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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.

Haystack - 12 Sep 2015 12:35 - 62721 of 81564

Diane Abbot saying the result shows the mood of the country. In fact, all it indicates is the moid of the activists. The polls show little appetite for Corbyn in the electorate.

Haystack - 12 Sep 2015 12:40 - 62722 of 81564

I voted for Corbyn using my cat's name - Simon. I have some friends who voted for him 2, 3, and 4 times.

MaxK - 12 Sep 2015 12:42 - 62723 of 81564

Nearly 80% turnout of registered members, and Corbyn stuffs the other three.

The PLP is going to have a problem if they want to out him.

aldwickk - 12 Sep 2015 12:55 - 62724 of 81564

Fred posted

Over the years, I have had immigrants from various countries staying as non-paying guests with my family for short and long periods. Months and in one case years and also helped to pay college fees etc..

MUG

Fred1new - 12 Sep 2015 13:03 - 62725 of 81564

Haze.

Your cat probably is more able to make intelligent choices than you can!

Fred1new - 12 Sep 2015 13:07 - 62726 of 81564

It is an interesting choice and will be interesting to see how he reorganises the Labour party and I think his values will have more appeal to Middle England and younger members of society than the present corrupted tory party.

At least he smells honest and "sincere".

V.I. to watch.

jimmy b - 12 Sep 2015 13:11 - 62727 of 81564

aldwickk , Fred talks bull ,probably had a friend to stay once , someone who can spend his days insulting any one who doesn't agree with his views wouldn't be open to accepting strangers in to his home ,it makes sense .

Fred1new - 12 Sep 2015 13:35 - 62728 of 81564

JB.

From memory, Ald was too strange for me and you are of a similar ilk.

I would think both of you as from the same planet as the tinker!

jimmy b - 12 Sep 2015 14:00 - 62729 of 81564

Be nice if you stopped referring to people who don't hold your view as Hitler and a racist or a BNP/EDL sympathiser of which i am none . You show a very closed mind and lack of intelligence .

aldwickk - 12 Sep 2015 14:12 - 62730 of 81564

Or UKIP

Fred1new - 12 Sep 2015 14:49 - 62731 of 81564

I was praising you!

Haystack - 12 Sep 2015 15:02 - 62732 of 81564

There was a 76.3% turnout in the Labour leadership election. Corbyn got 59.5% of the vote. That makes 45.4% of the Labour voters chose Corbyn. But that was only 251,00 of 422,000 the people who voted. There are 45.6m registered voters. That means 0.48% of the electorate voted for Corbyn. Not only is that a minute number of supporters, but they are all activists.

MaxK - 12 Sep 2015 15:10 - 62733 of 81564

Can you remind us all, how many votes Cameroon got to become leader?

Haystack - 12 Sep 2015 15:34 - 62734 of 81564

That is not relevant. I was talking about Corbyn's potentially low appeal to the voters.

Haystack - 12 Sep 2015 16:04 - 62735 of 81564

It puts Corbyn's win into perspective when you think that Cameron took 68% of the votes of his party members in his leadership win in 2005. There is so much fuss about Corbyn because it was unexpected and so unpopular with Labour MPs.

ExecLine - 12 Sep 2015 16:10 - 62736 of 81564

Despite what he says and how he says it, his 'non-executive', open-shirted, even scruffy appearance, limits his appeal to a massive section of voters.

To get to the top strata of politics and gain true political power, so as to be able to use it and influence large numbers of other people, you do have to at least look the part and be able to set an example for others to follow.

For a good while, I think he will be surrounded by sycophants, who might hope to benefit from fashionably hanging on to his coat tails.

Haystack - 12 Sep 2015 16:21 - 62737 of 81564

Can you tell the difference between One Wan Kenobi and Corbyn

Haystack - 12 Sep 2015 16:23 - 62738 of 81564

Is this man more tatty than Michael Foot?

Chris Carson - 12 Sep 2015 16:23 - 62739 of 81564

LOL LOL LOL LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!


'It's a f***ing disaster': Utter dismay from senior Labour MPs as Corbyn victory triggers EIGHT resignations from frontbench
Labour frontbenchers announce resignations within minutes of news hardline leftwinger had won leadership contest
Leadership rival Yvette Cooper confirms she will not serve under Corbyn, followed by Tristram Hunt and Liz Kendall
Rachel Reeves, Chuka Umunna, Jamie Reed and Emma Reynolds also refuse to serve under radical new leader
A total of 422,000 of the 550,000 Labour members took part in the vote, with Corbyn taking more than 251,000
By TOM MCTAGUE, DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR and MATT CHORLEY, POLITICAL EDITOR FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 12:26, 12 September 2015 | UPDATED: 16:14, 12 September 2015


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3231825/It-s-f-ing-disaster-Utter-dismay-senior-Labour-MPs-face-reality-led-Corbyn.html#ixzz3lXQq04js
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

cynic - 12 Sep 2015 16:46 - 62740 of 81564

beware of what you wish for could apply to both sides in the present scenario

if fred was half-way balanced, it would be (have been) worth hearing his views
unfortunately he is just a rabid dog

for my part, i worry greatly about corbyn, for he speaks eloquently
he has clearly appealed to a younger audience, many of whom could have but did not bother to vote previously
one of the problems with being young is a lack of experience in life, though that said, it can also be a benefit

will corbyn's utopian visions (to most of which i certainly do not subscribe) have any chance of realisation?
most, from all sides of the equation, think not but that is not to say they are right
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