Jim you should check out some of that good 'ol crank left twitter if you think this thread is really pro-Corbyn.
Almost all who are posting in here will vote Labour despite all our issues with the party and I see these laid out here time and again. Pom doesn't need to make things up. There was never a light discussion on anti-semitism.
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 19 August 2019 22:01 (six years ago)
Almost all who are posting in here will vote Labour despite all our issues with the party
lol and g'nite!
― pomenitul, Monday, 19 August 2019 22:03 (six years ago)
Yes come back tomorrow, you need a good night's sleep.
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 19 August 2019 22:08 (six years ago)
Derby North MP Chris Williamson is taking to the road again with his "democracy roadshow".The politician is urging Labour constituencies to back a mandatory re-selection process for sitting MPs.He delivered the same message during a similar trip last year.Mr Williamson - who is currently embroiled in a legal battle with Labour over his suspension from the party - has been making the case that Labour should adopt a rule change to ensure that MPs face such a process before each election.He said: "Currently Labour MPs in safe seats have a job for life and that's not the way any normal democratic organisation should work."He added that it "isn't radical or extraordinary, it is commonplace in other democracies around the world".In a video, released on his social media accounts, Mr Williamson can be seen accompanied by the former president of the ASLEF train drivers union, Tosh McDonald, in a 1964 Ford Mustang convertible.
The politician is urging Labour constituencies to back a mandatory re-selection process for sitting MPs.
He delivered the same message during a similar trip last year.
Mr Williamson - who is currently embroiled in a legal battle with Labour over his suspension from the party - has been making the case that Labour should adopt a rule change to ensure that MPs face such a process before each election.
He said: "Currently Labour MPs in safe seats have a job for life and that's not the way any normal democratic organisation should work."
He added that it "isn't radical or extraordinary, it is commonplace in other democracies around the world".
In a video, released on his social media accounts, Mr Williamson can be seen accompanied by the former president of the ASLEF train drivers union, Tosh McDonald, in a 1964 Ford Mustang convertible.
Corbyn's inattentive dithering over this fucking bellend is something he's constantly been hammered for on here.
― calzino, Monday, 19 August 2019 22:08 (six years ago)
Although I'm probably being harsh here, as SV pointed out - it's the rules etc.
― calzino, Monday, 19 August 2019 22:10 (six years ago)
haaaaaaaa
― Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Monday, 19 August 2019 22:14 (six years ago)
I know!
― calzino, Monday, 19 August 2019 22:16 (six years ago)
Comic Strip Presents...
― calzino, Monday, 19 August 2019 22:17 (six years ago)
I will vote labour, despite being accused of being ilx’s most notorious non-dom melt. Corbyn is better than any alternative on offer but is wish better alternatives were being offered, not necessarily different policies but better leadership, despite disparing about where that might come from.
This thread can be quite confronting to those of divergent viewpoints and I don’t post here often.
Plus I get to vote for Keir Starmer and be happy about which, I’m sure confirms everything you think about me.
― American Fear of Pranksterism (Ed), Monday, 19 August 2019 22:19 (six years ago)
I'm struggling to work out who exactly the Corbyn stans on this thread are - calz? Don't think so. NV. Nope. gyac. Nope. Matt DC. No way. mark s. No. And so on.
― Boulez, vous couchez avec moi? (Tom D.), Monday, 19 August 2019 22:24 (six years ago)
few just looking to give pom a good kickin so? corbyn just the excuse?
― phil neville jacket (darraghmac), Monday, 19 August 2019 22:25 (six years ago)
I'm happy to vote for Paula Sherriff who is just as much decidedly not a Corbynite as Starmer is, and it doesn't confirm anything about me - so chill Ed!
― calzino, Monday, 19 August 2019 22:28 (six years ago)
(xp) I'm sorry, he shows up and says, "Skripal", as a criticism of Corbyn. That's Fredlike.
― Boulez, vous couchez avec moi? (Tom D.), Monday, 19 August 2019 22:34 (six years ago)
xxp did you read his handwaving of my points about anti Irish sentiment or not?
― gyac, Monday, 19 August 2019 22:35 (six years ago)
heh look not great not great but i mean fred built up an impressive body of that before taking the first metaphorical shovel to the back of the head
idk maybe ye think ukpol thread is mighty and possibly has too many posters, and certainly too wide a range of opinions.
i mean im only here cos its warm during the day and i like everyone here, i was raised in worse environments on both counts tbh. so like i dont care. but.
xp you know my position on that score, i think that - and im not here to like litigate for pom on the specific case today or anything- the general bootroom glee from a few was over the top on a good poster and for not much more of a set of transgressions than might have irritated but not enraged so many of ye once upon a time.
its all a bit much imo, not from any one individual or anything.
― phil neville jacket (darraghmac), Monday, 19 August 2019 22:43 (six years ago)
You are really showing how you "don't care" huh?
Pom does fancy himself to be a big brave critic but take that approach on the French politics thread and see how far you get. The "lol" at the end is telling. Its no joke most of us will be voting for a lot of the PLP - most of whom don't cut it at all - just to get anything progressive and positive done for many who are suffering the most right now. That includes migrants.
No tears for that clown.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 07:24 (six years ago)
The 'lol' was in response to the notion that voting Labour is somehow a difficult ethical act for you, 'despite all our issues with the party'.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 07:36 (six years ago)
This thread can be quite confronting to those of divergent viewpoints and I don’t post here often.Plus I get to vote for Keir Starmer and be happy about which, I’m sure confirms everything you think about me.
― gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 07:37 (six years ago)
Really now? I fail to see how expressing dissatisfaction with Corbyn's handling of Brexit (a rather banal opinion among Labour supporters, although you'd be forgiven for not thinking that in light of this thread) from a pro-European perspective somehow amounts to 'handwaving' anti-Irish sentiment.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 07:40 (six years ago)
I mean, that’s not really for you to decide.Anyway, this is running in a mainstream paper today.
Varadkar can blame Britain all he likes – but he is the real threat to peace | Nick Timothy https://t.co/NF6JvfIl2y— Telegraph Politics (@TelePolitics) August 20, 2019
― gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 07:45 (six years ago)
Maybe you meant something less dismissive by “internal grievance” but I can only interpret the words in front of me.
― gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 07:48 (six years ago)
The 'lol' was in response to the notion that voting Labour is somehow a difficult ethical act for you, 'despite all our issues with the party'.― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 bookmarkflaglink
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 bookmarkflaglink
Most of us know what we are putting in for government. Its almost as if you haven't read people complaining about the state of the PLP for the last few years.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 07:48 (six years ago)
That was in reference to criticism of Corbyn itt, not your take on anti-Irish sentiment in the UK.
xp
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 07:50 (six years ago)
solid hit there.
is this your way of showing how you do?
― phil neville jacket (darraghmac), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:11 (six years ago)
Posting as I normally do.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:33 (six years ago)
The most recent prior criticism was that the thread was too critical, no real set of ideals beneath the picking apart of contradictory policy positions and critiques of various political postures. Like it was less than a week before the criticism that this is a nest of hardcore momentum cheerleading. Again and again various posters responded my reminding him of all the various things that Labour leadership has been criticised for itt (some of them are things that don't get nearly enough attention elsewhere) and again and again the critique rearticulated itself less as based on some actual basis and increasingly seemed to be based on some kneejerk distaste with the character of discussion. I literally don't mind at all there being a place to have a discussion about politics that takes for granted a social ideal that puts the welfare of most people ahead of the wealth hoarding ability of a tiny elite of the super-rich. I think its good to have a place that differences can be articulated and argued over without becoming a huge internal faultline that makes it impossible to recognise this common aspiration, and in a venue that is sufficiently private that it doesn't contribute to the internal disharmony that tends to fracture the left.
Its also true that when I've posted itt (far less frequently than most, but I read it quite often) the views expressed are my own and I'm not really sure how I could resolve this with pom's desire for this thread to express a more diverse or critical set of views about the labour leadership. Like these are the views I have? I think this is what's infuriating about these kinds of critiques. Like if you want to find people bashing corbyn just type fbpe into twitter or idk google jonathan freedland. Its true, this is also a venue anchored another set of values defined by the venn diagrams of views held by the posters. But these are the posters that are here. I don't think I'd ever bother tuning in to a discussion here about whether or not the welfare state just makes people more lazy. A certain internal coherence is the only thing that makes nuance possible in these sorts of discussions. That's why reality TV shows always get really boring when they become about EXTREME characters having screaming matches.
Just before the 2015 election, a labour canvasser came to my door (the mp for my constituency was not herself canvassing) and when I expressed antipathy toward certain labour positions at the time (in particular the tough on immigration posturing) the canvasser asked me if I was even eligible to vote in the election. Recently I've been feeling increasingly worried about the rising anti-Irish sentiment that is so nakedly expressed by politicians and in the media now and, coupled with the bizarre ignorance of (and even explicitly prejudicial attitudes toward) Ireland/N.Ireland that I've encountered while living here. (that famous channel 4 bit where nobody knew where the irish border was rings perfectly true in my experience and I've always found it really strange. I know its *a bit more nuanced than this* but that is not simply the ROI's border, its where our countries meet, ie. it is also YOUR border. Its also weird because surely you see it on the weather report like every night). Labour are the only party right now that can be trusted to safeguard the GF agreement and not to stoke sentiments of Ireland as an uppity vassal state that needs to be taken down a peg or two. The thought of what that sentiment might look like put into practice worries me. There are all kinds of conflictual things around this, and from my position what Brexit means and what it might entail are highly fraught and conflictual (not to rock the boat we're all in too much).
Anyway I apologise in advance but
― plax (ico), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:34 (six years ago)
That’s a booming post & no need to apologise
― gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:37 (six years ago)
I literally don't mind at all there being a place to have a discussion about politics that takes for granted a social ideal that puts the welfare of most people ahead of the wealth hoarding ability of a tiny elite of the super-rich.
Agreed, but conflating this with support of Jeremy Corbyn isn't helpful.
― Andrew Farrell, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:42 (six years ago)
EXTREME characters having screaming matches
The problem begins when mildly dissenting opinions are painted in such terms. The amount of caveats I include (aptly parodied by deems in his latest spin-off thread) to remind everyone that I am not concern-trolling and not coming at this from a Lib Dem perspective or whatever should in theory suffice, but alas…
And if you think certain posters of an infinitesimally (this needs to be emphasized, as there is in fact no significant source of disagreement among us) different political persuasion don't avoid this thread or reduce their contributions to a minimum because they're tired of getting gratuitously piled upon, that's awfully optimistic of you.
p.s.: btw, I'd be happy to see Corbyn win a GE.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:44 (six years ago)
xp I completely agree with the last full paragraph though!
― Andrew Farrell, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:46 (six years ago)
So do I and so do we all, I assume.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:47 (six years ago)
― Andrew Farrell, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:42 (one minute ago) bookmarkflaglink
Okay, but name me another party that's pushing this line?
― plax (ico), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:47 (six years ago)
Which posters is this thread missing out on by virtue of our samethink?
― gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:48 (six years ago)
It's not my place to name them.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:50 (six years ago)
fred, morbs, cutty, ddb, hstencil, connor smedley, doomie, jon williams, prom dressantino
― im led by donky (||||||||), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:51 (six years ago)
"mildly dissenting opinions"
Is that how you call your day long tantrum? Okay then.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:53 (six years ago)
I mean if we’re missing out on people with legitimate concerns, that’s obviously a tragedy and Their Voices Must Be Heard.More seriously...it’s a politics thread during a particularly fraught time. Politics is full of “robust debate” and as it should be, it’s literally life and death for some people. An MP was murdered in the street by a fascist and literally none of the anti-left discourse has dimmed. I would ask why people shouldn’t be angry or hold strong opinions?
― gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:56 (six years ago)
That's fine, gyac. But then it's fair to expect some amount of pushback from the EU crowd as well, no?
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 08:58 (six years ago)
Btw comrade alphabet, I daresay you should practice самокритика more often.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:01 (six years ago)
pom as Euler said, its just impossible to know what you actually WANT. You'd be happy to vote for corbyn bc you want a progressive shift in public policy but you are critical of certain decisions made by the labour party leadership in general and corbyn in particular during a period that you surely recognise has been fairly trying. I mean I think that's pretty much the consensus around here, in which case welcome to the groupthink. That's what's so infuriating about your position, you seem to want this to manifest as a general distaste of corbyn but if other people do not share your distaste well.... I also fail to see why it would be productive to share this distaste, like what would it enable? As major opposition to austerity goes, labour are the best bet. Same with a more ethical approach to international policy. The labour shadow cabinet have not been in government so have not had to opportunity to do anything as egregious as, say, taking unilateral military action against the large civilian population of another country and for that reason I find it hard to be as critical of them as I might be of New Labour. Any criticism I have is not going to be enough to make me go, what? Lib Dem?
I know you will interpret this as a policing of your dissent, but nobody would jump on you if you said "I think something different." The problem with the dissent you're offering is that you seem to be saying, "I find it somewhat distasteful that you all share a certain set of views." And that is how you have phrased your criticism. not at the views that people have espoused, but the fact that there is not enough variation in those views here. For one thing, shared views and ideals are a necessary pretext to the possibility of any kind of political action so I don't see consistency as itself a bad thing. And on top of that, the views here strike me as VERY particular. The consensus position here hardly lines up with any specific tangents that I know of in other venues.
― plax (ico), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:06 (six years ago)
xp also, most of the people addressing you *ARE* EU immigrants
― plax (ico), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:07 (six years ago)
Both the Tories and Labour judge that Brexit puts an end to EU freedom of movement. The "EU crowd", to use pomenitul's expression, then asks why Labour does not stand against Brexit. Does Labour want an end to EU freedom of movement in the UK? Do posters here want an end to EU freedom of movement in the UK?
it's about attitudes to migration in general, not just from the EU.― Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Monday, August 19, 2019 7:17 PM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
― Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Monday, August 19, 2019 7:17 PM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
I don't understand this. Before Brexit, migration to/from the EU was legal and simple. Is the thought that migration to/from elsewhere is better than EU migration? And/or that ending EU freedom of movement would improve migration to/from outside the EU?
― L'assie (Euler), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:09 (six years ago)
always worth remembering this thread is not very british. I think there might be more irish posters than english posters
― ogmor, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:12 (six years ago)
…who aren't especially pro-EU.
My argument, which I formulated repeatedly even though you claim not know to what I 'want', is that Corbyn is too ambiguous a Remainer for me to be fully on board with his Brexit policies, which doesn't mean that I wouldn't vote for him if I could.
We're almost at the point of peak sterility here.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:13 (six years ago)
careful, remember lord kelvin in 1897
― phil neville jacket (darraghmac), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:15 (six years ago)
the party’s* brexit policy. democratically agreed at conference as a compromise between the membership, unions and PLP and calibrated to not explode the 2017 coalition
― im led by donky (||||||||), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:15 (six years ago)
anyone watch the mountbatten documentary ?
every family down our way had the zapruder tape tbh
― phil neville jacket (darraghmac), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:17 (six years ago)
― gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:17 (six years ago)
The sheer, unadulterated hatred for FBPE or whatever is quite telling in that regard.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:19 (six years ago)