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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.

Fred1new - 17 Aug 2015 15:02 - 62031 of 81564

Post 62032

Was that written by the tory party's (hence known as the UK Tea Party) own Donald Trumpet?

Fred1new - 17 Aug 2015 15:07 - 62032 of 81564

Before the crowing wakes the children remember this guy and the Tea Party's celebration before the election results came in.

Haystack - 17 Aug 2015 20:29 - 62033 of 81564

aldwickk - 18 Aug 2015 21:41 - 62034 of 81564

I use Kaspersky

aldwickk - 18 Aug 2015 21:47 - 62035 of 81564

I use Kaspersky

Haystack - 18 Aug 2015 23:07 - 62036 of 81564

"Never trust a man, who when left alone with a tea cosy... doesn't try it on."

Billy Connolly

Haystack - 18 Aug 2015 23:53 - 62037 of 81564

Corbyn could be elected leader with the backing of just 20 of the party’s 232 MPs.

MaxK - 19 Aug 2015 08:34 - 62038 of 81564

Moonboot tells it how it is......




Jeremy Corbyn is the curator of the future. His rivals are chasing an impossible dream

George Monbiot

Tuesday 18 August 2015 19.29 BST


Those who believe that New Labour’s clapped-out politics can transform the party’s fortunes are delusional





On one point I agree with his opponents: Jeremy Corbyn has little chance of winning the 2020 general election. But the same applies to the other three candidates. Either Labour must win back the seats it once held in Scotland (surely impossible without veering to the left) or it must beat the Conservatives by 12 points in England and Wales to form an overall majority. The impending boundary changes could mean that it has to win back 106 seats. If you think that is likely, I respectfully suggest that you are living in a dreamworld.

In fact, in this contest of improbabilities, Corbyn might stand the better chance. Only a disruptive political movement, that can ignite, mesmerise and mobilise, that can raise an army of volunteers – as the SNP did in Scotland – could smash the political concrete.

To imagine that Labour could overcome such odds by becoming bland, blurred and craven is to succumb to thinking that is simultaneously magical and despairing. Such dreamers argue that Labour has to recapture the middle ground. But there is no such place; no fixed political geography. The middle ground is a magic mountain that retreats as you approach. The more you chase it from the left, the further to the right it moves.



More of a very good read here:

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/aug/18/jeremy-corbyn-rivals-chase-impossible-dream

ExecLine - 19 Aug 2015 08:41 - 62039 of 81564

Pistorius gets parole and comes out of prison this Friday.

He doesn't seem to have been in there very long, does he? It seemed like his court case dragged on for ever.

A sentence so light surely cannot be right? To me, it just seems like he has spent more time in court getting his sentence, than he has in prison.

cynic - 19 Aug 2015 09:12 - 62040 of 81564

thoroughly agree ..... he was as guilty as guilty could be

jimmy b - 19 Aug 2015 09:12 - 62041 of 81564

No it's wrong , i watched a lot of the court case on TV and from what i saw i think he is guilty of murder .

ExecLine - 19 Aug 2015 10:18 - 62042 of 81564

Not enough was made concerning his propensity towards rapidly becoming phenominally angry, IMHO.

Am I correct with my own assumption, that everyone here in the UK knew of it and yet it was hardly mentioned.

Haystack - 19 Aug 2015 11:07 - 62043 of 81564

The prosecutors are appealing to try again for murder.

jimmy b - 19 Aug 2015 11:15 - 62044 of 81564

How do you wake up in the night knowing there are only two of you in the house , not know where the one is or even call out there name

(also they were in the same bed as you and were not there when you got up)

then start pumping bullets through a bathroom door ..

Sequestor - 19 Aug 2015 12:01 - 62045 of 81564

Don`t give me ideas.

jimmy b - 19 Aug 2015 12:05 - 62046 of 81564

:))

Haystack - 19 Aug 2015 23:52 - 62047 of 81564

He is beginning to believe his own propaganda. A megalomaniac in the making.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/jeremy-corbyn-tells-labour-mps-if-you-dont-back-me-the-grassroots-will-rise-up-10462770.html

Jeremy Corbyn tells Labour MPs: if you don't back me, the grassroots will rise up

Jeremy Corbyn issues a stark warning today to Labour MPs that he expects them to back his radical agenda to reshape the party or face organised revolts by his army of grass-roots supporters.

“I will absolutely use our supporters to push our agenda up to the parliamentary party and get them to follow that,” he said. “We have to encourage the Parliamentary Labour Party to be part of that process and not to stand in the way of democratising the party and empowering the party members. It is going to be an interesting discussion.”



Mr Corbyn’s comments will fuel fears on the right of the party that his election will precipitate a return of the “trigger ballot” fights of the 1980s where those on the left of the party attempted to deselect MPs who disagreed with the party’s left-wing platform.

Privately, some Labour MPs have told The Independent that they fear they will be “purged” under the cover of boundary changes that are likely to mean large numbers of MPs have to seek early reselection ahead of the next election.

In his comments, Mr Corbyn did little to dismiss these fears, warning that he expected his parliamentary colleagues to back his plan for policy-making to be devolved to his new army of supporters who have propelled him to be the favourite in next month’s contest.

“I just want to remind my dear friends in the Parliamentary Labour Party that we are honoured to be members of Parliament,” he said. “We have been supported by the Labour Party to become Labour members of Parliament.

“But we are not the entirety of the Labour Party – we are part of the Labour Party. And I want to see real democracy so this election gives a very strong mandate for change within our society.”

MaxK - 20 Aug 2015 00:05 - 62048 of 81564

To change that a little''''


“I just want to remind my dear friends in the Parliamentary Tory Party that we are honoured to be members of Parliament,” he said. “We have been supported by the Tory Party to become Tory members of Parliament.



Perhaps it's time for the tory party to remember who elected them, and why.

hilary - 20 Aug 2015 08:01 - 62049 of 81564

The Tories are doing a fantastic job now they're free of the Lib Dem shackles, and Labour are about to commit political suicide .

MaxK - 20 Aug 2015 08:57 - 62050 of 81564

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