Thorpist Posted January 20, 2022 Share Posted January 20, 2022 Boris Johnson says he has "seen no evidence" of blackmail in his party: ref BBC. Why on earth would anyone believe him? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anna B Posted January 20, 2022 Share Posted January 20, 2022 Maybe we're ready for a different type of governance. Not FPTP More cooperation, less confrontation. Working together for the common good in a global economy. Strong leadership which is respected rather than despised, (Angela Merkel) Representative of and In touch with ordinary people. An elected second house, with useful, experienced, learned people. A suitable modern workplace not beset with tradition and privilege. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ECCOnoob Posted January 20, 2022 Share Posted January 20, 2022 (edited) 3 hours ago, Anna B said: Maybe we're ready for a different type of governance. Not FPTP More cooperation, less confrontation. Working together for the common good in a global economy. Strong leadership which is respected rather than despised, (Angela Merkel) Representative of and In touch with ordinary people. An elected second house, with useful, experienced, learned people. A suitable modern workplace not beset with tradition and privilege. It already is a suitable modern workplace. It employs thousands in offices all over the city and wider UK. The Chamber is just a tiny, but most interesting, part of the process and that's what gets focused on. Its the same way as the visually archaic court room is just a tiny speck of the legal world. All these easy armchair statements about reform are well and good but there are obvious flaws. Who actually gets to be that strong leader? What then stops them dominating and pushing their own agenda and agendas of their privileged followers and yes men........just like now. Human nature chooses sides and loyalty is open to reward no matter what system. Who then decides exactly what is deemed common good. Good for whom? A government can't give the people everything they want nor let business and corporations have free ride. There has to be a balance so who gets precedence? How does that then play out on the global stage where we are always going to be in competition no matter how much we as an individual nation try to reform - countries like China and emerging nations certainly won't share. Then, what makes so called 'ordinary' people. Jobs, background, income level, qualifications. Putting aside that so called "real world" down to earth lifestyle does not magically equal advanced skills required to run the country, how does one differentiate what is real word experience. Catch all stereotypes like "wealthy" for example could mean very different things to someone living/working near Burnley with a £50k salary and comfortable 4 bed house when compared to someone on £50k in Belgravia, strugggling to pay rent for their micro-bedsit with shared bathroom. There are 650 elected representatives in the House of Commons and we cannot get so distracted by the few headliners. Reform is one thing which I agree should be regularly considered but let's not sell it like its some magical transforming victory for the working classes. Let's not continually belittle the educated and well paid as some evil scurge on society which seems to frequently be the underlying agenda being pushed. Quite frankly, I want educated, experienced, qualified people in charge. What I don't want is Bob the bus driver who knows nothing about anything playing politician. Angela Rayner has given an example of a politician with the common touch and boy does she live up to it. Edited January 20, 2022 by ECCOnoob Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thorpist Posted January 20, 2022 Share Posted January 20, 2022 47 minutes ago, ECCOnoob said: Quite frankly, I want educated, experienced, qualified people in charge But without ethics and honesty you end up with Boris. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mister Gee Posted January 26, 2022 Share Posted January 26, 2022 On 19/01/2022 at 17:18, Jeffrey Shaw said: Liz Truss? I look at Liz Truss and think Prime Minister in the same way as I look at Jacob Rees Mogg and think prop forward for Hull Kingston Rovers. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cgksheff Posted January 26, 2022 Share Posted January 26, 2022 (edited) 2 hours ago, Mister Gee said: I look at Liz Truss and think .... ...... So funny that the ad that is appearing next to your post (for me) is for varifocals! 😜 Edited January 26, 2022 by cgksheff Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anna B Posted January 26, 2022 Share Posted January 26, 2022 On 20/01/2022 at 16:33, ECCOnoob said: It already is a suitable modern workplace. It employs thousands in offices all over the city and wider UK. The Chamber is just a tiny, but most interesting, part of the process and that's what gets focused on. Its the same way as the visually archaic court room is just a tiny speck of the legal world. All these easy armchair statements about reform are well and good but there are obvious flaws. Who actually gets to be that strong leader? What then stops them dominating and pushing their own agenda and agendas of their privileged followers and yes men........just like now. Human nature chooses sides and loyalty is open to reward no matter what system. Who then decides exactly what is deemed common good. Good for whom? A government can't give the people everything they want nor let business and corporations have free ride. There has to be a balance so who gets precedence? How does that then play out on the global stage where we are always going to be in competition no matter how much we as an individual nation try to reform - countries like China and emerging nations certainly won't share. Then, what makes so called 'ordinary' people. Jobs, background, income level, qualifications. Putting aside that so called "real world" down to earth lifestyle does not magically equal advanced skills required to run the country, how does one differentiate what is real word experience. Catch all stereotypes like "wealthy" for example could mean very different things to someone living/working near Burnley with a £50k salary and comfortable 4 bed house when compared to someone on £50k in Belgravia, strugggling to pay rent for their micro-bedsit with shared bathroom. There are 650 elected representatives in the House of Commons and we cannot get so distracted by the few headliners. Reform is one thing which I agree should be regularly considered but let's not sell it like its some magical transforming victory for the working classes. Let's not continually belittle the educated and well paid as some evil scurge on society which seems to frequently be the underlying agenda being pushed. Quite frankly, I want educated, experienced, qualified people in charge. What I don't want is Bob the bus driver who knows nothing about anything playing politician. Angela Rayner has given an example of a politician with the common touch and boy does she live up to it. Bob the bus driver probably knows more about public transport than Boris ever will. I'm not a fan of our Angela, but you've got to give her some credit for clawing her way to the top of the political tree against all the odds. It can't have been easy, and shows a whole lot grit and determination. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
catmiss Posted January 26, 2022 Share Posted January 26, 2022 Many commentators make the point that the Tory party won’t get rid of Boris because there’s no suitable successor or perhaps no one who can pull the wool over the electorates’ eyes as easily. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jack Grey Posted January 27, 2022 Author Share Posted January 27, 2022 (edited) 7 hours ago, catmiss said: Many commentators make the point that the Tory party won’t get rid of Boris because there’s no suitable successor or perhaps no one who can pull the wool over the electorates’ eyes as easily. Did Boris pulled the wool over your eyes? Edited January 27, 2022 by Jack Grey Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
spilldig Posted January 27, 2022 Share Posted January 27, 2022 16 hours ago, catmiss said: Many commentators make the point that the Tory party won’t get rid of Boris because there’s no suitable successor or perhaps no one who can pull the wool over the electorates’ eyes as easily. Certainly no suitable alternative either. Not with Starmer in charge. I can't see what purpose he serves. I have never heard him say anything useful or constructive he only ever seems to slag people off. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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