rogersix
Well-known member
- Jan 18, 2014
- 8,202
Hold on ! You don't live in the UK so your views are null and void
Regards
DF
but sydney's are? again, you make no sense
Hold on ! You don't live in the UK so your views are null and void
Regards
DF
but sydney's are? again, you make no sense
I was listening to a R5 phone-in today about Johnson. A rather dim woman challenged one of his critics to you give just one example of Johnson's 'so called lies'. This would have thrown me - there have been so many you kind of lose track of them.
At such a time, this link is invaluable. This is a very full compendium of Johnson's (and cronies') lies, with an explanation of why the contentions are lies. It is produced not by some trendy left wing academic but by Peter Oborne, a right-wing ex Telegraph staffer.
Hope the link works OK.
https://boris-johnson-lies.com/
Yes, it's good to see the list of lies in one place, although there are several more to be added now.....
Thanks for stepping in. He has shown a complete lack of interest in keeping to the thread topic but seems to show an unhealthy interest in the personal circumstances of other posters. Like so much of his (lack of) thought process, he is presumptuous and makes completely uniformed judgements.
For the record, as in all the rest of his vacuous declarations, he is wrong and I have reluctantly concluded that his comments are just tiresome and unworthy of response...
JCFG is banned for another week or so for breaking the new NSC abuse guidelines.Just need Chicken Run or JCFG to post a poll lead
I was listening to a R5 phone-in today about Johnson. A rather dim woman challenged one of his critics to you give just one example of Johnson's 'so called lies'. This would have thrown me - there have been so many you kind of lose track of them.
At such a time, this link is invaluable. This is a very full compendium of Johnson's (and cronies') lies, with an explanation of why the contentions are lies. It is produced not by some trendy left wing academic but by Peter Oborne, a right-wing ex Telegraph staffer.
Hope the link works OK.
https://boris-johnson-lies.com/
Apart from the frivolity and insults directed at Johnston (for which I can claim a fair share), I found an article that has genuinely deepened and expanded my understanding of the causes of recent woeful leadership in our country.... if you have time, it is well worth reading.....
https://www.theguardian.com/educati...s-boris-johnson-sad-little-boys-richard-beard
Apart from the frivolity and insults directed at Johnston (for which I can claim a fair share), I found an article that has genuinely deepened and expanded my understanding of the causes of recent woeful leadership in our country.... if you have time, it is well worth reading.....
https://www.theguardian.com/educati...s-boris-johnson-sad-little-boys-richard-beard
Utterly brilliant article; thanks for posting. Made me think that not only is there a strong case for abolishing these institutions in the name of social mobility but equally in the name of child protection.
Interesting article. The Guardian can always be relied upon to provide a balanced, stance free approach.
An interesting article by someone who suffered by being sent to boarding school at a very early age.
I went to boarding school from the age of eight and left the day before my eighteenth birthday. This was 1957 to 1966 and I’ll bet life for us ‘little men’ was rather more harsh and austere than Johnson, Cameron and Beard lived through quite a number of years later.
Yes, eight is far too young to sent away from your family and some boys naturally coped better than others, but I cannot recall endless crying and bed wetting at my prep school and certainly not at my public school. Lots of farting and mucking about after lights out in our dormitory at public school. Not surprising in a bare boarded stark dormitory housing 49!! of us.
Our headmaster had been head since pre war days and I don’t think the culture had changed much in all those years. Change began gradually in the mid sixties as it became clear that neither parents nor pupils would put up with the austerity that still existed.
As a bit of a rebel, my overiding memory is of being made to ‘conform’ to a certain set of rules. If you were an awkward bugger, the prefects or staff would get you under the catchall of ‘general attitude’. In my day, prefects were allowed to beat the younger boys. You were summonsed from the dormitory after lights out and sent to the bathroom, no dressing gown allowed , bent over the bath and whacked with a slipper by the senior prefect whilst the other prefects looked on. Unbelievable now!
I could go on with many tales and injustices, but won’t bore on.
In conclusion, I don’t think my education scarred me for life and I think I emerged relatively unscathed with a resilience and determination to never let any ******** I came across in life grind me down.
Would I wish my children or grandchildren to have had ‘my experiences’? Not in a million years.