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The General Election - June 8th 2017

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  • Theresa May refuses to guarantee Hammond's job as chancellor in their bizarre joint press conference in Canary Wharf.

    Strong and stable Tory government planning another reshuffle.

    I guarantee she's lining up people to blame if and when Brexit negotiations go tits up
  • cafcfan said:

    On the subject of tax.
    image

    Who the hell is that tosser? And how did anyone find his pronouncements?

    Does he know that the whole world was a very different place nigh on two generations ago? Would he know, for example, that the idiot Foot wanted to re-introduce exchange controls in 1983? That would have been good. Anyway, it allows us the opportunity to revisit the Foot manifesto (which didn't include the bit about exchange controls by the way, although all the documents were printed up and ready to go, presumably because of the Labour Party's 1983 promise of a Brexit.) So, the longest suicide note in history. It's remarkably similar in many respects to the 2017 edition. It's here politicsresources.net/area/uk/man/lab83.htm should anyone fancy some mawkish reminiscence of "The New Hope for Britain".
    A young Jeremy Corbyn, in his first stint as an MP said the '83 manifesto was “a very interesting electoral platform but lots of people in the party were quite frightened of it”. Whereas Tony Benn took comfort by arguing that “for the first time since 1945, a political party with an openly socialist policy has received the support of over 8.5 million people. This is a remarkable development by any standards and it deserves some analysis.”

    It is remarkable to look back now at that great orator, Michael Foot and see similar adoring crowds at that election campaign as our Jeremy gets now. In anything approaching normal times, the Labour party should be in with a strong shout this time round. But I suspect that the twin effects of the SNP's stranglehold on Scotland and the eagerly anticipated demise of UKIP as a political force would be sufficient to do for the party's chances even without the Corbyn effect. We shall see.
    (I'm still not voting.)
    Is your point that 1983 was a long time ago, or that it wasn't?
  • Rob7Lee said:

    It just come up on the news - If you earn £123k it will be £23k though.

    You need to change news channel! How can a 5p increase between 80k and £123k result in £23k more tax!?!

    5% of £43k is what....... £2,150 extra. Is Corbyn reading the news?




    BBC errors.
    I think that's the correct answer. In later additions of the news bulletin the additional £23k tax take was shown for someone earning half a million, not the lower figure! So just the odd footballer and some BBC newscasters then!


  • I expect this'll be reported on a similar scale to the shadow home secretary's numbers mix up. Oh wait.
    Selectively misrepresenting or even lying about the numbers is what politicians do. It's not news. Not knowing what figures to misrepresent or lie about was news.
    Already lol'd but, lol.
  • Chizz said:

    cafcfan said:

    On the subject of tax.
    image

    Who the hell is that tosser? And how did anyone find his pronouncements?

    Does he know that the whole world was a very different place nigh on two generations ago? Would he know, for example, that the idiot Foot wanted to re-introduce exchange controls in 1983? That would have been good. Anyway, it allows us the opportunity to revisit the Foot manifesto (which didn't include the bit about exchange controls by the way, although all the documents were printed up and ready to go, presumably because of the Labour Party's 1983 promise of a Brexit.) So, the longest suicide note in history. It's remarkably similar in many respects to the 2017 edition. It's here politicsresources.net/area/uk/man/lab83.htm should anyone fancy some mawkish reminiscence of "The New Hope for Britain".
    A young Jeremy Corbyn, in his first stint as an MP said the '83 manifesto was “a very interesting electoral platform but lots of people in the party were quite frightened of it”. Whereas Tony Benn took comfort by arguing that “for the first time since 1945, a political party with an openly socialist policy has received the support of over 8.5 million people. This is a remarkable development by any standards and it deserves some analysis.”

    It is remarkable to look back now at that great orator, Michael Foot and see similar adoring crowds at that election campaign as our Jeremy gets now. In anything approaching normal times, the Labour party should be in with a strong shout this time round. But I suspect that the twin effects of the SNP's stranglehold on Scotland and the eagerly anticipated demise of UKIP as a political force would be sufficient to do for the party's chances even without the Corbyn effect. We shall see.
    (I'm still not voting.)
    Is your point that 1983 was a long time ago, or that it wasn't?
    It depends. For most people it was a long time ago. If you're a member of the labour party, it was only yesterday.


  • I expect this'll be reported on a similar scale to the shadow home secretary's numbers mix up. Oh wait.
    Selectively misrepresenting or even lying about the numbers is what politicians do. It's not news. Not knowing what figures to misrepresent or lie about was news.
    It seemed to be news a couple of weeks ago...
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  • I expect this'll be reported on a similar scale to the shadow home secretary's numbers mix up. Oh wait.
    Selectively misrepresenting or even lying about the numbers is what politicians do. It's not news. Not knowing what figures to misrepresent or lie about was news.
    It seemed to be news a couple of weeks ago...
    Abbott's problem was twofold - first she didn't know the number and second her guesstimate was ludicrous.
    She said £300k but meant £300m then got flustered. Both are worrying but one will get more coverage than the other.
  • edited May 2017



    I expect this'll be reported on a similar scale to the shadow home secretary's numbers mix up. Oh wait.
    Selectively misrepresenting or even lying about the numbers is what politicians do. It's not news. Not knowing what figures to misrepresent or lie about was news.
    It seemed to be news a couple of weeks ago...
    Abbott's problem was twofold - first she didn't know the number and second her guesstimate was ludicrous.
    ..and turd, the 10,000 extra Police was a policy Labour chose to bring out before their manifesto was made public, so one woulda thought that the very head of the department who look after that particular area would've bothered to swot up on the basic figures before embarking on her intrepid "6 interviews in one day"


  • I expect this'll be reported on a similar scale to the shadow home secretary's numbers mix up. Oh wait.
    Selectively misrepresenting or even lying about the numbers is what politicians do. It's not news. Not knowing what figures to misrepresent or lie about was news.
    It seemed to be news a couple of weeks ago...
    Abbott's problem was twofold - first she didn't know the number and second her guesstimate was ludicrous.
    ..and turd, the 10,000 extra Police was a policy Labour chose to bring out before their manifesto was made public, so one woulda thought that the very head of the department who look after that particular area would've bothered to swot up on the basic figures before embarking on her intrepid "6 interviews in one day"
    Which is completely different to the current chancellor not knowing the cost of a tens of billions pound infrastructure project. :smiley:
    I bet he had a better guess than DA's though ; )
  • edited May 2017
    One got loads of numbers wrong from £300,000 for 10,000 police to £80,000,000 for 250,000 police to to £300,000,000 for 2500 police... She then accused the interviewer of making up figures!

    The other quoted a figure that included contingencies. He not once accused the interviewer of stating a single figure he had said himself! (£20bn in contingencies is mental though!)


  • I expect this'll be reported on a similar scale to the shadow home secretary's numbers mix up. Oh wait.
    Selectively misrepresenting or even lying about the numbers is what politicians do. It's not news. Not knowing what figures to misrepresent or lie about was news.
    It seemed to be news a couple of weeks ago...
    Abbott's problem was twofold - first she didn't know the number and second her guesstimate was ludicrous.
    ..and turd, the 10,000 extra Police was a policy Labour chose to bring out before their manifesto was made public, so one woulda thought that the very head of the department who look after that particular area would've bothered to swot up on the basic figures before embarking on her intrepid "6 interviews in one day"
    Which is completely different to the current chancellor not knowing the cost of a tens of billions pound infrastructure project. :smiley:
    I bet he had a better guess than DA's though ; )
    Well she was £299,700,000 off and he was £20bn off so no he didn't! :smile:
  • edited May 2017



    I expect this'll be reported on a similar scale to the shadow home secretary's numbers mix up. Oh wait.
    Selectively misrepresenting or even lying about the numbers is what politicians do. It's not news. Not knowing what figures to misrepresent or lie about was news.
    It seemed to be news a couple of weeks ago...
    Abbott's problem was twofold - first she didn't know the number and second her guesstimate was ludicrous.
    ..and turd, the 10,000 extra Police was a policy Labour chose to bring out before their manifesto was made public, so one woulda thought that the very head of the department who look after that particular area would've bothered to swot up on the basic figures before embarking on her intrepid "6 interviews in one day"
    Which is completely different to the current chancellor not knowing the cost of a tens of billions pound infrastructure project. :smiley:
    I bet he had a better guess than DA's though ; )
    Well she was £299,700,000 off and he was £20bn off so no he didn't! :smile:
    What's the difference as a percentage?
    38.5%ish? Out for the Cons
    99.9% Out for the Labs
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  • Dazzler21 said:



    I expect this'll be reported on a similar scale to the shadow home secretary's numbers mix up. Oh wait.
    Selectively misrepresenting or even lying about the numbers is what politicians do. It's not news. Not knowing what figures to misrepresent or lie about was news.
    It seemed to be news a couple of weeks ago...
    Abbott's problem was twofold - first she didn't know the number and second her guesstimate was ludicrous.
    ..and turd, the 10,000 extra Police was a policy Labour chose to bring out before their manifesto was made public, so one woulda thought that the very head of the department who look after that particular area would've bothered to swot up on the basic figures before embarking on her intrepid "6 interviews in one day"
    Which is completely different to the current chancellor not knowing the cost of a tens of billions pound infrastructure project. :smiley:
    I bet he had a better guess than DA's though ; )
    Well she was £299,700,000 off and he was £20bn off so no he didn't! :smile:
    What's the difference as a percentage?
    38.5%ish? Out for the Cons
    99.9% Out for the Labs
    What's the difference to the tax payer? : Annoying smiley face thing:
  • Your child will then come back with his degree in Burger Van Management to find a job market flooded with people with other similarly tinpot degrees, cant afford to move back out without a job, and then will cost you a fortune raiding your fridge for 20 years.

    Unless he actually does start a burger van. Then he can feed himself and live in it.
  • Your child will then come back with his degree in Burger Van Management to find a job market flooded with people with other similarly tinpot degrees, cant afford to move back out without a job, and then will cost you a fortune raiding your fridge for 20 years.

    Unless he actually does start a burger van. Then he can feed himself and live in it.
    Did I miss something in the Labour Manifesto? Did they say they were going to scrap uni fees, but only offer ridiculous courses DamoNorthStand made up?
  • edited May 2017
    If 16% are getting firsts whilst less intelligent youth numbers appear to be rising I can only think one of four things may have occurred:

    1. The students of the past did not try hard enough
    2. The students of today get have an easier scoring system
    3. The students of today try a lot harder
    4. Less students continue on into University.

    Answering myself:

    4. I am pretty sure there are more students so we can write this one off.
    3. I am certain students of today feel they have more competition, as a result of more people going to University. Whether this = Trying harder or not is difficult to tell.
    2. I am unsure about this one, however a bit of googling seems to show exams have increased in difficulty if anything!
    1. This is my only option remaining, but I just don't believe it's this one! Surely they tried just as much....

    This is why I don't like my brain... it disagrees with itself!

    I can only come to the newest option.

    5. Students are tutored to pass an exam and to get high scores on an essay (rather than knowing the subject matter inside out) in order to make their universities look better than they are at teaching the subject matter and to make more money out of students paying higher fees.
  • Dazzler21 said:

    If 16% are getting firsts whilst less intelligent youth numbers appear to be rising I can only think one of four things may have occurred:

    1. The students of the past did not try hard enough
    2. The students of today get have an easier scoring system
    3. The students of today try a lot harder
    4. Less students continue on into University.

    Answering myself:

    4. I am pretty sure there are more students so we can write this one off.
    3. I am certain students of today feel they have more competition, as a result of more people going to University. Whether this = Trying harder or not is difficult to tell.
    2. I am unsure about this one, however a bit of googling seems to show exams have increased in difficulty if anything!
    1. This is my only option remaining, but I just don't believe it's this one! Surely they tried just as much....

    This is why I don't like my brain... it disagrees with itself!

    I can only come to the newest option.

    5. Students are tutored to pass an exam and to get high scores on an essay (rather than knowing the subject matter inside out) in order to make their universities look better than they are at teaching the subject matter and to make more money out of students paying higher fees.

    Students of today can't afford to get shitfaced every night!

    Was £1k a year for me which I thought was reasonable.
This discussion has been closed.

Roland Out Forever!