed this week that our local Costco has lambs in the cooler now. With a sign that they are Halal.