Surely the ILX Montagnards should be pro-French?
― Let them eat Pfifferlinge an Schneckensauce (Tom D.), Monday, 23 September 2019 23:19 (six years ago)
i will have an opportunity to check in itt in approx 11 hours and i hope to see demonstrably worse behaviour from all fwiw
― all over bar the shouting (im here for the shouting) (darraghmac), Monday, 23 September 2019 23:19 (six years ago)
But you have been posting some of worst garbage I've seen in years on this thread tonight, proper fucking bullshit FBPE deep cuts from hell.
If only dn's allowed for this much characters.
― Le Bateau Ivre, Monday, 23 September 2019 23:26 (six years ago)
Free movement is the antidote to the bonfire of workers rights, wages and the race to the bottom. If workers have the ability to sell their skills to the highest bidder (even if only some take up the opportunity) it raises pay and condition. If only capital is free to move and not labour, labour is fucked because capital flow to where it is cheapest and labour will be powerless. People have to have the right to up sticks a seek out a better life.
― American Fear of Pranksterism (Ed), Monday, 23 September 2019 23:27 (six years ago)
Thread needs more Ed <3
― Le Bateau Ivre, Monday, 23 September 2019 23:29 (six years ago)
transparent kowtowing is less what this thread needs, especially from posters who deep down know they've shit the bed after too many wine spritzers!
― calzino, Monday, 23 September 2019 23:57 (six years ago)
you post that 50+ clear bollocks about labour in remain position and expect not to get some shit on a messageboard. And then start with some self-victimising bullshit. You are a joke!
― calzino, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 00:02 (six years ago)
Playing this differently would have picked up some support at the expense of other support. I generally think the right path has been taken, but not with a significantly solid level of conviction or certainty. The lay of the land is what it is
Otherwise its just
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j_oZgQT4uNQ
― anvil, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 00:12 (six years ago)
Dunno what this fake love-in is about. I personally can't stand most of you.
― What a ridiculous clusterfuck of totally uncool jokers (jed_), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 01:03 (six years ago)
that's not actually true but there are tens/hundreds of UK ILXors using this site daily who are interested in politics and this thread is a no-go for them. That's not conjecture, btw.
― What a ridiculous clusterfuck of totally uncool jokers (jed_), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 01:11 (six years ago)
FWIW, a good experiment is to deliberately not post to this thread for a while and just observe it. It's really not a good thread to observe.
― What a ridiculous clusterfuck of totally uncool jokers (jed_), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 01:19 (six years ago)
I do that all the time and it’s pure respite from Trump administration bullshit. I love this thread.
― El Tomboto, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 01:59 (six years ago)
― lefal junglist platton (wtev), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 05:36 (six years ago)
turd throwing is an acceptable amateur sport, no animals are harmed, get with the program
― El Tomboto, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 05:52 (six years ago)
A depressing problem confronting Labour’s Brexit strategy is that there is a large (growing?) proportion of society that doesn’t want to bring this culture war to an end per se, they want to win it.— Will Davies (@davies_will) September 23, 2019
depressing because as we know from the US you can’t win a culture war. the right know this - the object is not to win but to perpetuate it forever and as people get more angry they might not notice all the other shit going wrong around them. labour’s position is the only one which recognises this and offers a route out here...
― stoffle (||||||||), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 05:53 (six years ago)
stick this on a billboard !!
Labour is promising free personal care for OAPs, perfect state schools, cheaper bills, better trains, lower emissions, fully funded councils, electric cars when you want em, no prescription charges, no tuition fees, no austerity, lower taxes for 95%- and all with a four day week!— steve hawkes (@steve_hawkes) September 23, 2019
― stoffle (||||||||), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 06:00 (six years ago)
Yeah, this isn't even close to what I was saying...
― Le Bateau Ivre, Monday, 23 September 2019 23:04 (yesterday) link
This is all very silly, because what matters is what Ed wrote above. That is what matters, that is the fucking point. "The timidity and vacillation that is galling".
― Le Bateau Ivre, Monday, 23 September 2019 23:09 (yesterday) link
Well beyond you and Ed not liking Lab's Brexit policy you are not coming up with the same thing at all. You were agreeing with Lammy who was comparing Lab policy with Tory and Lib Dem policy, and was doing it badly, for point scoring.
If, through Lab's policy, we end up fully remaining in the EU then there will be FOM. If you vote Lib Dem we could end up leaving. That's the reality of Labour's 'vacillation'.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 06:18 (six years ago)
― stoffle (||||||||),
Brexit has always been a culture war (the idea that immigration or the EU itself are major factors behind leave have always been wrong, its mostly identity politics). I don't necessarily agree its a growing section of society on either side though, just the illusion or fig leaf of tangibility has gradually been put back on the shelf (hence the lack of interest in a deal)
Leave have never seemed that fussed about actually leaving, and Remain have never seemed that fussed about remaining, moving of goalposts to make sure goal is never quite achievable. Riding the grievance wave. The victory is nothing to do with the EU and never has been
Where I'd semi-disagree with that tweet, is while I agree large sections of society want to "win" against the other side, I don't think they want to bring it to an end at all, but to feel the continuing cut and thrust of battle. The public may say they are sick of it and just want it to end, but they are lying, because they are addicted
― anvil, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 06:18 (six years ago)
</adam curtis voice>
― conrad, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 06:52 (six years ago)
Labour has some fantastic policies, but it's all going to be swamped by brexit. And at the risk of being labelled a centre-right/FBPE/whatever concern troll, I can't for the life of me see how their brexit policy is going to be an electoral winner. For the vast majority of people who don't follow this stuff closely, they're just going to see that tories = pro=brexit, libdems = anti-brexit, labour = fudge/can't make their minds up. And of course that narrative will be hammered home by the media. Some remain/labour voters will peel off to the libdems, some leave/labour voters will stay at home or possibly vote brexit party. And absolutely no previously non-labour voters will be persuaded by this to vote labour. And Labour needs not only to hang on to the voters they have, but persuade quite a few more.
― Zelda Zonk, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 06:53 (six years ago)
I got Vardz in to do it and that lad isn't cheap should have gone with Fabian Delph he was on offer
― anvil, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 06:54 (six years ago)
agree with wanting to "win" stuff - some politicians continue to tell their audience that "winning" is possible and to hold firm - and also the shallowness of the "i just want it to end/go away" stuff
― conrad, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 06:56 (six years ago)
"pick a side" is such trash
― conrad, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 06:57 (six years ago)
Labour has some fantastic policies, but it's all going to be swamped by brexit
This comes down to whether this is true on the ground as well as true in the media (I don't necessarily have a strong view either way on this). Basically whether the Peterborough by-election was indicative or an anomaly
― anvil, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 06:58 (six years ago)
Winning is never about the trophy you get to hold, its about the look on the travelling fans faces as they leave early. The trophy is meaningless without it
― anvil, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:01 (six years ago)
If anyone is motivated solely by Brexit then the choice between a party that is going full-pelt towards No Deal vs one who will offer a second referendum with Remain on the ballot should be fairly clear. Anyone hanging their FBPE hopes on the Lib Dems winning a majority is going to be disappointed.
― ShariVari, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:02 (six years ago)
I can’t imagine even Swinson thinks they’re going to win a majority so it’s a referendum either way.
― ShariVari, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:03 (six years ago)
clarity of brexit positions is no match for an effective ground game and deep campaigning roots, as we have already seen in peterborough (?)
― stoffle (||||||||), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:07 (six years ago)
(xp) Of course she doesn't, and neither does any Lib Dem MP or member or voter, unless they're clinically insane.
― Let them eat Pfifferlinge an Schneckensauce (Tom D.), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:07 (six years ago)
swinson is trying to put “clear yellow water”* between the LDs and LAB by making them “the paramilitary wing” of FBPE
*piss
― stoffle (||||||||), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:08 (six years ago)
Watching Ed Davey on QT fall apart, in about 10 seconds flat, trying to justify their policy makes me think they are going struggle over the course of an election campaign. Sorry, Sir Ed Davey *spit*
― Let them eat Pfifferlinge an Schneckensauce (Tom D.), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:10 (six years ago)
we all know we got into this mess because the tories wouldn’t face down the headbangers on their own side. don’t let us repeat the same mistake please
― stoffle (||||||||), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:13 (six years ago)
there must be lots of LibDems exasperated at Swinson's election tactics, but perhaps keeping quiet until she fucks it all up.
of the more senior Labour right arseholes peers, Margaret Beckett has become my favourite one just by not taking every opportunity to undermine the leadership despite attempted prompts by bbc correspondents. Today Tom Watson is going to preach about party unity in his conference speech, not really a strong part of his game.
― calzino, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:17 (six years ago)
They voted for her tactics en masse at their conference.
― Let them eat Pfifferlinge an Schneckensauce (Tom D.), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:20 (six years ago)
there's more than a whiff of "ideological purity" and refusal to engage with "the world as it is" about "full-throated remain"
― conrad, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:25 (six years ago)
Is "A Referendum On The Final Deal" really that complex a concept to put on a manifesto? Especially if you are someone whose literal job it is to make complex concepts understandable to the casual reader?They need to find a direct and understandable way of communicating it to the general public but anyone who thinks this is too complex to be understood by the casual voter is basically saying they think the public are stupid.Every Labour member will pick the side they want to in the end anyway regardless of party policy, and most of them will rightly back Remain.
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:26 (six years ago)
xxpmust be nice to have conference votes are so clear minded and unanimous (and dumb as fuck and wrong!) and are not beholden to a "cult leadership" which was what Clive Lewis shitposting last night. Funny that he used to be seen as leadership potential, that ship has sailed.
― calzino, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:30 (six years ago)
I actually think Corbyn's original position, to negotiate a soft brexit with no new referendum, was probably the best one. Despite being strongly remain myself, I do think remain is basically dead. Any attempt to revoke article 50 will provoke a complete breakdown of the political system, it's just not a feasible option any more. A referendum with remain as an option just prolongs the agony. Leaving the EU but remaining in the customs union is probably the only real alternative to the horrors of no deal.
― Zelda Zonk, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:33 (six years ago)
absolutely no previously non-labour voters will be persuaded by this to vote labour. And Labour needs not only to hang on to the voters they have, but persuade quite a few more.
Labour's policy isn't about trying to win over non-Labour Remainers - the likelihood is that those who are more concerned about Brexit than about economic democracy or decreasing the wealth gap or protecting the poorest and most vulnerable people in society are *never* likely to be committed Labour supporters. The policy is intended to reconcile conflicting views within Labour support and Labour Leave constituencies. It's also a good faith attempt to reconcile a narrowly divided electorate on a national level. It's arguable whether it's the best policy at any given moment, or whether it can be refined, or when it needs to change course, but it's a more nuanced and considered policy than any of the other main parties. This is its strength and, to true believers on both sides of the EU debate, its weakness.
The idea that wholeheartedly becoming the Remain party will improve Labour's chances in a general election is highly speculative *at best*. There are certainly swathes of Remainers who will never vote for a Leftish Labour party: because of their class interests, consciously or unconsciously; because they've committed themselves to the narrative of Corbyn as the enemy of the EU and can't back down from that position no matter what the evidence; because they are, at heart, liberals or softcore Tories. So the party's policy towards Remain becomes a matter of complex calculation based on the vagaries of the FPTP system. It's pointless to win over a bunch of Remainers in seats that Labour can't win. That's realpolitik. Their calculations may prove to be right or wrong but they are being made in good faith. The party and the country's fortunes will turn on this and once again it is more complicated than choosing the "just" cause, when half the country is unconvinced that the cause is just.
This matters because THE ONLY WAY that Brexit can be averted or ameliorated is a Labour-led government after the next election. The Lib Dems cannot become even the opposition, so a vote for the Lib Dems is a vote to strengthen Johnson's position except, maybe, in Tory/Lib Dem contested seats. Even there, given Swinson's antipathy to the Labour party and affinity to soft Toryism a vote for the LDs risks giving them the power to prop up a hard Brexit Tory government. Anybody for whom Remain is the over-riding concern who doesn't realise this, or realises it but can't bring themselves to vote Labour because of one of the aforementioned reasons, isn't worth reaching out to frankly.
Finally my best guess is the EU is not the main factor for a significant majority of the electorate, so to sacrifice the policies that do matter in the interests of an illusory crushing victory for Remain is, well, I wouldn't.
― Fox Pithole Britain (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:35 (six years ago)
Otm
― Bidh boladh a' mhairbh de 'n láimh fhalaimh (dowd), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:47 (six years ago)
Booming NV post.
It's amazing/unsurprising how many of the people who say they don't understand how they might look patronising to the casual voter apparently also think that "A Referendum On The Final Deal" is too complicated a policy for the public to understand.
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 07:52 (six years ago)
Yep, NV very much otm. The position, in addition to not being complicated, respects that people did vote Leave. It’s not saying to those wavering working-class Leave voters, that are worried about what no deal means for them, “fuck you, you made your choice and we don’t want your vote”. It’s not saying “well 52% of you voted Leave but we don’t care about your votes and want to undo them ASAP”. It’s reflecting the reality - if another referendum is run, and Leave wins again (which it’s got a pretty good chance of doing!), then the country is leaving on a deal that does the least damage.
― gyac, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 08:01 (six years ago)
Did we discuss this exceptional self-own from Mike Gape's by the way?
screenshot just in case he deletes. this is.. this is beautiful. pic.twitter.com/GQcDkr67BB— Jonathan Fisher (@fishplums) September 23, 2019
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 08:04 (six years ago)
We did and he did delete! I see he’s joined Mainstream now and is going to stand at the next election.
― gyac, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 08:06 (six years ago)
we lolled last night, think i lolled without commenting.
― Fox Pithole Britain (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 08:07 (six years ago)
THE FIGHT IS ON. GAPES VS. @GAPESOLOGY, POLITICAL SHOWDOWN OF THE CENTURY. pic.twitter.com/9FiwvW31HT— Reel Politik podcast (@reel_politcast) September 17, 2019
― gyac, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 08:08 (six years ago)
what the hell is Mainstream? kinda hard to google
― Fox Pithole Britain (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 08:09 (six years ago)
it's a party for... the mainstream (in no way affiliated to or the same as Change UK)
― Captain ACAB (Neil S), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 08:09 (six years ago)
keir starmer did not look comfortable defending the private schools policy on NN last night - doesn’t bode well for the “corbynism but with a head boy as leader” set
― stoffle (||||||||), Tuesday, 24 September 2019 08:09 (six years ago)
More to the point if this exact same Brexit policy had come from, say, Yvette Cooper a lot of the same people who are currently criticising it would be queuing up to praise it as a masterpiece of canny political positioning.
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 08:11 (six years ago)