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Ohhhhh Jeremy Corrrrrrbyn

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  • You got much work done today @Henry Irving?
  • i stood in Lewisham East once-----soon moved though
  • Lee is the centre of my the Universe ya mug!
  • seth plum said:

    I absolutely believe that contemplation of Corbyn's judgement is totally valid.
    It is that kind of thing that guides the votes of individuals. It is also in the realm of personal opinion.
    For example to read in that article that Michael Gove described the Good Friday Agreement as a 'mortal stain' and a 'humiliation' for the British Army would influence my vote if Gove ever decided to stand in Lewisham East.

    Start a Michael Gove thread and I'll agree with you but this is the Corbyn thread : - )
  • And one more thing and this is very Leuth like thing to do but at the end of that article

    James Butler is a writer and editor at Novara Media based in London.

    Talk about having an agenda

    Shit, I missed that. It's a bit of an ad hominem/genetic fallacy, but not without validity. The piece remains well-written.
  • Novara is a mixed bag, but the left overall is a broad church. I mean me and @Greenie are both in the congregation for a start ;)
  • edited December 2018

    Maybe you won't change my mind but maybe others reading this will see the wisdom of your arguments and change their minds.

    Or maybe it is rather than you'd prefer not to shine so much light on Corbyn and his real views so duck the debate.

    Or maybe it is easier to put those people who tell you uncomfortable truths that disturb YOUR fixed viewpoint into a neat box so you can dismiss them. That is usually the Corbyn cult way. All those who disagree are red tories/blairites/Zio-nazies/etc etc. Some on here tried that telling me I was a tory and brexiter, when I'm neither. Haven't you either thought that maybe it's you, not everyone else, who's got it wrong. Maybe the Hackney Council view isn't real.

    But if you don't want to debate that is fine. Lots of free space for me, @kentaddick and everyone one else with their eyes open to expose Corbyn for what he is.
    Do you honestly think there is anyone on this site without a well formed opinion about politics and politicians? Do you think anyone has had a Damascus moment because of something said in the political threads?
    I don't and because of that I now try not to engage with the political stuff. All it becomes is stupid mud slinging or lists of "evidence" to justify a point of view.
  • idk, I've realised some things thanks to CL. my other online haunts tend to be Corbyn echo chambers, so it's nice to know exactly what he's up against in terms of centrist sentiment (and of course, the actual failings he's therefore demonstrated - many of these, the SHGs of this world, are people he really should have been able to win over)
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  • I mean, one of the biggest problems with Corbyn, that CL has made me aware of, is the people he pushes forward to greet the public - the Burgons and Williamsons of this world (Abbott is a special case - no jokes lol - and a net bonus I think). I wouldn't be half as aware of these clots without you lot mocking them four times a week
  • PaddyP17 said:

    Oh man. This isn't in order but yeah:

    - I never tried to dismiss or downplay any links he had to the LLB? I asked what they were, because *and I cannot stress this enough* I'm trying to approach this critically rather than with an agenda.

    - Again, you are highlighting parts of the article without proper context to further your view. I understand this. This is very VERY common practice. But it's not actually engagement. The contextualisation provided by the author of the Ireland-UK relationship is really important and very much worth reading.

    - "But look, even his apologists are admitting he's a friend of terrorists!" - BUT THEY'RE NOT. They're contextualising the actions he took at the time, which are consistent with the far/hard left's views at the time.

    - Following on from the above point, your use of the word "evidence" is inaccurate.

    - In fairness this piece isn't even a defence, really. It's an example of nuance.

    - To quote from the article: "If Corbyn’s views during the Troubles were sometimes too forgiving of Republican misdeeds, then his consistent position throughout, that peace would come of dialogue and the fostering of mutual solidarity, rather than unceasing war, was eventually proven right."

    You appear to be disregarding the subtleties consistently in order to further your view on Corbyn. You even do so when presented with a question like Callum's regarding nuclear warfare, which is not a simple "Yes/No" question, even if you're trying to claim it is.

    Adding qualifiers (i.e. "I'd only launch nukes if it was the only viable option to safeguard the UK's future because XYZ") and understanding reasons behind actions being taken is all nuance.

    Much like deciding whether to press the big red nuclear button is not a simple yes/no, nor is the Corbyn situation black or white. Like I said before, he has explicitly condemned anti-Semitism, for instance. If you refuse to or cannot see this, then it calls your in many ways justified criticism of Corbyn into question as it can look editorialised and as peddling an agenda (which I don't particularly want to accuse you of, as it's unconstructive).
    "An agenda" is a meaningless phrase unless you or whoever can actually say what this agenda is? What is hidden about what I say? What am I trying to gain or play here? What do I win?

    The piece is written by one of the founders of Novora Media. They are a hard core communist pro-Corbyn site that really got their big break by interviewing one of the candidates for the labour leadership. Have a wild guess at which one. It is they who have the agenda. They are Corbyn loyalists. They are defending him. They can't deny the IRA links happened (too much evidence) so they have to deflect it.

    You are trying to make it about subtleties or nuance but it isn't. He is what he is. He has condemned anti-semitism. I'm sure Nigel Farage has condemned racism (he even attacked Yaxley-Lennon). Are we saying "oh, nice bit of nuance there Nigel, you can't be a racist despite all your other statements if you have condemned racism".

    "But look, even his apologists are admitting he's a friend of terrorists!" - BUT THEY'RE NOT. They're contextualising the actions he took at the time, which are consistent with the far/hard left's views at the time."

    You say contextualising, I say make excuses. The hard left's views at the time were as stupid and wrong as they are now (the names have changed, that is all, the support and blind eye turned for "anti-imperialist" groups hasn't.

    As for the nuclear debate with Cullum it IS a yes or not question. You are either prepared to press the button or you're not. There are no other choices.

    Every sane leader with their finger on the button (ie not Trump, Kim and maybe Putin) would have reservations and conditions about when to press the button but the answer is still, at the final count, YES or NO.

    If Corbyn said "let's scrap trident and all nuclear weapons, let's spend the money of conventional weapons and a small but high quality army/navy/RAF and the proper care of veterans" that might actually be a vote winner, it might even sway me but he needs to be honest just like he needs to be honest about being pro-Brexit.
  • edited December 2018
    Talking of pressing the button this documentary is very good 7 mins in for best bit.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHP_LOtx6Ik
  • Talking of pressing the button this documentary is very good 7 mins in for best bit.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHP_LOtx6Ik

    Best 'sit com' ever.

    Proves that whoever is in power, the Civil Service really run the Country.
  • Addickted said:

    Best 'sit com' ever.

    Proves that whoever is in power, the Civil Service really run the Country.
    Amen.
  • bobmunro said:

    I would say more passionate than obsessed.

    Henry clearly has very strong views about Corbyn's behaviour insofar as terrorism and antisemitism is concerned. Views that I share, even if not as passionately.
    His selective take on what
    PaddyP17 said:

    Oh man. This isn't in order but yeah:

    - I never tried to dismiss or downplay any links he had to the LLB? I asked what they were, because *and I cannot stress this enough* I'm trying to approach this critically rather than with an agenda.

    - Again, you are highlighting parts of the article without proper context to further your view. I understand this. This is very VERY common practice. But it's not actually engagement. The contextualisation provided by the author of the Ireland-UK relationship is really important and very much worth reading.

    - "But look, even his apologists are admitting he's a friend of terrorists!" - BUT THEY'RE NOT. They're contextualising the actions he took at the time, which are consistent with the far/hard left's views at the time.

    - Following on from the above point, your use of the word "evidence" is inaccurate.

    - In fairness this piece isn't even a defence, really. It's an example of nuance.

    - To quote from the article: "If Corbyn’s views during the Troubles were sometimes too forgiving of Republican misdeeds, then his consistent position throughout, that peace would come of dialogue and the fostering of mutual solidarity, rather than unceasing war, was eventually proven right."

    You appear to be disregarding the subtleties consistently in order to further your view on Corbyn. You even do so when presented with a question like Callum's regarding nuclear warfare, which is not a simple "Yes/No" question, even if you're trying to claim it is.

    Adding qualifiers (i.e. "I'd only launch nukes if it was the only viable option to safeguard the UK's future because XYZ") and understanding reasons behind actions being taken is all nuance.

    Much like deciding whether to press the big red nuclear button is not a simple yes/no, nor is the Corbyn situation black or white. Like I said before, he has explicitly condemned anti-Semitism, for instance. If you refuse to or cannot see this, then it calls your in many ways justified criticism of Corbyn into question as it can look editorialised and as peddling an agenda (which I don't particularly want to accuse you of, as it's unconstructive).
    Spot on. Hats off to you for bothering to engage.
  • Addickted said:

    Best 'sit com' ever.

    Proves that whoever is in power, the Civil Service really run the Country.
    Let's all be thankful for that, because politicians must have velcro on their shoes as I'm convinced they would have trouble with conventional laces.
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  • 100% this.

    There is a lot of what Corbyn says that as a socialist I really quite like. What worries me a lot is what he doesn’t say. The man is as far as I can see completely untrustworthy.

    I'm not a million miles from that position.

    I've been Labour all my life - bit of a Marxist when a student but like many have moved to the centre/centre left as I've got older. But I cannot vote for Corbyn's Labour Party and I would be physically sick if I ever thought of putting my cross against a Tory candidate. So I am without any real choice.

  • bobmunro said:

    I'm not a million miles from that position.

    I've been Labour all my life - bit of a Marxist when a student but like many have moved to the centre/centre left as I've got older. But I cannot vote for Corbyn's Labour Party and I would be physically sick if I ever thought of putting my cross against a Tory candidate. So I am without any real choice.

    If there was to be a general election at some point before 2022 which I doubt if I’m honest, what I would like to see is a Labour government returned but one that needs the support of others in order to govern. Something to check the excesses if you like. Much in the same way that the Lib Dem’s were in part able to do when in coalition.

    This would be far preferable in my eyes to seeing another Tory government elected. They have been an unmitigated disaster for this country. We cannot have that continue. I will undoubtedly vote labour and I’ll admit have my fingers crossed.

  • I like what he has to say.

    So much so, that I bought one of his trouser presses.
  • That is one view but it is disputed that 1. Japan was already defeated. They still had large armies in Japan and in China and Burma. 2. that the "peace feelers" were from the ruling military group. Truman couldn't know what was going on with the Emperor and the various peace and war parties. Certainly there were strong parties wanting to continue the war. Peace might have come without the bomb or an invasion but that is clear only with hindsight.

    I don't doubt that Truman wanted to use and test the bomb both to impress the Soviets (Stalin hadn't been that impressed when told and maybe already knew) but also to show the Japanese what would happened if they didn't surrender.
    Re read Anthony Beevor's "The Second World War" tonight (ok, not all 950 pages but the relevant parts) and takes the same stance ie the the army were very reluctant to surrender and it was only the 2nd bomb that made the Emperor force the army to accept terms. The war was far from over.

    Even then some army officers tried to stop the broadcast of Emperor's surrender.

    I had forgotten the extent to which the Japanese used chemical warfare.

    Photos available if any of @micks1950 @Leuth @seth plum @ShootersHillGuru want them.

    Some horrific stuff about the end of war in China too @Stu_of_Kunming
  • @seth plum - after a mundane day at the big house I’ve just read through this thread. To you sir, my hat is off. You have raised an intelligent, decent son.
  • I am aware of Japanese actions. My father was in Burma, and my Chinese wife has knowledge of the Japanese behaviour in China, which piqued my interest before.
    Whether all that justifies the Americans using two nuclear weapons I am not so sure.
    As has been alluded to earlier it is also a case of signalling stuff to Russia at that time, and also a desire to try the weapons out. The effect was certainly to negate the need for an American invasion of the Japanese home islands that is true, but there may have been other ways to avoid invasion too, yet still bring the war to an end.
  • seth plum said:

    I am aware of Japanese actions. My father was in Burma, and my Chinese wife has knowledge of the Japanese behaviour in China, which piqued my interest before.
    Whether all that justifies the Americans using two nuclear weapons I am not so sure.
    As has been alluded to earlier it is also a case of signalling stuff to Russia at that time, and also a desire to try the weapons out. The effect was certainly to negate the need for an American invasion of the Japanese home islands that is true, but there may have been other ways to avoid invasion too, yet still bring the war to an end.

    I wasn't referencing the Japanese atrocities (and Russian and Chinese) at the ending of the war to justify the atom bombs. Sorry if it read that way.

    There may have been another way have brought the war to an end but if we agree with Beevor's view not as quickly or without many more lives lost.
  • Re read Anthony Beevor's "The Second World War" tonight (ok, not all 950 pages but the relevant parts) and takes the same stance ie the the army were very reluctant to surrender and it was only the 2nd bomb that made the Emperor force the army to accept terms. The war was far from over.

    Even then some army officers tried to stop the broadcast of Emperor's surrender.

    I had forgotten the extent to which the Japanese used chemical warfare.

    Photos available if any of @micks1950 @Leuth @seth plum @ShootersHillGuru want them.

    Some horrific stuff about the end of war in China too @Stu_of_Kunming
    Gar Alperovitz's book 'The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb' is the most thorough and forensic analysis of events and decisions that led up to the use of the atomic bomb on Japan and all of it's 864 pages are relevant to that decision.

    I'm not suggesting that Japanese conduct during the second world war wasn't barbaric or denying that there was a diehard kamikaze faction in the army that opposed any surrender - but, as I've pointed out, most leading US military, political, and diplomatic figures believed that Japan was on the brink of collapse and that offering to allow the emperor to remain would have brought about surrender, without a need to use the bomb, or a contested invasion.

    And if Roosevelt had lived a little longer and Truman not taken over that might have happened:

    https://www.garalperovitz.com/atomic-bomb/

    http://www.doug-long.com/quotes.htm

    http://www.doug-long.com/debate.htm
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