Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

Protecting Patterson – the Tory gift to the Opposition – politicalbetting.com

12345679»

Comments

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,068
    edited November 2021
    Leon said:

    But religions can EXPLODE

    How many followers did Mohammad have in, say, 620AD? A few dozen? A few hundred?

    By his death in 632 most of Arabia was Islamic. That's ten years. Within 40 years of his death, Islam ruled: from Spain to India
    That is because Islam (and also Christianity) had appeal with ordinary people in the areas they spread.

    There is little evidence the most ultra wokesim has much appeal to most ordinary people beyond liberal elites, as evidenced by the Virginia result last night
  • Surprised to see Kwasi Kwarteng abstained. I thought in a 3 line whip all ministers had to support the Government?
  • eekeek Posts: 29,738
    HYUFD said:

    I also oppose recall petitions every 5 minutes and would oppose a similar sanction for a Labour MP based on the same facts.

    Otherwise MPs could easily decide to impose sanctions on each other and force recall petitions just to force constant by elections because they want a chance to win the incumbent's seat. See also the ludicrous recall petitions you now get in California for senior elected officials.

    MPs are elected for up to 5 year terms and should serve those terms and be judged on them by their electorate once they have completed those terms.

    They should not be suspended and face a recall unless they have faced a criminal conviction and a prison term of at least a year or more
    You are aware of what Owen was found guilty of doing.

    Abusing his position as an MP to write letters (as if he was writing on behalf of a constituent) for a very large sum of money.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,266
    edited November 2021
    IanB2 said:

    A good number of the Tory rebels sit for red wall seats, which speaks volumes

    Notably Aaron Bell.

    Well done @Tissue_Price

    I note Bob Seely abstained.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Surprised to see Kwasi Kwarteng abstained. I thought in a 3 line whip all ministers had to support the Government?

    Depends if he was paired. It's a shame we don't have pairing lists, or at least i haven't seen one for this vote.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,738
    edited November 2021

    Surprised to see Kwasi Kwarteng abstained. I thought in a 3 line whip all ministers had to support the Government?

    Abstained > means working elsewhere so I suspect he's unavoidably detained in Glasgow alongside Ed Miliband (who also abstained).

    It's almost like they were paired...
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    Sean_F said:

    If indeed, Johnson is a joke, clown, figure of fun, despised by everyone, what does it say about the people who keep losing to him?
    That they are very poor at politics.
  • Carnyx said:

    Depends if he was paired. It's a shame we don't have pairing lists, or at least i haven't seen one for this vote.
    According to all the sources I have seen even pairing is normally suspended for 3 line whips unless there is a serious reason such as illness or absence overseas.
  • JBriskin3JBriskin3 Posts: 1,254
    Carnyx said:

    So you take the view tghat the constitution is irrelevant and corruption is to be encouraged?
    No I'm just taking a common sense view point in contrast to your whitterings. The electorate can't vote for the PM directly but by voting for their party they have power over who becomes PM.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,266

    Surprised to see Kwasi Kwarteng abstained. I thought in a 3 line whip all ministers had to support the Government?

    I don't think it was three line. I see Rishi Sunak didn't vote. Glasgow a very convenient place to be!
  • If Patterson is found guilty again what will Boris do?
  • HYUFD said:

    I also oppose recall petitions every 5 minutes and would oppose a similar sanction for a Labour MP based on the same facts.

    Otherwise MPs could easily decide to impose sanctions on each other and force recall petitions just to force constant by elections because they want a chance to win the incumbent's seat. See also the ludicrous recall petitions you now get in California for senior elected officials.

    MPs are elected for up to 5 year terms and should serve those terms and be judged on them by their electorate once they have completed those terms.

    They should not be suspended and face a recall unless they have faced a criminal conviction and a prison term of at least a year or more
    You just confirm that you are a party apparatchik who cannot see right from wrong, and excuse unacceptable behaviour in public office
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,807
    HYUFD said:

    That is because Islam (and also Christianity) had appeal with ordinary people in the areas they spread.

    They is little evidence the most ultra wokesim has much appeal to most ordinary people beyond liberal elites, as evidenced by the Virginia result last night
    Yes, that's fair, and is grounds for cautious optimism, long term. However Wokeness has already eaten into many western institutions, like rust, despite lacking broad popularity.

    Perhaps it is a weird kind of hybrid, it has definite elements of religiosity, but ALSO of radical political movements

    Communism was never "broadly popular", but it took over half the world, was only defeated after decades of struggle, and the stink of it still lingers. Putin certainly compares it to Bolshevism, as we have seen



  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    HYUFD said:

    Yet who are the true believers of the woke religion? Mainly students and some liberal academics and a few in the public sector.

    It is hardly a religious force growing on the scale of evangelical Christianity or Islam globally yet.

    One thing's for sure: it's a huge vote winner for conservative parties all round the world. It probably made the difference wrt the Virginia election last night.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,068
    eek said:

    You are aware of what Owen was found guilty of doing.

    Abusing his position as an MP to write letters (as if he was writing on behalf of a constituent) for a very large sum of money.
    He was not found guilty of anything criminal no, he was found guilty of breaching Commons rules by doing paid lobbying work, something par for the course in say DC
  • Depressing
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    HYUFD said:

    He was not found guilty of anything criminal no, he was found guilty of breaching Commons rules by doing paid lobbying work, something par for the course in say DC
    Like beating up grannies is OK because furriners do it?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    This thread has been suspended.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,807
    Andy_JS said:

    One thing's for sure: it's a huge vote winner for conservative parties all round the world. It probably made the difference wrt the Virginia election last night.
    "Probably"? DEFINITELY


    "Wokeness makes its electoral debut. Democrats’ defense of Critical Race Theory in education looks to have been a key factor in the Republicans’ Virginia upset. Cancel Culture/CRT has migrated from campus and twitter into political reality."

    https://twitter.com/epkaufm/status/1455805356949520386?s=20
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    HYUFD said:

    Yet who are the true believers of the woke religion? Mainly students and some liberal academics and a few in the public sector.

    It is hardly a religious force growing on the scale of evangelical Christianity or Islam globally yet.

    Woke fulfills a need for religion, in the same way that climate change activism does. But it doesn't do much more than that. The problem with the analogy is that, when you really go in to it, as a belief system it is completely empty. There is no coherent and inclusive system of meaning and purpose; such that exists within Christianity and Islam, for instance.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,852
    Leon said:

    Yes, that's fair, and is grounds for cautious optimism, long term. However Wokeness has already eaten into many western institutions, like rust, despite lacking broad popularity.

    Perhaps it is a weird kind of hybrid, it has definite elements of religiosity, but ALSO of radical political movements

    Communism was never "broadly popular", but it took over half the world, was only defeated after decades of struggle, and the stink of it still lingers. Putin certainly compares it to Bolshevism, as we have seen
    The most regressive aspect of it is that according to its tenets, the only thing that you cannot transcend is race. For everything else, there is a clear distinction between your identity and your body.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,068
    Leon said:

    Yes, that's fair, and is grounds for cautious optimism, long term. However Wokeness has already eaten into many western institutions, like rust, despite lacking broad popularity.

    Perhaps it is a weird kind of hybrid, it has definite elements of religiosity, but ALSO of radical political movements

    Communism was never "broadly popular", but it took over half the world, was only defeated after decades of struggle, and the stink of it still lingers. Putin certainly compares it to Bolshevism, as we have seen



    Communism was actually pretty popular amongst ordinary peasants in Russia and China initially, mainly because they were so poor
  • NEW THREAD

  • Labour Party "cyber incident"?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,110
    Foxy said:

    Notably Aaron Bell.

    Well done @Tissue_Price

    I note Bob Seely abstained.
    Quite possibly a pairing, Tho
  • Carnyx said:

    This thread has been suspended.

    Erm, no... Boris wants to review that suspension...

    (Of course he doesn't, but the gag was irresistible.)
This discussion has been closed.