Buzzer
Languidly Clinical
- Oct 1, 2006
- 26,121
The longer it goes on, the more desperate and boring his haters become; there are only so many ways one can say the same thing.
"Whatever"..."Wouldn't happen in Germany"
Yes. I see what you mean.
The longer it goes on, the more desperate and boring his haters become; there are only so many ways one can say the same thing.
"Whatever"..."Wouldn't happen in Germany"
Yes. I see what you mean.
I'll just leave this here, in the probably futile hope you and others will read it and take it on board.
http://owenjonesramblings.tumblr.com/post/127086741904/on-meeting-dodgy-people
I'll just leave this here, in the probably futile hope you and others will read it and take it on board.
http://owenjonesramblings.tumblr.com/post/127086741904/on-meeting-dodgy-people
Just read Jones's blog and I take on board the fact that Corbyn, along with all politicians, meets lots of people with unsavoury views as part of his job. That doesn't take away one part from what I wrote though. He either has a very bad memory or he's lying about not knowing of Jahjah. And Jones blog does not address Corbyn's donations to organisations, it doesn't mention the glowing references and donatiohe gives to people that he knows are dodgy.
I also think Jones is being very coy when he says that the likes of Blair and Thatcher have got away with minimal scrutiny regarding their links to murderous regimes such as Saudi Arabia. Firstly, no they haven't. Blair is hounded daily and quite rightly about how much money he makes from his links both from within the press and the Labour Party. Secondly, is Jones saying that because he perceives Blair and Thatcher to have been treated lightly that Corbyn should be afforded the same light touch that Jones abhors?
Thirdly, Blair and Thatcher have/had those links for political expediency by virtue of their positions of power. Corbyn, we are told is different; man of principle who can afford to have principles because he is a maverick and beholden to no-one. Why then did he knowingly continue to be a mouthpiece for PressTV, the Iranian Government propaganda machine and as awful, as homophobic, as anti-semitic and murderous as the Saudi government that Jones mentions? Corbyn was even criticised by Ofcom for his involvement. I'd like to know Jones's views on that.
Still don't get what you are accusing JC of. He is not an an anti-semite, he has spent his political career campaigning against racism and for peaceful resolutions to conflicts when others are happy to go to war at the drop of a hat.
There are people in the middle east with despicable views, well that's hardly news, and plenty of them are in the Israeli government and the Saudi royal family too. You cannot move for people with repugnant views in the middle east, but if you want to get stuff done you will have to take deep breath and sit down and talk with them at some point.
British foreign policy has been an unmitigated disaster over the last decade, hundreds of thousands are dead, millions are displaced, and more people (in the countries we have destabilised) live with the threat of violent death than ever before. In addition to that we now live in a society where the politics of fear is used to justify an ever increasing assault on civil liberties.
Corbin offers a fresh approach to foreign policy and I welcome it.
JC can wins votes back elsewhere and in the 34% of people that did not vote and includes a lot of young people.
That's 34% of the electorate that didn't vote - in addition,there are also an estimated 7.5m people eligible to vote who aren't on the electoral roll. JC is also looking to target many of these (it's thought that a lot of them are students). Corbyn's not getting all these people voting but if he can get just a fifth, that's about 4m extra voters - that would make a huge difference. And he wouldn't have to take a single vote back from the Tories
With our political system it depends where they are i.e swing seats, but he cam also win back seats in Scotland where the Tories cannot
That's 34% of the electorate that didn't vote - in addition,there are also an estimated 7.5m people eligible to vote who aren't on the electoral roll. JC is also looking to target many of these (it's thought that a lot of them are students). Corbyn's not getting all these people voting but if he can get just a fifth, that's about 4m extra voters - that would make a huge difference. And he wouldn't have to take a single vote back from the Tories
What about the New Labour votes he would lose? Not an insubstantial amount I guess.
Yes, there may well be some but remember that Labour has already lost a lot of those New Labour voters (43% in 1997, 28% in 2010, the last really NL election - Miliband was New Labour with some Old Labour thrown in).
Historically, 28% is the party's lowest share - it got that in 1983 too. Corbyn may lose the party a few more but I think he'll recover a lot more
Think I'll add "Corbyn supports the IRA" to the list of NSC cliches.
I think you should factor in that by the next election, there will have been an EU referendum, so UKIP are likely to be less important by then. Their percentage of the vote will drop, and this will more than likely increase the Tory vote.
I've heard several people say they like his honesty and plain speaking.