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CoppsYou want to be taken seriously. You want to not be the target is easy slurs. But then everything you say on this subject DOES have the air of a zealot and a believer, deaf to any other arguments.The biggest example in your recent post is your use of the TINA argument (back to the 80s again, eh?) There is ALWAYS an alternative. It is the stance of the zealot to argue TINA (and yes, I know that Wilts has said there's no debate to be had, but he's an old leftie having a mid-life crisis). Consider. If, 18 months ago, someone had claimed that an obscure backbencher would be chosen as leader of the Labour Party and the membership would treble. You'd have been laughed out of court.
For the non lefties amongst us it is quite amusing. The whole campaign is a farce really...
Epic PR own goal from the bearded tax exile Branson, and it looks like he might have committed an offense by inappropriate use of CCTV footage;Virgin Trains 'broke own rules by releasing Jeremy Corbyn CCTV' | UK Politics | News | The IndependentYou would have thought his legal team would have intervened to stop him early, but when a bloke sees his cash cow under threat sense goes out the window.
Well THAT's upped the ante somewhat!http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/labour-calls-richard-branson-stripped-8719591Apparently, if you question Corbyn, you are "undermining democracy".Course, this couldn't possibly be McDonnell playing mood music to the starry-eyed Corbynistas to cement his and Corbyn's hold on the party, whilst not worrying too much how utterly f**king stupid this sounds to the rest of the country, could it?New Politics eh? Was this article written on a used toilet roll by some leftie twit and then not even edited? chucking Sir Philip Green into the wash waters down the legitimate case against him and causes any reader with a reading age of over 13 to cringe.
The social housing issue should drive the building sector with so many unemployed tradesmen available.The money on wages and materials would filter back into local economies and the money raised from taxation and benefit savings would fund more projects. I know that it's not that simple but surely we should have our best brains working on kick starting this sector. It could also spur apprenticeships to get more of our young working.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on August 24, 2016, 08:27:10 pmQuote from: wilts rover on August 24, 2016, 05:24:45 pmJust to stir the tureen a little further, I notice that prospective defender of public rights, Mr Smith, when faced with the choice of believing a rail passenger (and a Labour Parry member at that) or the rail company in this dispute, he came down on the side of big business.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-37173048WiltsI think that's called "evidence-based decision making."You appear to be hinting that faith-based decision making would be preferable. Well there you go. An edited company video that doesn't show the area where Corbyn is sitting proves that Virgin trains are not overcrowded. Sorted for their franchise renewal next year then.You appear to have missed what I am actually hinting at is that Smith is too close to big business. By not asking for independent evidence, the witness mentioned in the Guardian, the train manager who found the seats for Corbyn, the people who moved for him, anyone else on the train, anyone who uses that service line, then it's 'faith-based' that their 'facts' tell the whole story.But if you and Owen are happy with that, fair enough.
Quote from: wilts rover on August 24, 2016, 05:24:45 pmJust to stir the tureen a little further, I notice that prospective defender of public rights, Mr Smith, when faced with the choice of believing a rail passenger (and a Labour Parry member at that) or the rail company in this dispute, he came down on the side of big business.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-37173048WiltsI think that's called "evidence-based decision making."You appear to be hinting that faith-based decision making would be preferable.
Just to stir the tureen a little further, I notice that prospective defender of public rights, Mr Smith, when faced with the choice of believing a rail passenger (and a Labour Parry member at that) or the rail company in this dispute, he came down on the side of big business.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-37173048
Are you still believing the Guardian version of event Wilts? Despite the real facts behind who wrote it being outed?
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on September 01, 2016, 07:52:25 pmAre you still believing the Guardian version of event Wilts? Despite the real facts behind who wrote it being outed?Thanks for the info Glyn. If you could be helpful and point out where they are wrong and what the 'real facts' are that would be useful. This is the latest version I could find:Amid a deluge of social media speculation about who was telling the truth, it eventually emerged that both sides actually agreed about much of the convoluted narrative.On Wednesday, Corbyn confirmed there had been some available seats, but not two together, and that he was hoping to sit next to his wife.As a series of passengers came forward to confirm they, too, had not been able to find seats at the start of the trip, Virgin trains agreed the service had been busy, and that they had been making a very specific point about some seats being free.One of the problems appeared to be passengers not sitting in seats that had been reserved by other people who did not get on the train. About 45 minutes into the three-hour trip, train staff moved people into free seats to clear some of the blockages.http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/aug/25/traingate-latest-jeremy-corbyn-gets-seat-on-glasgow-virgin-service
And "Charles B Anthony" had a tweet out yesterday. "#Traingate made Jeremy Corbyn more popular with supporters, new poll finds." (My emphasis)Job done then Chas, eh? You little entryist tinker.