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THE TALK TO YOURSELF THREAD. (NOWT)     

goldfinger - 09 Jun 2005 12:25

Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).

Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.

cheers GF.

MaxK - 22 Nov 2014 08:57 - 50983 of 81564

cynic - 22 Nov 2014 09:00 - 50984 of 81564

SNP
although one might argue that SNP has a greater affinity to labour than the tories, it is more than presumptuous to assume that they would be happy to (formally) align themselves with the labour party in westminster

i think, that like UKIP, they will sell themselves to the highest bidder with little regard to the colour of the rosette

Chris Carson - 22 Nov 2014 09:20 - 50985 of 81564

Emily Thornberry Twitter row: white van man Dan Ware is cage fighter who says 'she's caused me a lot of grief'
Neighbours suggest Emily Thornberry might not have tweeted picture of "gentle giant" Dan Ware's house if she had seen his muscular frame

Gordon Rayner By Gordon Rayner, Chief Reporter5:56PM GMT 21 Nov 2014
Had Emily Thornberry known that the occupant of the now famous “three flag house” was a heavily-built cage fighter, she may well have thought twice before posting her career-ending tweet.
On Friday Dan Ware got his own back by turning up on Mrs Thornberry’s doorstep in Islington, north London, where he was photographed knocking on her front door for the benefit of the tabloid newspaper that had taken him there.
He said Mrs Thornberry’s “snobby” tweet proved that “Labour is full of the upper classes”, adding: “I’ve come to her massive £3 million house in Islington to demand a personal apology from Miss Thornberry, Ed Miliband and the Labour Party on behalf of all ordinary, decent working people.

“I think they need to get out of their mansions and visit the working class.”
Mrs Thornberry had already left for Parliament by the time the muscular 37-year-old arrived on her doorstep.
Mr Ware, a car dealer who has four children with his ex-wife, lives with his new partner, Donna, and shares parenting duties with the children’s mother.
He was upset not only at the way Mrs Thornberry appeared to be looking down her nose at the three England flags on his house in Strood, Kent, but also by the fact that his white Ford Transit van’s number plate was clearly legible in the picture she tweeted.
“She’s caused me a lot of grief,” he said. “She’s been very stupid.”
Mr Ware, a passionate fan of both the England football team and West Ham United, describes himself as a Sun reader as well as being “working class”. He and his then wife bought his house for £119,000 in 2002.
He is the sort of voter Labour needs on its side if it is to stand any chance at next year’s general election, but is so disaffected with politics he says he “can’t even remember when I last voted” because: “No matter who you have in, it doesn’t matter.” He had not even been aware that a by-election was happening in Rochester and Strood before reporters started knocking on his door.
His neighbour Sharon Taft, 54, said: “Dan is a gentleman, he is a gentle giant.
"Everyone thinks it's ridiculous what has happened, he put [the flags] up for the World Cup and just kept them there. I think he just feels a bit embarrassed about it all, he's quite a private person.”
Another neighbour said: “We all saw him this morning and asked for his autograph.
"He was a bit red-faced but took it in good spirits.
"He's just a normal bloke, there was no reason for her to say what she did and post the picture.
"He is a cage fighter so I wouldn't want to get on the wrong side of him, but out of the cage, he isn't like that at all, he's so nice.”

MaxK - 22 Nov 2014 09:41 - 50986 of 81564

Haystack - 22 Nov 2014 09:55 - 50987 of 81564

A further indication that UKIPers are nutters

https://yougov.co.uk/news/2014/11/21/supporting-ukip-has-more-personal-stigma-than-the/

Supporting UKIP has more personal stigma than the other parties

A significant minority of voters would find it hard to stay friends with a UKIP convert

It may have been too little, too late, but the Conservatives briefly made headlines with warnings that making Rochester and Strood a UKIP constituency would lower the value of homes there.

The last-ditch effort clearly wasn’t enough – the UKIP candidate, Mark Reckless, won with a majority of nearly 3,000 votes – but it did raise the question of whether there was a particular stigma attached to voting UKIP, and new YouGov research suggests there is to a greater degree than any of the other main parties.

To test this, YouGov asked the following question about supporters of the four main parties: How would you feel if a good friend of yours became a supporter of ­­­_________?

Respondents were allowed to say whether they would ‘agree’ or ‘disagree’ with their friend, but also whether it would affect their friendship either positively or negatively.

It revealed that while most Labour voters would (predictably) ‘disagree’ with their friend if they began supporting the Conservatives, few (only 14%) would find it harder to stay friends. The same was true of Conservatives on a Labour-supporting and Lib Dems on a Labour- or Tory-supporting friend. Overall, only 3% of voters would find it difficult to be friends with a Labour supporter, 3% would find it difficult with a Green supporter, 5% for a Lib Dem and 7% for a Conservative.

With UKIP, the numbers are much higher. One in four voters (24%) would find it harder to stay close with a ‘good friend’ if the friend became a UKIP supporter. While most voters still wouldn't feel this way – 31% would even 'agree' with their newly UKIP-supporting friend – the response to the UKIP convert is significantly more negative than for other parties.

The negative sentiment towards UKIP was much more common among Labour (40%) and Lib Dem voters (42%) and than among Conservative voters (13%).

cynic - 22 Nov 2014 09:59 - 50988 of 81564

just shows how much house prices vary across the country .... in merthyr or even somewhere quite nice on the carmarthen coast, you could probably buy a mid-terrace house for about £60,000

it's called supply and demand (aka market forces) and, without getting silly about it, it does rather highlight the current PC nonsense about "mansion tax" for the so-called super-wealthy

i won't get drawn on that one, but the appalling "wealth tax" currently applicable in france really does show its stupidity

Stan - 22 Nov 2014 10:04 - 50989 of 81564

Oh belt up Alf, you will be dealt with later.. again -):

Haystack - 22 Nov 2014 10:13 - 50990 of 81564

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2844749/Labour-chaos-sacking-snob-MP-War-breaks-party-desperate-Miliband-claims-respects-White-Van-Man.html

Labour in chaos over sacking of snob MP: War breaks out in party as desperate Miliband claims he respects White Van Man

Labour MPs split after Miliband orders Emily Thornberry to stand down

Some branded gaffe 'horrendous' while others called her treatment unfair

Aides said Miliband was 'angrier than he has ever been' after news broke

Ed Miliband tried to end Labour’s disastrous ‘elitism’ row yesterday by insisting he admires the working classes.

Ukip’s second poll victory over the Tories had been eclipsed by a Labour frontbencher apparently sneering at a white van driver whose modest home is decked with England flags.

Mr Miliband bizarrely declared he felt ‘respect’ on seeing a white van and insisted it was right for Emily Thornberry to resign over her tweet.

But his desperate intervention failed to calm Labour Party turmoil.

Some of his MPs said Miss Thornberry’s gaffe was ‘horrendous’ while others claimed he was playing into Tory hands by asking her to quit.

On a dramatic day at Westminster:

The full scale of the doomed Tory attempt to hold Rochester was laid bare, with Cabinet ministers making 100 visits;
Nigel Farage claimed Labour had shown itself to be ‘anti-English’ and Ukip was now the party of the working class;
A potential Tory defector welcomed Ukip’s new MP back to Westminster and sided with the party in an NHS vote;
David Cameron was urged by Tory MPs to toughen his stance on the EU and immigration;
The Lib Dems suffered their worst ever result, finishing fifth with just 349 votes.

The furore over Miss Thornberry, MP for Islington South and Finsbury, erupted after she tweeted the picture of Daniel Ware’s home while campaigning in Rochester.

When accused of sneering, she claimed she had ‘never seen anything like’ the house and said her critics were prejudiced against Islington, which has become a byword for champagne socialism.

But Mr Miliband was said to have exploded in fury when he heard about Miss Thornberry’s tweet, first ordering her to apologise and later telling her to stand down as shadow attorney general.

Labour strategists had hoped a Ukip landslide in Rochester would mark the moment that pressure switched on to Mr Cameron and away from Mr Miliband, who has endured weeks of speculation about his leadership.

But with Ukip’s win narrower than expected, a result likely to deter further potential defectors who want to keep their Commons seats after next May’ s election, there was little sign of Tory disunity.

Instead, Labour was riven over whether Mr Miliband’s treatment of Miss Thornberry had been over the top and how it should counter the threat to its working-class vote from Ukip.

Her treatment was particularly brutal, given that she was the first MP to nominate him for the party leadership. However aides said Mr Miliband was ‘angrier than he has ever been’.

Some senior figures privately accused the Labour leader of overreacting because of his own sensitivity about accusations made earlier this month in the traditionally supportive New Statesman magazine that he is an ‘old-style Hampstead socialist’.

‘Ed’s abandoned an ally when his enemies have survived far worse,’ one source said.

Miss Thornberry said: ‘I made a mistake, I’ve resigned and if I’ve upset anyone or insulted anyone I apologise.’

Mr Miliband insisted: ‘I’m afraid her tweet conveyed a sense of disrespect.

'That’s not my view, that’s not Labour’s view, it’s wrong, it never will be our view, and that is why I think it is right that she resigned.’

Asked what he thought when he sees a white van outside a house, Mr Miliband replied: ‘What is going through my mind is respect.
'Respect is the basic rule of politics and I’m afraid her tweet conveyed a sense of disrespect. There is nothing unusual or odd, as her tweet implied, with having an England flag in your window.’

Mr Cameron said: ‘Emily Thornberry is one of Ed Miliband’s closest allies and aides. Effectively what this means is that Ed Miliband’s Labour Party sneers at people who work hard, who are patriotic and who love their country.’

Mr Farage said Labour voters looking at the party’s leadership would not recognise them as ‘members of their own tribe’.

Labour MP John Mann said: ‘It was horrendous. It insults people like me, it insults the people I know – my friends and family – Labour voters across the country because white vans, England flags, they’re Labour values.’

Ian Austin, a former Labour frontbencher, said: ‘Lots of people around the country suspect the country is run or politics is run by an out-of-touch metropolitan elite that doesn’t understand anything about their lives, doesn’t understand the pressure they’re under, doesn’t care about their concerns, and sneers at them.’

But Labour’s Alan Johnson said he did not think Miss Thornberry should have quit: ‘She’s not a stranger to council housing – it’s where she comes from. It doesn’t sound to me like a resignation scandal.’

Though it held the seat for 13 years until 2010, Labour put little effort into the contest in Rochester, triggered by the defection to Ukip of former Conservative MP Mark Reckless, who won it for his new party.

MaxK - 22 Nov 2014 10:18 - 50991 of 81564

The full scale of the doomed Tory attempt to hold Rochester was laid bare, with Cabinet ministers making 100 visits;

aldwickk - 22 Nov 2014 10:29 - 50992 of 81564

Stan

A man of few words and even less brain cell's

Fred

Have you been reading , Readers Digest's "lean a new word every month " elucidate Do you do an impression of that other Welsh wind bag Niel Kinnock ?

Fred1new - 22 Nov 2014 10:39 - 50993 of 81564

cynic - 22 Nov 2014 10:47 - 50994 of 81564

stan - quite seriously .... have a look at how the current french wealth tax is levied ..... it is so-called socialism gone mad and with far-reaching effects even for hard-up farmers and the like

Haystack - 22 Nov 2014 11:29 - 50995 of 81564

Hollande was in atricky position when he was elected. He won on an anti-austerity, socialist platform. The problem is that he didn't have an alternative plan that was costed. He essentially had the same plan as our Labour party, which was to pump money into the economy. He wanted to spend money on infrastructure projects and took a Keynesian stance of trying to spend his way out of a recession.

He found quite quickly that funds were not available. He had two choices. One was to increase taxes or borrow. It was then that France's credit status was downgraded making borrowing more expensive. He did borrow quite a bit, but there were threats to downgrade France even further. Clearly borrowing was a dead end, especially as the medicine was not working. He then switched to taxes and introduced very aggressive higher tax rates. These have hit wealthy people, some of whom have left the country. As cynic says, it has hit farmers and people with any assets.

The sad thing for Holland's, is that even the tax hikes haven't worked and he is now France's most unpopular leader. If there was an election tomorrow, his party would be wiped out.

There is a lesson to be learnt by the UK.

cynic - 22 Nov 2014 12:19 - 50997 of 81564

great pix ..... confess i have never bothered to go up there as it's something of a hassle to book

i'm very surprised that it hasn't become a prime terrorist target, though i'm sure it's very well guarded and protected
apart from the fact that it is an iconic building, i believe many orthodox moslems find it offensive as they consider it hubris or somesuch for humans to try to climb to or as high as Allah

i'm sure we must have some moslems on this site, or at some with decent knowledge who can confirm or demolish this statement

MaxK - 22 Nov 2014 14:06 - 50998 of 81564

DAILY MAIL COMMENT: It's no good Dave. To keep out Red Ed, you MUST change

By Daily Mail Comment

Published: 01:40, 22 November 2014 | Updated: 01:54, 22 November 2014


Asked yesterday what goes through his mind when he sees a white van parked outside a house, an awkward-looking Ed Miliband paused and, oozing sincerity, recited … ‘Respect’.

Whether this is true or, more likely, just a desperate and slightly ludicrous sound-bite dreamed up by his spin doctors didn’t matter a jot.

The damage had already been done by his close friend Emily Thornberry, whose sneering tweet of a van parked outside a home decorated with England flags will be the abiding — and most devastating — memory of the Rochester by-election.



David Cameron must scrap his commitment to spending £12billion a year on foreign aid, appeal to Ukip defectors by advancing the date of the promised EU referendum, and stop sneering at Ukip supporters



In a single image, this champagne socialist MP — a human rights lawyer who lives in a £2.9 million house in trendy Islington with her High Court judge husband (whose chambers offers advice on setting up offshore trusts), and who send their children to a selective school 13 miles away so they can avoid the appalling local comprehensives — summed up Labour’s condescending and arrogant disregard for ordinary voters.


In a single image, this champagne socialist MP — a human rights lawyer who lives in a £2.9 million house in trendy Islington with her High Court judge husband (whose chambers offers advice on setting up offshore trusts), and who send their children to a selective school 13 miles away so they can avoid the appalling local comprehensives — summed up Labour’s condescending and arrogant disregard for ordinary voters.

Indeed, how telling that a schism opened in the Labour Party yesterday, with many of Mr Miliband’s MPs believing Ms Thornberry should not have been made to resign from her shadow post, perhaps because they share her disdain for ‘everyday people’, to use her leader’s own cringemaking phrase.

Doubtless, David Cameron was grateful to Labour for providing a distraction from his own woes in Rochester, where Ukip overturned a 9,500 majority to win its second MP in a month.

When the by-election was called, ministers spoke bullishly of pricking the Ukip bubble — with Mr Cameron saying unedifyingly that he would stop the defector Mark Reckless from getting his ‘fat arse’ back on the green benches of the Commons.





Emily Thornberry's sneering tweet of a van parked outside a home decorated with England flags will be the abiding memory of the Rochester by-election

But, despite flooding the Kent constituency with Cabinet ministers — the Prime Minister himself made an unprecedented five visits — the Tories lost by almost 3,000 votes.



More: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2844947/DAILY-MAIL-COMMENT-s-no-good-Dave-Red-Ed-change.html






aldwickk - 22 Nov 2014 14:11 - 50999 of 81564

Dennis Skinner MP

what does he contribute to the debate ? His all outdated class war ranting and doesn't put forward anything of substance, his become a joke.

ExecLine - 22 Nov 2014 14:31 - 51000 of 81564



Christian Horner's guests at Red Bull:

Haystack - 22 Nov 2014 16:29 - 51001 of 81564

It is a sign of Labour's woes, when Miliband has to remind people that the party supports working people.

Haystack - 22 Nov 2014 16:59 - 51002 of 81564

http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/rochester-byelection-forget-emily-thornberry-labour-long-since-betrayed-the-working-class-9876518.html

Rochester by-election: Forget Emily Thornberry, Labour long since betrayed the working class

What is striking about the Emily Thornberry affair is not that a Labour minister has “shown contempt for the working class”, as has been suggested, but that this should be a surprise.

This contempt wasn’t a clause in the party’s constitution, but increasingly it came close to being a policy within the past fifty years - finally becoming official in the 1990s when the Labour government embraced an open-door approach to immigration, fully aware that it would be opposed by the masses. And so - it didn’t tell them. It kept the news within its ranks in the hallowed halls of Westminster, and at north London dinner parties far from the postcodes where white vans are parked and the flag of St George flies. Well, it certainly smelt like contempt.

Part of the Labour party story - beyond the fleeting triumphs and the false dawns - has been that of championing an image of the working class, while showing contempt for the working class that fails to fit this image. Way back, this was anyone who wanted to own their own home, run their own business, watch ITV, send their kids to grammar school, or live next door to people they felt they had something in common with. This changed over time, thankfully. The party realised that the multitude didn’t exist in some folksy, prelapsarian, mythical north somewhere in the 1930s.

The perennials of unemployment, housing lists and the north-south divide persisted, but essentially the outlook and the aspirations of the working class changed. What didn’t was the party’s failure to address concerns among the multitude - immigration, multiculturalism, Europe - that didn’t fit with the image in which it had cast the average bloke, whoever he was. (As a cub reporter the late Gilbert Harding charged into a pub and bellowed: “Where will I find the average man?” Only to discover that every example was the exception to the rule).

From the off, those early supporters of the Labour party, the Fabians Beatrice and Sidney Webb, showed contempt for the leisure of the working class. Those steeped in the internationalism of the hard left, and the self-loathing of the soft-centre, never understood the patriotism of the British working class - something that was an extension of the neighbourhood, as surely as this was an extension of the street, and the street an extension of the home, for those that had little else to align themselves with. Along with this came an insularity, localism, collectivism (that was celebrated), but equally, a negative reaction to outsiders arriving en masse and changing the cultural landscape (which was condemned).

Seeing the image tweeted by Labour’s now former shadow attorney general, it’s as though this concept of the working class is being held up to ridicule. The absence of an accompanying comment appears to underline this. Thornberry’s fatal faux pas has been compared with that of Gordon Brown’s almighty slip-up, when he was heard to refer to Labour voter Gillian Duffy as a bigot for daring to raise the taboo of immigration. Chances are this might have a similar impact.

Emily Thornberry claims there was no malice aforethought in her eagerness to keep her Twitter followers updated on her day out. It was simply that she never comes across such sights on the Islington street in which she lives. But we all live in a culture where such cries of innocuousness and innocence are redundant. It’s a culture that the Labour party itself has created - a false triumph you could argue - and now it has come along and bitten one of its own on the rear. Before, and certainly beyond the era of the Macpherson Report and its thought crime of “unwitting prejudice”, we had to be seen to be offended, and often on the behalf of others; of being guilty until proven innocent; of giving interpretation precedence over intention. How ironic, that it should now be a character so much part of that culture who has been condemned and forced to apologise and resign - the very stereotype and caricature, no less: a multi-millionaire, Islington-living, Labour minister who married well, and created her riches in the nebulous but lucrative field of human rights law.

The stereotypical white van man with his St George flag, must be absolutely relishing this as he prepares to give his vote to another party. Just like so many of his number in Rochester, Clacton, and Heywood and Middleton.
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