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
- 20 Nov 2015 22:58
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It didn't take long for Corby to turn into a hypocrite.....and join the club.
Chris Carson
- 20 Nov 2015 23:14
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Hays - He's fooling no one. Utter disgrace to the Labour Party.
Haystack
- 20 Nov 2015 23:28
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Interestingly the article was in the Guardian. Every day now there are several anti Corbyn items. There was a time not long ago when a Labour leader could do no wrong in the eyes of the Guardian no matter how stupid they were.
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/nov/20/free-vote-on-air-strikes-urged-as-corbyn-reminded-of-own-previous-support
Haystack
- 21 Nov 2015 00:08
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Who cares? The public certainly won't.
VICTIM
- 21 Nov 2015 08:22
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I must say the UN are on the ball, hope they sort it out in the next 50 years .
Fred1new
- 21 Nov 2015 08:39
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I would have thought it time that the UK opts out of the UN and goes it alone.
Fred1new
- 21 Nov 2015 08:42
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Too many rules and legislation. Bloody waste of money. Don't get enough out of it.
The British people don't want it.
We need devolution down to street level.
Get rid of taxation.
Stan
- 21 Nov 2015 10:50
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Best job ever for Alf/Bamber!
You get to mess about, have sex, take drugs and alcohol AND YOU GET PAID FOR IT. At last, after 30 years on the dole, I can see a career for him... undercover police officer.
Haystack
- 21 Nov 2015 11:14
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Britain poised for Syria air strikes after Labour revolt against Jeremy Corbyn
Up to 60 Labour MPs could back military intervention in Syria in defiance of Jeremy Corbyn on the basis of a UN resolution calling for "combat by all means" to be used to wipe out Isil
Britain is poised to join air strikes against Isil in Syria after senior Labour MPs publicly defied Jeremy Corbyn and pledged cross-party support for international action in the wake of the Paris terrorist attacks.
Hilary Benn, the shadow foreign secretary, welcomed a UN security council resolution - passed on Friday night - calling for "combat by all means" to be used to wipe out Isil. The resolution was passed unanimously at the UN last night.
David Cameron called the unanimous UN decision an “important moment”. He said he would build the case for air strikes in Syria, adding that Britain “cannot expect others to shoulder the burdens and risks of protecting this country”.
He said: “The international community has come together and has resolved to defeat this evil, which threatens people of every country and every religion. Today’s vote shows beyond doubt the breadth of international support for doing more in Syria and for decisive action to eradicate Isil.”
France announced after the vote that it was tripling attacks against Isil in Syria, with air strikes launched from the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle. “This text is a call for international mobilisation,” said François Delattre, France’s ambassador to the UN.
Labour insiders said that the resolution, reinforced by Friday night's vote, is likely to be enough to convince as many as 60 Labour MPs of the need to extend RAF air strikes to Syria - something which would boost David Cameron's chances of passing a vote in the Commons.
Shadow cabinet ministers say that military intervention is even more likely after the party's own legal advice suggested that there is a "sound basis" for air strikes even without the UN approval.
Mr Corbyn looked increasingly isolated after Labour MPs used a series of broadcasts to defy their leader over his shambolic security strategy in what looked like an organised coup.
Liz Kendall, a former Labour leadership contender, said he had failed "to rise to the challenge" posed by the Paris terror attacks.
One shadow minister said that the week has demonstrated that Mr Corbyn is "unelectable" and is likely to be forced out as Labour leader before the election in 2020.
He said: "The worrying thing is that the Labour Party is being painted as untrustworthy on on national security and defence. If you are not trusted on that, you are unelectable.
"The last election they didn't trust us on the economy, now they don't trust us to keep them safe."
Haystack
- 21 Nov 2015 11:51
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Once again the left is obsessed with the wrong things!
Stan
- 21 Nov 2015 12:04
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Don't change the subject, just spill the beans.
Fred1new
- 21 Nov 2015 12:22
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What exactly is Cameron considering doing against ISIS ISIL etc.? Please inform us, or go back to play with the juniors?
Is Cameron volunteering to be the first his feet on the ground, with corporal Hayes and private Manuel in toe?
Bet my bottom dollar they won't.
Don't expect their cohorts, or families will be involved either. (Though they might make a few bob on the clean up. There must be a good deal somewhere.)
Tub-thumpers.
Have a look at Syrian civilian casualties from "effective" bombing.
Ask someone, which is the best way of being killed?
Having your head cut off or being blown apart or partially apart by a drone or missile.
Ask their kids, now and 20 years down the line.
=-=-===
Let us have a look at the plans before the sheep vote for Cameron's, plan of combat before it is changed before a U-turn.
jimmy b
- 21 Nov 2015 13:06
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He got some backing for his don't shoot to kill policy :)
Stan
- 21 Nov 2015 13:23
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Unlike the "Con" artists who deal in quantity over quality as usual I expect.
jimmy b
- 21 Nov 2015 13:30
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Stan you can put it any way you like ,he got NO support ,
that's because when you are confronted by people who not only want to gun down crowds but they then blow themselves up it seems wise to shoot them rather than reason with them . Anyone who thinks otherwise is a complete loony as is Corbyn .
Haystack
- 21 Nov 2015 14:01
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Quality? Surely not the bloated Diane Flabbot. Corbyn seems to have gathered up quite few of the political rejects to join him in his Cabinet.
Haystack
- 21 Nov 2015 14:04
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Corbyn was voted in by Labour activists. He may have gained a good majority amongst the lefty loonies, but those who voted for him add up to 0.5% of the electorate.