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  • MonkeysMonkeys Posts: 766

    The issue isn't lies versus truth. The issue is one of professionalism.

    Freedom of conscience is very important and everyone is free to hold whatever religious or non-religious beliefs they choose, in the privacy of their own home and their own Church etc. But when you go to work, especially as a politician or in the legal sphere etc you should be professional enough to check your personal religion at the door and not let it dominate. So long as you are prepared to have your own beliefs, but accept that others have their own beliefs that may be very different, then people are free to choose and there's no need for religion and politics to mix. Forbes could be ultra-orthodox and I wouldn't give a damn, if she was able to keep her religion and politics separate but she has been unable to do so.

    Religion is like a penis. Its OK to have one, its OK to be proud of it, and its OK to exercise it however you want with other consenting adults, even in ways other people find weird. But don't take it out and put it on display in the workplace, and whatever you do don't try and shove it down other people's throats against their will.
    She just said what she thought. I know that's naïve, that we really don't want politicians saying what they think. It's about our judgement of character, and the more they lie about themselves the better we think their character is.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729
    kle4 said:

    Except I'm sure I read it flagged up on here even, a place without massive knowledge of internal scottish politics, and she was a senior figure, a rising star - it seems pretty implausible there was not mention of her views floating about, people gossip about rising stars after all.
    Almost the exact same thing happened to another political party six years ago. That was in the middle of a general election campaign, of course. The simplest explanation is that scrutiny of politicians is random, especially outside the big two parties.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,415
    edited February 2023
    Monkeys said:

    She just said what she thought. I know that's naïve, that we really don't want politicians saying what they think. It's about our judgement of character, and the more they lie about themselves the better we think their character is.
    And what she thinks shows she is unsuitable for high office. What she said shows she thinks that as a politician, her own morals and judging others for being sinners, is appropriate. It is not.

    If you want to spread your morals, then go into the clergy. If you go into politics, then your job is to represent all people of all religions and none, not your own, just as Yousaf did - while being completely open and honest in doing so. If asked a question, you should be professional enough to not put yourself and your own faith ahead of everyone else's. She isn't. She is unsuited for office and should be rejected.
  • kle4 said:

    Except I'm sure I read it flagged up on here even, a place without massive knowledge of internal scottish politics, and she was a senior figure, a rising star - it seems pretty implausible there was not mention of her views floating about, people gossip about rising stars after all.
    You’ve answered your own question, there wasn’t a hint of Forbes’ ossified views or gossip about them floating about.
    That tends to be what leadership elections are about; who knew that Mordaunt was a slippery hypocrite over trans issues or Rishak was a dweeb who didn’t know how to put fuel in a car.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,240
    kle4 said:

    Sometimes it is a relief to remember incompetence is not a UK only affliction. Though if it was the UK the new trains would be delivered a lot more than just 2 years late, as the story says is the case here.

    Two top Spanish transport officials have resigned over a botched order for new commuter trains that cost nearly €260m ($275m; £230m).

    The trains could not fit into non-standard tunnels in the northern regions of Asturias and Cantabria.

    The head of Spain's rail operator Renfe, Isaías Táboas, and the Secretary of State for Transport, Isabel Pardo de Vera, have now left their roles.

    The design fault was made public earlier this month.

    The Spanish government says the mistake was spotted early enough to avoid financial loss. However the region of Cantabria has demanded compensation


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-64717605

    Though in Spain they resign...
  • More than plausible I'd say.
    Careful, you’ll get some hysterical bleating about editing people’s posts if you’re not careful. Or not as the case might be.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,566
    Foxy said:

    Though in Spain they resign...
    I'll reserve judgement just in case they get made Prime Minister and Deputy PM next week.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,814
    edited February 2023

    And what she thinks shows she is unsuitable for high office. What she said shows she thinks that as a politician, her own morals and judging others for being sinners, is appropriate. It is not.

    If you want to spread your morals, then go into the clergy. If you go into politics, then your job is to represent all people of all religions and none, not your own, just as Yousaf did - while being completely open and honest in doing so. If asked a question, you should be professional enough to not put yourself and your own faith ahead of everyone else's. She isn't. She is unsuited for office and should be rejected.
    You're pretending that your stupid rules are somehow consistent, when they're clearly anything but. Forbes is entitled not only to have whatever views and moral code she chooses, but also to let those views and moral code to inform her political decisions. To suggest otherwise is the most absurdly Stalinist thing from someone pertaining to be liberal that I've ever heard.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    This thread has withdrawn ...
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,597
    algarkirk said:

    There's also this question. Most people don't practice exactly the way of life Kate Forbes represents- trad religion, trad morality, and all that. The political realm and anoraks, abundantly represented in and around PB, are suddenly consumed by a sort of bullying hatred of someone who, when all is said and done comes across to normal people as just a nice girl, a bit old fashioned but on the whole would make a decent daughter in law.

    It seems to me that lots of people won't care much, unless instructed by the media, and would view her as OK, and actually quite like her image. People don't mind people who go to church and have stable sets of practical values. They often rely on them for things.

    Whether she is value betting wise I don't know. I think she may have to stand down.

    “unless instructed by the media” is the critical phrase here. The National and BBC Scotland will want Yousaf. BBC Scotland will push him slightly more subtly than The National, but let’s see who gets the most positive media coverage.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,566

    You're pretending that your stupid rules are somehow consistent, when they're clearly anything but. Forbes is entitled not only to have whatever views and moral code she chooses, but also to let those views and moral code to inform her political decisions. To suggest otherwise is the most absurdly Stalinist thing from someone pertaining to be liberal that I've ever heard.
    She can. And others can decide they don't like that.
  • You're pretending that your stupid rules are somehow consistent, when they're clearly anything but. Forbes is entitled not only to have whatever views and moral code she chooses, but also to let those views and moral code to inform her political decisions. To suggest otherwise is the most absurdly Stalinist thing from someone pertaining to be liberal that I've ever heard.
    Don't be stupid.

    There should be no law against Forbes selfishly allowing her private beliefs to shape what she thinks the law should be.

    There equally is no law, nor any problem, in the majority of people like myself who don't share her beliefs [and even many who do share her beliefs but oppose her making those beliefs political] to think that her enforcing her views on others is problematic and should be opposed.

    Indeed opposing one person trying to force their personal beliefs onto everyone else via the law isn't illiberal, its pretty much the definition of liberalism. I do not want a law forcing my views onto Forbes, Forbes can not say the same, that is why she is not fit for office, and that is a perfectly liberal answer.
  • The issue isn't lies versus truth. The issue is one of professionalism.

    Freedom of conscience is very important and everyone is free to hold whatever religious or non-religious beliefs they choose, in the privacy of their own home and their own Church etc. But when you go to work, especially as a politician or in the legal sphere etc you should be professional enough to check your personal religion at the door and not let it dominate. So long as you are prepared to have your own beliefs, but accept that others have their own beliefs that may be very different, then people are free to choose and there's no need for religion and politics to mix. Forbes could be ultra-orthodox and I wouldn't give a damn, if she was able to keep her religion and politics separate but she has been unable to do so.

    Religion is like a penis. Its OK to have one, its OK to be proud of it, and its OK to exercise it however you want with other consenting adults, even in ways other people find weird. But don't take it out and put it on display in the workplace, and whatever you do don't try and shove it down other people's throats against their will.
    Maggie T was very happy to let her religious views influence her politics.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    edited February 2023

    Maggie T was very happy to let her religious views influence her politics.
    Sure, but she did so explicitly as well. The Sermon on the Mound is very clear on that. She positively wove it into her argument.

    Edit: it's not for nothing that the speech is nicknamed that.
  • MonkeysMonkeys Posts: 766

    Don't be stupid.

    There should be no law against Forbes selfishly allowing her private beliefs to shape what she thinks the law should be.

    There equally is no law, nor any problem, in the majority of people like myself who don't share her beliefs [and even many who do share her beliefs but oppose her making those beliefs political] to think that her enforcing her views on others is problematic and should be opposed.

    Indeed opposing one person trying to force their personal beliefs onto everyone else via the law isn't illiberal, its pretty much the definition of liberalism. I do not want a law forcing my views onto Forbes, Forbes can not say the same, that is why she is not fit for office, and that is a perfectly liberal answer.
    She isn't proposing a single change to the law, and in fact stated the law should be upheld as it is, with respect to same-sex marriage.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    DavidL said:

    Err…Sunak?

    The problem I am having with Sunak is that he keeps disappearing. The job of the PM is to make the political weather. Boris got that, even although he was a lying b******, hell, even Truss got that, although her preference for hurricanes was regrettable, but Sunak, he just disappears.
    Just checked out the official number ten twitter. Some tweets about Sunak at the Munich Security conference (on the 18th). No tweets on the 19th or the 20th. Today there are three retweets and one quote tweet of tweets by other government departments. On gov.uk there is no news about what the PM has been doing today or yesterday. No meetings with anyone worth publicising. Nothing.

    The Foreign Secretary seems to be busy, and there's a welcome announcement that the Health Secretary is finally going to enter talks with the RCN, but the PM isn't doing very much.

    I know I'm quick to take the piss out of politicians and their lame photo opportunities, but a PM does need to be meeting people - whether that be people in business, abroad, civil society, government agencies, etc, to solve problems and to get people on board with their agenda.

    Maybe Sunak is busy going through the budget, line-by-line, with his Chancellor. Or doubtless he's working on something else similarly important. But the detail is why he has a Cabinet, and why his Cabinet minsters have junior ministers, and whole battalions of SPADs, and regiments of civil servants. The Prime Minister should be selling his government to the country.

    It's not even that Rishi Sunak is bad at being Prime Minister. It's that he doesn't seem to understand what the job of Prime Minister is.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198

    The issue isn't lies versus truth. The issue is one of professionalism.

    Freedom of conscience is very important and everyone is free to hold whatever religious or non-religious beliefs they choose, in the privacy of their own home and their own Church etc. But when you go to work, especially as a politician or in the legal sphere etc you should be professional enough to check your personal religion at the door and not let it dominate. So long as you are prepared to have your own beliefs, but accept that others have their own beliefs that may be very different, then people are free to choose and there's no need for religion and politics to mix. Forbes could be ultra-orthodox and I wouldn't give a damn, if she was able to keep her religion and politics separate but she has been unable to do so.

    Religion is like a penis. Its OK to have one, its OK to be proud of it, and its OK to exercise it however you want with other consenting adults, even in ways other people find weird. But don't take it out and put it on display in the workplace, and whatever you do don't try and shove it down other people's throats against their will.
    Simpler, really.

    Religiously inspired beliefs are beliefs.

    If you want to be the leader of a Western European major party, then believing that gay marriage is wrong etc means that… you can’t.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,814

    Don't be stupid.

    There should be no law against Forbes selfishly allowing her private beliefs to shape what she thinks the law should be.

    There equally is no law, nor any problem, in the majority of people like myself who don't share her beliefs [and even many who do share her beliefs but oppose her making those beliefs political] to think that her enforcing her views on others is problematic and should be opposed.

    Indeed opposing one person trying to force their personal beliefs onto everyone else via the law isn't illiberal, its pretty much the definition of liberalism. I do not want a law forcing my views onto Forbes, Forbes can not say the same, that is why she is not fit for office, and that is a perfectly liberal answer.
    You're tying yourself in knots. There's nothing 'selfish' about Forbes pursuing policies dictated by her beliefs - in actuality she has not done that, but if she were to do so, that would be in line with every other politician (or in an ideal world it would be).

    Of course those opposed to her beliefs also have the right to campaign for their own vision and beliefs, and if they're in the majority, to prevail, but you cannot say there is no 'forcing of beliefs' because that is not the case - Churches being compelled to solemnise gay marriages is one incidence of a belief in gay marriage being forced upon those who don't believe it.

    Your argument that Forbes should be disapproved of or drummed out of politics for her traditional Christian beliefs (which by the way have not even lead her to campaign against any of the reforms you support) is totally inconsistent with any form of liberalism, and it would be a pleasant surprise if you had the humility and strength of character to acknowledge the fact.
  • Surprised (pleasantly) by that from Badenoch.

    Telling lies would, indeed have been easy.

    The backers claiming that they didn’t know is risible.
    They almost certainly knew - they just didn’t expect her to tell the truth - which says more about them than her.
  • TresTres Posts: 2,819
    Monkeys said:

    She isn't proposing a single change to the law, and in fact stated the law should be upheld as it is, with respect to same-sex marriage.
    If she had been in charge 20 years ago it's likely we would never have gotten the law in the first place.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,360

    The Leeds tram system must have been built awfully quietly
    Ahem. Yes. Sheffield. Apols. The Leeds Supertram got canned by Darling.
  • algarkirk said:

    There's also this question. Most people don't practice exactly the way of life Kate Forbes represents- trad religion, trad morality, and all that. The political realm and anoraks, abundantly represented in and around PB, are suddenly consumed by a sort of bullying hatred of someone who, when all is said and done comes across to normal people as just a nice girl, a bit old fashioned but on the whole would make a decent daughter in law.

    It seems to me that lots of people won't care much, unless instructed by the media, and would view her as OK, and actually quite like her image. People don't mind people who go to church and have stable sets of practical values. They often rely on them for things.

    Whether she is value betting wise I don't know. I think she may have to stand down.

    Kate Forbes has decided that if she's going to stand for leader she's going to do so on her own terms and be who she is - and nothing else.

    Whatever you think of your views, I think at some level you have to respect that.
  • Had a weird dream last night

    I'd died and found the afterlife to be an excessively bureaucratised communist "paradise"

    Heaven was run by Engels
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,094

    @malcolmg ?
    @StuartDickson @londonpubman

    Stuart is correct I am not a member , I would not give a penny to enrich the Murrel's
This discussion has been closed.