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If Farage doesn’t distance himself from the odious Trump then his polling might struggle

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  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,189
    A

    I find it hard to understand why so many Trump supporters on the UK right - such as Jenrick - now criticise him when it was absolutely clear what he was going to do on Ukraine and tariffs well before November. Were they being opportunistic then or is it now?

    People see and hear what they want to. They pick a side and then reconcile that with their wishes.

    It’s not uncommon to encounter Corbynites who tell you that he is actually a hardcore Remainer. Who would have instantly taken us back into the EU.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    rcs1000 said:

    He's a human being.

    I didn't agree with his vote, but he's just another human being.
    Did he not understand that Trump wants him to make stuff in the US, employing fellow Americans?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,512
    Jonathan said:

    Who on Earth will trust them as we used to? It’s done.
    They only way is if the constitution is changed so a clinically insane tyrant can't do this again. Foreign policy turned 180 degree overnight without Congress doing a thing. Indeed, most of congress claps like fucking circus seals. Which is actually disrespectful to seals frankly.

    But we are getting way ahead of ourselves.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,637

    New Zealand has just sacked its UK High Commissioner for suggesting Donald Trump does not have a firm grasp of history.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cp3yew446k5o
    Auck-ward.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,844

    On your first point, the same is true of Turkey - the Ottoman Empire once bestrode the world, and Erdogan has explicitly referenced that past, and seems to have clear ambitions of a greater Turkey. His territorial ambitions are also more directly opposed to our interests given the strategic importance of our military base on Cyprus.

    On your final point, broadly I agree, but we need to be careful that we are doing this, not doing stupid things like giving away Chagos as part of our military budget.
    We're not giving them away. They're not ours. Legally. Which is why HMG started the negotiation to hand them back to their rightful owner. The US may not care about international law, but we do.

    We have maintained administration over a US military base. We're diverging with the US as allies. If they lose Diego Garcia it's their problem not ours. With Trump now backing Putin are we not going to be decoupling ourselves anyway?
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884
    edited March 6
    rcs1000 said:

    He's a human being.

    I didn't agree with his vote, but he's just another human being.
    If he is now on the side of democracy and doing things big or small to turn America in the right direction, I think he should be welcomed and supported.

    If not, my sympathy is with the people who did the right thing and are just as damaged by his choice.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,817
    rcs1000 said:

    What about New Zealand???
    Very deep in with China, sadly. I'd probably add Japan and Italy to the top of our second order allies list, shift them into the top grouping if the Tempest project gets the green light (which is really must now).
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,686
    nico67 said:

    They had 8 years to convert but were happy to ignore everything that Trump has done . And it’s too late now we have Trump for the next 4 years . I feel sorry for those that didn’t vote for Trump and will suffer , those that did deserve to feel as much pain as possible . Only then might they wake up .

    This might sound rather un-Christian and lacking forgiveness but that’s where I’m at .
    I'd be a liar to say I'm immune to schadenfreude. And there are certainly others I feel more sympathy for.

    But I also remember some of the idiotic mistakes I've made.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    kjh said:

    Yes it did puncture the high IQ claims. Just trundling off loads of random links without being able to determine whether they are sound. I thought @IanB2 hit the spot after all those AI links the other day, although it was a bit cruel, but then leon does it to everyone else:

    Quoting Ian: 'Anyhow, PB’ers who were here this morning already witnessed a superlative demonstration of where a combination of AI and sub-par human intelligence can take you. It wasn’t pretty.'

    And sadly that is where we may end up as AI takes hold and humans lose their ability to challenge what is presented to them.
    Yes. To have come back a few days later, obviously not having engaged his own brain, with another load of nonsense quite obviously cut and paste from one of his pet AIs, is disappointing - and a sad comment on what may well be the future, of people taking the output of their AI as gospel without having thought about it themselves at all.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,136
    edited March 6
    Nigelb said:

    In particular ?
    Probably not much, unless he's in our circle of acquaintance.

    But in general, absolutely we should. If you believe democracy is still a viable form of government, then you have to be open to your opponents changing their minds in the face if evidence.
    You might think him an idiot, but how does that make him any different from a large number of voters ?

    The other point, of course, is that the damage Trump's policies do isn't confined to those who voted for him.
    It's easy to confuse a lack of political engagement with stupidity, and there are very few people stupid enough to not understand what kind of individual Trump is.

    My sympathy is limited because his behaviour has been exactly in line with what I and others expected. That lack of care will extend to Democrats too if they don't start to kick up a fuss - put your protests where your mouth is.
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 5,088
    Nigelb said:

    I'd be a liar to say I'm immune to schadenfreude. And there are certainly others I feel more sympathy for.

    But I also remember some of the idiotic mistakes I've made.
    We’ve all made mistakes but I’m very happy to see that the vast majority of members in here be they right or left on their politics have found common ground on Ukraine .


  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,844
    IanB2 said:

    Did he not understand that Trump wants him to make stuff in the US, employing fellow Americans?
    Americans can't afford to buy stuff made in the US. Same here. Have you seen how much British clothes cost? OK, so its high-end, but that's because production costs are also high-end.

    Here's the simple truth. We need to consume less. Unchecked capitalism means that we have to consumer more and more. Wardrobe full of clothes you like? Buy more? Smartphone more than 18 months old? Buy another! Not buying new tech fast enough? Lets engineer in obsolescence.

    Western countries could make all the stuff they used to. But it would be the end to Friedman Capitalism which has dominated our lives for the last 40+ years. And the people who own our economies think that would be bad for them. So we won't.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    An example of stuff happening, where NZ takes action over something which would normally be not noticed at all. This is real fear operating. Plenty more to come.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/mar/06/phil-goff-donald-trump-comments-new-zealand-high-commissioner-removed-chatham-house-ntwnfb
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    edited March 6
    All that US propaganda we’ve been fed for 50 years about leadership of the free world, the shining light on the hill, the new world, the land of liberty etc chokes. I couldn’t give less of a toss about their founding fathers or , as it turns out, ineffective constitution.

    Personally I would like to see us promote our own story and mythology. For example , the Scottish enlightenment needs to be celebrated, but few have heard of it.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,817
    nico67 said:

    They had 8 years to convert but were happy to ignore everything that Trump has done . And it’s too late now we have Trump for the next 4 years . I feel sorry for those that didn’t vote for Trump and will suffer , those that did deserve to feel as much pain as possible . Only then might they wake up .

    This might sound rather un-Christian and lacking forgiveness but that’s where I’m at .
    This attitude is why the left struggles so much, it's completely unwelcoming to those had the temerity to leave "paradise" or realise they made a mistake. It's mean spirited and in this particular case I'm sure that the guy who runs this business has many people employed who are going to lose their jobs too if his company goes under, kids that will go hungry and families evicted from their homes. Regardless of how people voted, these are all horrible outcomes on a personal level, revelling in it because you disagree with the way someone voted just feels wrong, very bad karma.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,844
    MaxPB said:

    Very deep in with China, sadly. I'd probably add Japan and Italy to the top of our second order allies list, shift them into the top grouping if the Tempest project gets the green light (which is really must now).
    In deep with China is the present. We're all in deep with China. Looking around my desk the following are made in China: laptop, monitor, keyboard, mouse, phone, headphones, webcam, label printer. That's just for starters.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,256
    Eabhal said:

    It's easy to confuse a lack of political engagement with stupidity, and there are very few people stupid enough to not understand what kind of individual Trump is.

    My sympathy is limited. And that will extend to Democrats too if they don't start to kick up a fuss.
    The Dems still haven't figured out what happened.

    On the other hand there will be special places in hell for the likes of Rubio who sold their souls to the orange devil.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,617
    Nigelb said:

    Ukraine has a million strong army, and a large, relatively modern defence industry.
    Depending on how much is eventually ceded to Russia, that will be added to the future Russian threat.
    Or to Europe's defences.

    Our choice.
    Without US military aid, or it being plugged, Ukraine could be in real trouble in as little as four months

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/05/world/americas/ukraine-us-weapons-suspension.html?campaign_id=51&emc=edit_mbe_20250306&instance_id=149213&nl=morning-briefing:-europe-edition&regi_id=221882697&segment_id=192674&user_id=565c1b804dcd1b7fd2985ae5816491d3
  • BattlebusBattlebus Posts: 663
    algarkirk said:

    An example of stuff happening, where NZ takes action over something which would normally be not noticed at all. This is real fear operating. Plenty more to come.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/mar/06/phil-goff-donald-trump-comments-new-zealand-high-commissioner-removed-chatham-house-ntwnfb

    Chatham House Rules?
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    MaxPB said:

    Australia, Canada, France and Poland in that order I'd say then a bunch of second order allies in Europe.

    I would put the Nordics and the Netherlands ahead of Australia and Canada, both of which have much higher priorities than the UK in their own neck of the woods.

  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    MaxPB said:

    This attitude is why the left struggles so much, it's completely unwelcoming to those had the temerity to leave "paradise" or realise they made a mistake. It's mean spirited and in this particular case I'm sure that the guy who runs this business has many people employed who are going to lose their jobs too if his company goes under, kids that will go hungry and families evicted from their homes. Regardless of how people voted, these are all horrible outcomes on a personal level, revelling in it because you disagree with the way someone voted just feels wrong, very bad karma.

    Nothing says warm and welcoming more than "You lost, get over it"!

  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,310
    Jonathan said:

    Excellent, what’s your position on Яeform and our home grown Maga?

    The Tories need to destroy them, correct?
    Yaeform makes absolutely no sense.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017

    A

    People see and hear what they want to. They pick a side and then reconcile that with their wishes.

    It’s not uncommon to encounter Corbynites who tell you that he is actually a hardcore Remainer. Who would have instantly taken us back into the EU.

    They actually believe this. If Jenrick really did believe that Trump would be good for the UK he is clearly as unfit to hold office as Corbyn was.

  • nico67nico67 Posts: 5,088
    MaxPB said:

    This attitude is why the left struggles so much, it's completely unwelcoming to those had the temerity to leave "paradise" or realise they made a mistake. It's mean spirited and in this particular case I'm sure that the guy who runs this business has many people employed who are going to lose their jobs too if his company goes under, kids that will go hungry and families evicted from their homes. Regardless of how people voted, these are all horrible outcomes on a personal level, revelling in it because you disagree with the way someone voted just feels wrong, very bad karma.
    Trumps actions are likely to lead to more Ukrainian deaths . My sympathy is with Ukrainians. Sorry the well is reserved for them. And horrible outcomes are losing friends and family because Trump is a fxcking traitor. I understand what you’re saying but my anger at what’s happening is currently obliterating any sympathies for the collateral damage caused by voting for Trump .
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,617

    Nothing says warm and welcoming more than "You lost, get over it"!

    The post he’s responding to is hardly warm, welcoming or mature now, is it ?
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,617
    nico67 said:

    Trumps actions are likely to lead to more Ukrainian deaths . My sympathy is with Ukrainians. Sorry the well is reserved for them. And horrible outcomes are losing friends and family because Trump is a fxcking traitor. I understand what you’re saying but my anger at what’s happening is currently obliterating any sympathies for the collateral damage caused by voting for Trump .
    God bless you for your saintliness paraded on display here for all of us to see. Polishing your halo in public must give you such a frisson of joy.
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 3,413
    Jonathan said:

    Brilliant. Only a few weeks ago Tories were saying their future was some kind of pact.

    The country needs the Tory party to get off its knees, reject maga and the theological new right and remember what patriotic British conservatism is all about.
    I say this with some diffidence, but it seems to me that patriotic British conservatism has been labelled as Far Right for too long to be acceptable now.

    Good morning, everyone.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,617

    They actually believe this. If Jenrick really did believe that Trump would be good for the UK he is clearly as unfit to hold office as Corbyn was.

    Well quite given the Trumpdozer is doing exactly what he said he would.

    I think that shows a major flaw in Jenrick.
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 935
    algarkirk said:

    Totally sympathise. And our USA friends need to know that in Europe one of our feelings is a profound sadness and solidarity with our friends.

    But there is one more thing to say. What cannot be denied is that USA voters voted for Trump, and for an GOP congress, in the 100% full knowledge of what Trump had said in speech after speech; including tariffs, isolationism, making sure the Ukraine war was forced to an end, regarding Canada as an annexe with a governor as PM, and seeking to acquire Greenland.

    They also knew (6 Jan) that Trump was a liar, rabble rouser and fraud who only believed in an electoral process when he won. They also knew that he never criticises Russia.

    They have got what they voted for and what he stood for. Which was the bit those changing their minds didn't get?
    Why would you sympathise? They were presumably happy with the rest of his programme that means other people losing healthcare, jobs etc, they're just shocked because they weren't expecting to experience the negative consequences of their vote.
    People vote for policies not caring how it will impact on others in the expectation they'll be unaffected.
    US would be a different place if, for example, those campaigning against gun laws were shot instead of schoolkids. You could have a pardon system, school shooters get an unconditional pardon if they just take the kids hostage and agree to exchange them for Alex Jones and NRA committee members.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,476
    Good morning, Miss JGP.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,222
    edited March 6
    Jonathan said:

    All that US propaganda we’ve been fed for 50 years about leadership of the free world, the shining light on the hill, the new world, the land of liberty etc chokes. I couldn’t give less of a toss about their founding fathers or , as it turns out, ineffective constitution.

    Personally I would like to see us promote our own story and mythology. For example , the Scottish enlightenment needs to be celebrated, but few have heard of it.

    WW1 14-18
    Interwar 19-38
    WW2 39-45
    Cold war 46-91
    Post cold war Pax Americana 92-24
    End of end of history 25-> ?
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,798
    Nigelb said:

    .

    I don't just disagree with that; I think it's a massively counterproductive response (not you personally, but in general).

    If you don't welcome the conversion of political opponents, or ridicule the admission of mistakes (even the most egregious ones), then you do your own favoured policies a huge disservice.
    I propose that this comment be framed and placed on the site's banner.
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 5,088
    Taz said:

    God bless you for your saintliness paraded on display here for all of us to see. Polishing your halo in public must give you such a frisson of joy.
    Thank you ! Not sure why my post has caused such a drama . Many think the same and just don’t want to look bad and cruel . You should go onto Dem sites to see the level of bile aimed at their fellow US voters who supported Trump . My post was positively vanilla in comparison.
  • scampi25scampi25 Posts: 96
    I'd like to see how the polls go after the spending review. Deep cuts to fund defence will prove a good test of the resolve of ordinary people to make sacrifices. I'm unsure how it will go.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100

    Britain needs to rediscover the period in the eighteenth century when it was the intellectual centre of Europe, and finally shake off Victorian anti-intellectualism ; that"s what's allowed the less advanced, rather than more expansive, part of American mass culture to exert too much of an
    influence on us.
    There’s more to us than the Beatles, WW2, Victorians and Empire. Freedom was not invented in America.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    Jonathan said:

    There’s more to us than the Beatles, WW2, Victorians and Empire. Freedom was not invented in America.
    Indeed, although I would the Beatles in the category of a refinement and improvement of something coming from America. In the 1960's.British popular culture advanced American popular culture, and broadened it.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    I would *put*, that should ofcourse say below, there.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,256
    edited March 6
    Taz said:

    The post he’s responding to is hardly warm, welcoming or mature now, is it ?
    I am sure Jenrick has landed where he has is entirely for personal gain. However everything he is saying now resonates with the British voter. No one cares that just six weeks ago he attended Trump's inauguration.

    He has an opportunity because for good or ill Starmer remains equivocal regarding Trump's evil. Now this may be pragmatic, but to the uninitiated and myself, Starmer looks like a traitor for letting Trump's misbehaviour go unchecked. Jenrick looks like he has captured the mood of the nation. I can't understand why the self-styled World King and defender of Ukraine hasn't condemned Trump.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    Battlebus said:

    Chatham House Rules?
    The Chatham House Rule! There's only one... and it obviously wasn't in place.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    kjh said:

    Yes it did puncture the high IQ claims. Just trundling off loads of random links without being able to determine whether they are sound. I thought @IanB2 hit the spot after all those AI links the other day, although it was a bit cruel, but then leon does it to everyone else:

    Quoting Ian: 'Anyhow, PB’ers who were here this morning already witnessed a superlative demonstration of where a combination of AI and sub-par human intelligence can take you. It wasn’t pretty.'

    And sadly that is where we may end up as AI takes hold and humans lose their ability to challenge what is presented to them.

    Did it puncture high IQ claims or just show how extremely limited IQ is as a measure of anything other than a very specific type of intelligence? I admit I have skin in the game as I am certain my IQ is well below 100, but it really doesn't seem to have done me any harm at all. I just do not have the mental capacity or stamina to do an IQ test. I look at the questions and my mind glazes over.

  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,370
    scampi25 said:

    I'd like to see how the polls go after the spending review. Deep cuts to fund defence will prove a good test of the resolve of ordinary people to make sacrifices. I'm unsure how it will go.

    I think most Western countries will fund defence spending via deficits.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    edited March 6

    I am sure Jenrick has landed where he has is entirely for personal gain. However everything he is saying now resonates with the British voter. No one cares that just six weeks ago he attended Trump's inauguration.

    He has an opportunity because for good or ill Starmer remains equivocal regarding Trump's evil. Now this may be pragmatic, but to the uninitiated and myself, Starmer looks like a traitor for letting Trump's misbehaviour go unchecked. Jenrick looks like he has captured the mood of the nation. I can't understand why the self-styled World King and defender of Ukraine hasn't condemned Trump.

    I would be surprised if as many as 20% of people know who Robert Jenrick is, though they may have a vague recollection of him ordering that Disney characters be painted over in children's homes. The current polling suggests most voters do not see Starmer as a traitor.

  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884
    Taz said:

    God bless you for your saintliness paraded on display here for all of us to see. Polishing your halo in public must give you such a frisson of joy.
    "More joy in heaven over one sinner who repents" etc does need the "repent" bit.
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 5,088
    The general public mostly understand the need for Starmer to keep up his juggling act .

    This may change though down the line .
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099

    Did it puncture high IQ claims or just show how extremely limited IQ is as a measure of anything other than a very specific type of intelligence? I admit I have skin in the game as I am certain my IQ is well below 100, but it really doesn't seem to have done me any harm at all. I just do not have the mental capacity or stamina to do an IQ test. I look at the questions and my mind glazes over.

    Maybe you're just lazy? ;)

    More seriously, you are of course right that IQ and what one might call practical intelligence are some way apart.

    The trouble for Leon is that the sort of sums we've been doing for his geneological puzzle are a lot closer to requiring traditional IQ than practical intelligence (although he's shown little of either, as blindly trusting these AI search engines to solve problems for him isn't very intelligent).
  • FossFoss Posts: 1,394
    MaxPB said:

    There is one interesting dynamic playing out right now, markets are pricing the cost of tariffs directly into USD which just keeps falling. It is the opposite of what I (and I think most others) expected and it makes for a double inflationary impact. I think most people expected for USD to strengthen by 10-12% which would take the edge off tariffs for American consumers but right now USD is down about 6% and falling. American consumers are going to be paying 20-25% more of their hard earned cash for imports of basic goods and close to 15% more dollars for Canadian petroleum products which will send gas prices in the north of the US skyrocketing.

    It feels, to me, that the markets have called Trump's bluff. If the dynamic of selling off USD continues the US is heading for a major, major crisis. This is the first time I've ever thought that US global economic hegemony might be sunsetting. I don't think Trump and MAGA isolationists realise just how much it benefits the US economy.

    A bit of US-lead market chaos is probably good for Reeves' position tho'.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,798
    nico67 said:

    Thank you ! Not sure why my post has caused such a drama . Many think the same and just don’t want to look bad and cruel . You should go onto Dem sites to see the level of bile aimed at their fellow US voters who supported Trump . My post was positively vanilla in comparison.
    And that isn't really going to help either.
    Dems ought to be welcoming Robert's neighbour with open arms. They still have a tendency to push people away.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,207
    edited March 6
    IanB2 said:

    Maybe you're just lazy? ;)

    More seriously, you are of course right that IQ and what one might call practical intelligence are some way apart.

    The trouble for Leon is that the sort of sums we've been doing for his geneological puzzle are a lot closer to requiring traditional IQ than practical intelligence (although he's shown little of either, as blindly trusting these AI search engines to solve problems for him isn't very intelligent).
    I think it just shows how little some arts graduates understand of maths or science. @Leon is a storyteller, fantasist and sensationalist. He doesn't have the concentration and self discipline for real understanding.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,222
    rcs1000 said:

    We have friends in California who are (or were) Trump voters. He voted Trump because (a) concerns about illegal immigration / crime, and (b) because he thought Trump (as a businessman() would manage the economy better than Harris.

    Said friend has a clothing business: he basically supplies big chains with own label clothing that bears a remarkable physical resemblance to that made by more expensive brands.

    Before the election, he saw the way the wind was blowing and moved a lot of production out of China, and into Mexico. He's been absolutely poll-axed by the Mexican tariffs: he's genuinely worried he is going to lose his business because his contracts are in the US and his cost of importation just rose 25%, and his customers don't care.

    He's still clinging on to the hope that this will all blow over, but he's in wide eyed shock right now that things have gone the way they've gone.
    he basically supplies big chains with own label clothing that bears a remarkable physical resemblance to that made by more expensive brands

    Sounds like IP theft to me.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    IanB2 said:

    Maybe you're just lazy? ;)

    More seriously, you are of course right that IQ and what one might call practical intelligence are some way apart.

    The trouble for Leon is that the sort of sums we've been doing for his geneological puzzle are a lot closer to requiring traditional IQ than practical intelligence (although he's shown little of either, as blindly trusting these AI search engines to solve problems for him isn't very intelligent).

    I am bone idle, of that there is no doubt! Why do today what you can put off until tomorrow?

  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    Jonathan said:

    He blows with the wind.

    I wonder what Thatcher, Churchill would have done these past few weeks. It would have been really tough for them given their closeness to the US. I imagine they would be in the same place as Starmer.
    Sacrilege it may be, and Churchill certainly saved the country, but the more negative side of the Churchillian inheritance is partly why we're in this position.

    His links with Roosevelt may have been indispensable, but he never entirely understood the American foreign policy mindset, and always confused American interests with entirely our own, with his American mother.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    MaxPB said:

    I don't think so, I think it's just hibernating. Americans will remember eventually but it mat be too late for them to take back the mantle.
    The thing is, US society is split down the middle. There's a huge swathe of Americans, notably on the coasts but in every major city, that think like us and other Europeans - broadly rational, educated, open, outwards looking. Then there's a larger group, of assorted religious fanatics, racists and the profoundly ignorant - these are people who would vote for Trump even if he came over to their house and took a dump on the carpet. In the middle there is a whole load of people who are too busy working to even look up and see what's happening. As long as gasoline prices are kept down they'll be happy with whatever. This swing group might vote with the first group sometimes, and the second group other times. So we may get a swing back from extreme MAGA at some point. But it should be obvious to everyone in Europe and the broader West that the US is no longer a reliable ally.
    I also wonder how long those first two groups can cohabit in the same country. There is a profound clash of values.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,222
    Nice to see the centrist Dads getting bent out of shape over Ukraine whilst the genocide in Gaza has been met with splendid indifference.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,668
    maxh said:

    FPT @Luckyguy1983:

    I often wholeheartedly disagree with your posts but not this one - I think (a) your assessment overall is good and (b) you bring a valuable analysis to this site that is fairly original - ignore those who accuse you of being a Russian shill.

    I would just take issue with the second paragraph. You draw an equivalence between Russia and other regional powers that may or may not be true. Historically Russia was far more than a regional power and there is evidence that Putin harks back to that history as his legitimating myth. The potential downside of Russia being more comparable to Germany in
    the 1930s is huge. I don't doubt that many on here are overstating the likelihood of this latter comparison, but it's worth insuring ourselves against it if possible.

    I agree, though, that this shouldn't be to the exclusion of attempting to defend ourselves against China's more subtle and nefarious infiltration of our economy and society in the ways you mention.

    If we beef up our military, including intelligence, this won't just help us counter Russian aggression - it will also help us counter the Chinese (and potentially US) variants. It still probably will be woefully inadequate, but it is worth making the attempt.
    His overall assessment would be better if he hadn't confused Druze and Jew in Syria! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Druze
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,346
    Foxy said:

    I think it just shows how little some arts graduates understand of maths or science. @Leon is a storyteller, fantasist and sensationalist. He doesn't have the concentration and self discipline for real understanding.
    He doesn't want to understand. Like many of us, he has a fixed worldview, and everything that happens has to be contorted into that worldview, rather than having his worldview shifted.

    That's something that can happen to all of us. In fact, it's probably the case for me as well on some things.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,013
    Based on this Yougov charts Trump's Yougov favourable rating of 15% is closer to the 12% UKIP voteshare in 2015 while Farage's favourable rating of 26% is much closer to the current Reform poll rating.

    So Farage doesn't want to get too close to Trump if he wants to try and get most seats at the next GE
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,256
    nico67 said:

    The general public mostly understand the need for Starmer to keep up his juggling act .

    This may change though down the line .

    I believe we are at the tipping point. Any more misbehaviour from Trump over Ukraine and the State Visit invite should be rescinded.

    Trump already appears to have cut Europe loose, and if Starmer is still riding two horses to avoid trade tariffs, he is wasting his time.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,256
    Foxy said:

    I think it just shows how little some arts graduates understand of maths or science. @Leon is a storyteller, fantasist and sensationalist. He doesn't have the concentration and self discipline for real understanding.
    Doesn't that say more about Leon than about arts graduates in general?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,207
    MaxPB said:

    This attitude is why the left struggles so much, it's completely unwelcoming to those had the temerity to leave "paradise" or realise they made a mistake. It's mean spirited and in this particular case I'm sure that the guy who runs this business has many people employed who are going to lose their jobs too if his company goes under, kids that will go hungry and families evicted from their homes. Regardless of how people voted, these are all horrible outcomes on a personal level, revelling in it because you disagree with the way someone voted just feels wrong, very bad karma.
    Considering how unlikely it is that @RCS1000 friend follows this site, I think he remains in blissful ignorance.

    Worth noting that Californias electoral vote went to Harris so this persons vote did not help get Trump elected (though his vote for HoR may have made a difference).

    It's best not to mock such people to their faces though, but rather to get them to question themselves. "If you had your vote over again, would you vote the same way?" And then leave it there whatever his response. If Harris, job done, if still Trump then just let the seed grow rather than start an argument.
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 935
    nico67 said:

    Thank you ! Not sure why my post has caused such a drama . Many think the same and just don’t want to look bad and cruel . You should go onto Dem sites to see the level of bile aimed at their fellow US voters who supported Trump . My post was positively vanilla in comparison.
    Given the large number of christians who are enthusiastic Trump supporters, being unchristian is no bad thing.

    The real point is that people might change their vote but they haven't really changed. If the people mentioned above's business survives but their competitors don't, meaning they eventually profit they'll probably vote even more enthusiastically for Trump/his successor next time.
    The public sentiment that came out of WW2, "I don't want it to be them, in different circumstances it could just as easily be me", has faded and life is much worse for it.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938

    I believe we are at the tipping point. Any more misbehaviour from Trump over Ukraine and the State Visit invite should be rescinded.

    Trump already appears to have cut Europe loose, and if Starmer is still riding two horses to avoid trade tariffs, he is wasting his time.
    He has to ride them to the last opportunity, as a good diplomat.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,844
    AnneJGP said:

    I say this with some diffidence, but it seems to me that patriotic British conservatism has been labelled as Far Right for too long to be acceptable now.

    Good morning, everyone.
    Good morning! I think that the reasons this has happened are how the terms "patriotic" and "conservatism" are framed.

    The latter is easy - Tory governments since 2015 haven't been conservative. The othering of conservatism by Conservative politicians started in earnest under Cameron. Fruitcakes and Loonies - of course they must be far right because we Conservatives are the patriotic right and these loonies are to the right of us.

    As for patriotism, its a label which gets endlessly misapplied. There are very few political actors of whichever party who are not patriots, acting in the best interests of their country as they see it. Patriotism has become weaponised as a stick to try and beat the other side with.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,145
    Jonathan said:

    Imagine Churchill having to prosecute WW2 with 20% of the Population fed on a daily diet of propaganda from Lord Haw Haw.

    That’s where we are today.

    Censorship isn’t going to work, but flooding the zone might.

    Isn't that what happened?
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    Dopermean said:

    Why would you sympathise? They were presumably happy with the rest of his programme that means other people losing healthcare, jobs etc, they're just shocked because they weren't expecting to experience the negative consequences of their vote.
    People vote for policies not caring how it will impact on others in the expectation they'll be unaffected.
    US would be a different place if, for example, those campaigning against gun laws were shot instead of schoolkids. You could have a pardon system, school shooters get an unconditional pardon if they just take the kids hostage and agree to exchange them for Alex Jones and NRA committee members.
    Why would I sympathise? Simple. Because a lot of good people are having a hard time, because we hang together, because I would like good outcomes instead of bad, because I do stupid things too and so on.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,207

    Doesn't that say more about Leon than about arts graduates in general?
    That's why I specified SOME arts graduates. We saw it a lot in how MSM reported on covid too.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,686
    Pulpstar said:

    Nice to see the centrist Dads getting bent out of shape over Ukraine whilst the genocide in Gaza has been met with splendid indifference.

    The centrist dads aren't happy with that, either.
    The difference is the UK or Europe's ability to influence events. Which, in the case of whatever it is that Netanyahu and Trump are about to do in Gaza, is close to nil.

    Note that Saudi Arabia's bid of $55bn to rebuild the place has just been rejected out of hand by Trump. And MBS probably now has more influence in the White House than we do.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    Foxy said:

    That's why I specified SOME arts graduates. We saw it a lot in how MSM reported on covid too.
    I did History and Geography myself
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,013

    I would put the Nordics and the Netherlands ahead of Australia and Canada, both of which have much higher priorities than the UK in their own neck of the woods.

    No Australia and Canada and NZ are first as we share the King as our head of state with them and our language and similar ancestry.

    Then the non US NATO nations, then Japan and S Korea and Singapore then while Trump remains in office the US is the current order of our closest allies
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,145
    Jonathan said:

    He blows with the wind.

    I wonder what Thatcher, Churchill would have done these past few weeks. It would have been really tough for them given their closeness to the US. I imagine they would be in the same place as Starmer.
    Churchill was in almost precisely this position and spent the best part of two years trying to overcome official American neutrality until that twerp Hitler declared war on the United States for no sensible reason at all. Churchill gave up a bunch of foreign bases to America and almost bankrupted the country in order to defend our island, whatever the cost may be.

    The last repayment was made 61 years after the end of the war, in 2006.
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/6215847.stm
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,844

    The thing is, US society is split down the middle. There's a huge swathe of Americans, notably on the coasts but in every major city, that think like us and other Europeans - broadly rational, educated, open, outwards looking. Then there's a larger group, of assorted religious fanatics, racists and the profoundly ignorant - these are people who would vote for Trump even if he came over to their house and took a dump on the carpet. In the middle there is a whole load of people who are too busy working to even look up and see what's happening. As long as gasoline prices are kept down they'll be happy with whatever. This swing group might vote with the first group sometimes, and the second group other times. So we may get a swing back from extreme MAGA at some point. But it should be obvious to everyone in Europe and the broader West that the US is no longer a reliable ally.
    I also wonder how long those first two groups can cohabit in the same country. There is a profound clash of values.
    Its held together for a long time, and I see no reason for it to stop now. Inertia is a wonderful thing, and if MAGA can restrain itself there is no reason at all that the traitorous libs can't be subsumed into the project.

    And that is the big if. I'm only an observer from a long way away, but I don't see any restraint in MAGA. The Reichstag speech the other night demonstrated that - with a doubling down afterwards looking for legal sanction against traitors in Congress. Universities being told that campus protests are illegal. They are protecting the constitution by removing it chunk by chunk.

    Once they set off down that route it's hard to see a way back to the long-standing uneasy equilibrium between red and blue.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,256
    Pulpstar said:

    Nice to see the centrist Dads getting bent out of shape over Ukraine whilst the genocide in Gaza has been met with splendid indifference.

    Ukraine is but a few stops down the line from us. A Ukraine defeat proposes a real and present danger to the UK.

    That doesn't mean Gaza and the West Bank are forgotten, just parked for the moment.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,509

    I am bone idle, of that there is no doubt! Why do today what you can put off until tomorrow?

    You are absolutely right about IQ, but it is Leon who keeps going on about it. By the way even though it is pointless I am absolutely sure yours is not under 100.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745
    IanB2 said:

    and as a p.s. to my own analysis above, I have of course underestimated the probability significantly, by limiting my scenario to one generation in time, of the early 1500s. In the generation above, there will have been fewer descendants and more ancestors, and in the generation following, more descendants and fewer ancestors, and none of those will need to have paired up either, for me not to be a descendant of the Dark Ages guy.

    You don’t need to do the maths to see that the chances of that not being the case head quickly towards zero.

    Wait, you’re STILL going at it <<< checks grandfather clock >>> TWELVE HOURS LATER??


  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,370
    Pulpstar said:

    he basically supplies big chains with own label clothing that bears a remarkable physical resemblance to that made by more expensive brands

    Sounds like IP theft to me.
    It's not: it's perfectly legal to copy the style of a designer, which is why there there are hundreds of jackets made my myriad companies that bear a startling resemblance to Chanel.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Pulpstar said:

    Nice to see the centrist Dads getting bent out of shape over Ukraine whilst the genocide in Gaza has been met with splendid indifference.

    Not that old hackneyed line. Right now centrists dads,mums, childfree, left and right are united in outrage at Ukraine (3hrs from London), Canada, trade wars and, yes, Gaza.
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 5,088
    Nigelb said:

    The centrist dads aren't happy with that, either.
    The difference is the UK or Europe's ability to influence events. Which, in the case of whatever it is that Netanyahu and Trump are about to do in Gaza, is close to nil.

    Note that Saudi Arabia's bid of $55bn to rebuild the place has just been rejected out of hand by Trump. And MBS probably now has more influence in the White House than we do.
    Agree with that . There’s really little that Europe can do re Gaza , Israel has limitless backing from Trump.

    But we can effect events in Ukraine .
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    Dopermean said:

    Given the large number of christians who are enthusiastic Trump supporters, being unchristian is no bad thing.

    The real point is that people might change their vote but they haven't really changed. If the people mentioned above's business survives but their competitors don't, meaning they eventually profit they'll probably vote even more enthusiastically for Trump/his successor next time.
    The public sentiment that came out of WW2, "I don't want it to be them, in different circumstances it could just as easily be me", has faded and life is much worse for it.
    Being 'Christian' is about the largest identifiable grouping in the human race. There are over a billion Roman Catholics alone, and to claim the 'Christian' identity requires no actual commitment to any particular thing. The people huddling in the Catholic church in Gaza are Christians too. This doesn't tell me that Roman catholic Vance is a good person.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,013

    A lot of voters are low-information. It's easy to live inside a media bubble where much of what you hear is the same CRISIS which you must fix NOW by voting how they want you to vote.

    We saw this with Brexit, where farming and fishing voted for Brexit to remove trade barriers only to have bigger trade barriers imposed. We're seeing this with US business. Inside the bubble the problem is caused by liberals/socialists and the solution is easy and quick. In practice the real world is complex and slow.

    Trump has just announced a 1 month moratorium on auto part tariffs. As if that will make any difference. Their problem is that - as we faced with Boris and the ERG in charge - the people setting policy are low-information.
    Fishermen voted to end the CFP and get more control over their waters not to remove trade barriers, the NFU backed Remain
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,370

    He doesn't want to understand. Like many of us, he has a fixed worldview, and everything that happens has to be contorted into that worldview, rather than having his worldview shifted.

    That's something that can happen to all of us. In fact, it's probably the case for me as well on some things.
    Everyone suffers from cognitive dissonance to some extent, it's just more pronounced in some people than others.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    Leon said:

    Wait, you’re STILL going at it <<< checks grandfather clock >>> TWELVE HOURS LATER??


    More to the point, you're still going at it FOUR DAYS later, and still you don't understand it.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,442
    edited March 6
    There's little doubt that Starmer is at last showing what he's good at and his lawyerly studies are coming to the fore as they did with last years far right protests but I believe we're starting to see some real leadership.

    The Cote d'Azur isn't the best place to gauge the political scene but I'm getting a distinct feeling of camaraderie between the British and French. At last we have a common enemy. No more Gallic shrugs. This is the real thing. Even the Americans here seem to loathe him.

    In the reign of Tony Blair Britain was the cool place to be. Could the Macron/Starmer combo be heralding the second coming?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,686
    rcs1000 said:

    Everyone suffers from cognitive dissonance to some extent, it's just more pronounced in some people than others.
    The real trick is to recognise it when it's happening to you.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    Nigelb said:

    The centrist dads aren't happy with that, either.
    The difference is the UK or Europe's ability to influence events. Which, in the case of whatever it is that Netanyahu and Trump are about to do in Gaza, is close to nil.

    Note that Saudi Arabia's bid of $55bn to rebuild the place has just been rejected out of hand by Trump. And MBS probably now has more influence in the White House than we do.
    I live a very sheltered life. What is a centrist dad? Am I one because I am both a centrist and a dad or is there a special meaning?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,013
    agingjb2 said:

    I suspect that China will be the most effective and efficient of the various powerful tyrannies we face, but perhaps also the least intolerable.

    China under Xi hasn't yet invaded its neighbour nor is it imposing big new tariffs on its main economic rival
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,222
    Happy world book day everyone.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,668
    Foxy said:

    Considering how unlikely it is that @RCS1000 friend follows this site, I think he remains in blissful ignorance.

    Worth noting that Californias electoral vote went to Harris so this persons vote did not help get Trump elected (though his vote for HoR may have made a difference).

    It's best not to mock such people to their faces though, but rather to get them to question themselves. "If you had your vote over again, would you vote the same way?" And then leave it there whatever his response. If Harris, job done, if still Trump then just let the seed grow rather than start an argument.
    One should welcome political converts like parable of the prodigal son.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,476
    Pulpstar said:

    Nice to see the centrist Dads getting bent out of shape over Ukraine whilst the genocide in Gaza has been met with splendid indifference.

    There's also the resource acquisition in Congo by Rwanda...
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,503
    HYUFD said:

    Based on this Yougov charts Trump's Yougov favourable rating of 15% is closer to the 12% UKIP voteshare in 2015 while Farage's favourable rating of 26% is much closer to the current Reform poll rating.

    So Farage doesn't want to get too close to Trump if he wants to try and get most seats at the next GE

    I doubt it'll be Farage's views on Trump that stop people voting Reform in 2029, even if Trump is somehow still in power then.

    It'll be the government's failure to get a grip on, or reverse, immigration, continuing stagnation in living standards, further wokeness and the inability of the Conservatives to make headway that will deliver him the votes.

    If those factors are somehow countered, or lose their salience, Reform will struggle.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745
    IanB2 said:

    More to the point, you're still going at it FOUR DAYS later, and still you don't understand it.
    I’ve got you writing entire theses, at 7am (and still deeply flawed) I consider this my greatest triumph (of the week, anyway)
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,668
    nico67 said:

    Agree with that . There’s really little that Europe can do re Gaza , Israel has limitless backing from Trump.

    But we can effect events in Ukraine .
    I agree there's a limit to what Europe can do re Gaza, but we can do more than we're currently doing.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,310
    algarkirk said:

    I live a very sheltered life. What is a centrist dad? Am I one because I am both a centrist and a dad or is there a special meaning?
    If you don't know then you are one.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zltpK2KiaQ
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,798
    Foxy said:

    That's why I specified SOME arts graduates. We saw it a lot in how MSM reported on covid too.
    It's not really arts graduates v science graduates, though this is a handy shorthand. It's people who can think mathematically v people who can't. The former group is very small. It doesn't fit the human brain. Rather arrogantly, I place myself in it. Sorry. Maths was my best subject at school but I didn't do it an university.

    But even my brain often instinctively wants to make a billion about twice a million and I have to concentrate in order for it not to.

    This isn't unusual. People's brains instinctively think logarithmically rather than instinctively. You have to educate them out of it. If you asked someone with no mathematical education whatsoever (like a small child) what half of nine is, they would say three.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,793
    edited March 6
    Pulpstar said:

    Nice to see the centrist Dads getting bent out of shape over Ukraine whilst the genocide in Gaza has been met with splendid indifference.

    It's certainly a striking illustration of Donald Trump's warped mindset. Gagging to provide "whatever it takes" to the cause of Israeli aggression. Won't give a dicky bird to the cause of Ukrainian defence.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    HYUFD said:

    China under Xi hasn't yet invaded its neighbour nor is it imposing big new tariffs on its main economic rival
    This is worth repeating, because it"s how much of the world sees things.

    China is largely seen as a peacable manufacturer, trader, and mercenary businessman.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,844
    Fishing said:

    I doubt it'll be Farage's views on Trump that stop people voting Reform in 2029, even if Trump is somehow still in power then.

    It'll be the government's failure to get a grip on, or reverse, immigration, continuing stagnation in living standards, further wokeness and the inability of the Conservatives to make headway that will deliver him the votes.

    If those factors are somehow countered, or lose their salience, Reform will struggle.
    I've made the exact same point. We are mostly reasonably well off successful people living inside an information bubble. The target market for Reform are either not like us, or have been captured inside a different disinformation bubble.

    Either way, our moral panic about Trump is not shared by Reform voters. It *could* be if Trump turns on the west, but in that scenario the strongest denouncer will be Farage.

    Punters will be voting on themselves, their family, their community. Reform will be speaking their language, showing understanding and offering solutions. That these "solutions" won't work doesn't matter as Labour and Tory solutions have also failed.

    I make this point often on my YouTube channel when the self-righteous comes on banging on about the evils of EV / Musk etc. What I think isn't necessarily what other people think. I have that basic level of self-awareness, but so many others do not. Which is why they conflate the latest moral panic possessing them - Brexit, Corbyn, Gaza, Boris, Trump etc - with how everyone must be thinking.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012

    NATO is dead - we haven't yet formally wound it up but as Article 5 no longer applies then the whole concept of mutual defence is over. That then imperils the five eyes intelligence group and so on and so on.

    My response to who is first is all of them. UK / Canada / Australia / NZ are the Four Eyes intelligence group. UK is in rNATO as are France et al, with Japan, S Korea, Singapore and others as strategic allies.

    With the shuttering of NATO and Five Eyes, we need to rapidly evolve the alliance and that means everyone.

    Starmer announced support for Ukraine in a way that boosts our economy. Germany is lifting its borrowing cap and will be investing in ways that boosts its economy. War footing economies can be very effective - many allied economies have been stagnant for a long time. The end of NATO is a political jolt but can also be a positive economic one.

    I absolutely hate the fact that I am now ramping the idea that we need to invest heavily in defence. But we do, and we need investment in our economy. Its an opportunity we have to grasp in this new phase of our world order.
    Worth noting that while Starmer's public position is the inviolability of the USA/NATO deal, his best friend Macron is charged with a slightly different position, reflecting of course the UK's true stance, as the Guardian reports his words:

    He further said said he had decided “to open the strategic debate on the protection of our allies on the European continent by our [nuclear] deterrent” but stressed any use of France’s nuclear weapons would remain only in the hands of the French president.

    Macron said in his address: “I want to believe the US will stay by our side. But we have to be ready if that isn’t the case.

    “Europe’s future should not be decided in Washington or Moscow, and yes the threat from the east is returning. And the innocence of these 30 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall is over.”
This discussion has been closed.