Got something to say or just want fewer pesky ads? Join us... 😊

Anyone ELSE at the LEVEL for JC rally ?



Lincoln Imp

Well-known member
Feb 2, 2009
5,964
Nothing wrong in principle with British party leaders - I just watched Vince Cable giving his conference address on the parliament channel. I had meant to flip back to The Championship but Cable just kept saying exactly the right things in that quiet and reasonable voice of his. If people thought LibDems would get enough votes to win they'd get enough votes to win.
 




Super Steve Earle

Well-known member
Feb 23, 2009
8,896
North of Brighton
Nothing wrong in principle with British party leaders - I just watched Vince Cable giving his conference address on the parliament channel. I had meant to flip back to The Championship but Cable just kept saying exactly the right things in that quiet and reasonable voice of his. If people thought LibDems would get enough votes to win they'd get enough votes to win.

I hate Cable, with his reasonable tones. I genuinely despise the man.
 


Hampster Gull

Well-known member
Dec 22, 2010
13,465
Nothing wrong in principle with British party leaders - I just watched Vince Cable giving his conference address on the parliament channel. I had meant to flip back to The Championship but Cable just kept saying exactly the right things in that quiet and reasonable voice of his. If people thought LibDems would get enough votes to win they'd get enough votes to win.

He's a top man, would be a great PM
 








Big G

New member
Dec 14, 2005
1,086
Brighton
That I doubt, I drove past at 6 and it's not as packed as you think, empty to the left and right of the park, great to see him in Brighton just as the students start term great timing eh, we should not be seeing hammer and sickle flags any more than swastika flags.

Err are you aware mate.
It's perfectly acceptable to display flags of politics of the extreme left...it's all to do with the hypocrisy and double standards!
 


timbha

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
10,487
Sussex
Err are you aware mate.
It's perfectly acceptable to display flags of politics of the extreme left...it's all to do with the hypocrisy and double standards!

Yes, and it's very worrying how far this runaway (cult) train will be allowed to run with the support of anarchists and ex Greens
 


Big G

New member
Dec 14, 2005
1,086
Brighton
Yes, and it's very worrying how far this runaway (cult) train will be allowed to run with the support of anarchists and ex Greens

Indeed mate...makes my blood boil.
Don't care for extreme left or right but this growing acceptability that it's ok or 'right on' if it's lefty politics is the epitome of hypocrisy!
 






Raleigh Chopper

New member
Sep 1, 2011
12,054
Plymouth
This "JC" is certainly no saviour of all men......More likely to condemn us to a living hell given the opportunity.........

Thanks for the heads up mate, I certainly won't be voting for him then, I mean I would hate it to get worse than this vile peice of useless crap and her merry band of dormitory pillow fighters that we currently have and flushing the country down the Khazi.
 








dazzer6666

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Mar 27, 2013
55,382
Burgess Hill
That I doubt, I drove past at 6 and it's not as packed as you think, empty to the left and right of the park, great to see him in Brighton just as the students start term great timing eh, we should not be seeing hammer and sickle flags any more than swastika flags.

Loads bought tickets for the party loyalty points but couldn't be arsed to turn up.
 






PaoloAlbioni

New member
May 6, 2016
126
IMG_5199.JPG
Several thousand present when John McDonell began proceedings around 6.20pm with excellent opening speech, very good humoured too. 5 other brief but moving speeches from activists including Diane Abbott's sister before JC spoke to massive cheers and some sporadic outbreaks of 'Oohhh Jeremy Corrrbyn'. I would have liked more on Brexit but excellent on education, NHS, renationalisation of the railways, protection for EU migrants and the scandals of immoral wealth distribution and homelessness. All in all, a very galvanising early evening on the Level.
Now 3 points tomorrow would complete a perfect weekend....
 


The Rivet

Well-known member
Aug 9, 2011
4,592
I can remember a story/truth told to me as a child by a friends father. It included this; 'We sought a belief, a truth and an ideology we could identify with. We didn't study history as those that were educated. We were needy, wanted a leader and a miracle economic boom', 'He was called Stalin and many believed him and millions died.'
 


jimhigham

Je Suis Rhino
Apr 25, 2009
8,026
Woking
I've heard the suggestion that Corbyn will take us back to the seventies a thousand times. I can just about recall the tail end of the seventies. I have a better recollection of dismayed parents rather than anything that actually affected me. I'm in no rush to go back there. However, it hardly seems that we are living in some sort of golden age now. Inequality is rising, housing supply continues to diminish and prospects for the youth are the worst that they have been for generations.

One could argue that Thatcher ushered in a much needed correction against trade union excess. One could equally well argue that Corbyn is required to oversee a correction against the worst of largely unregulated capitalism. I'm not averse to the concept of such a correction now and feel it is overdue. The trick lies in knowing when to apply the breaks and I have little confidence that Corbyn would even want to.

We live in those interesting times we were warned about. It just seems they've been burbling away my entire life.
 


Jul 20, 2003
20,647
I can remember a story/truth told to me as a child by a friends father. It included this; 'We sought a belief, a truth and an ideology we could identify with. We didn't study history as those that were educated. We were needy, wanted a leader and a miracle economic boom', 'He was called Stalin and many believed him and millions died.'

I don't think he'd get away with that kind of thing.
 






The Rivet

Well-known member
Aug 9, 2011
4,592
JC, he really is a clown.

LONDON (Reuters) - The British Labour Party’s socialist leader Jeremy Corbyn said there needed to be dialogue to stop growing violence in Venezuela but stopped short of condemning its President Nicolas Maduro who he has vociferously supported in the past.

Corbyn has been under pressure at home to speak out about the situation in the South American nation amid international criticism of Maduro who once described the British politician as “a great friend of Venezuela”.

Some 120 people have been killed during four months of sustained anti-government protests and Maduro has faced global pressure to dismantle a newly created pro-government constituent assembly which has been condemned as a power grab.

“There has to be a dialogue and a process that respects the independence of the judiciary and respects the human rights of all,” Corbyn, who has long expressed admiration for Venezuela’s socialist regime, told broadcasters.
 
Last edited:


Albion and Premier League latest from Sky Sports


Top
Link Here