Just asking, what type of civil disobedience would you condone? Organized protests and marches? Blocking one of the worlds busiest vehicular bridges during rush hour?I do, however, admit that I do support civil disobedience in the name of a just cause.
I get the impression Mr Corbyn does not want to be Prime Minister but is content with protest politics. He is an idealist, and in British politics on the left, they are ultra keen to spend other folks money, just not very good at spending it lolI
I was a long term but disillusioned supporter of the British Labour party. I'm now a full member and an enthusiastic Corbyn supporter.
I suppose I'd have to take it on a case by case basis, but any answer would inevitably be hugely subjective, dependant on the issue and my beliefs.Just asking, what type of civil disobedience would you condone? Organized protests and marches? Blocking one of the worlds busiest vehicular bridges during rush hour?
Everything has its time and place, but too much anarchy is bad for business![]()
Yeah sadly we have gone from one extreme to another. I would ban overseas investment in property, if you don't live here then you cannot buy. All those empty, overpriced properties in London is a crime! The UK is the whore of the property world.We haven't had a left wing government since 1979. It was a disaster then, but the country has been run for the benefit of the ultra rich and the military industrial complex ever since. Corbyn, at least, cares about the people who actually live here, rather than just the people who invest here.
Yeah sadly we have gone from one extreme to another. I would ban overseas investment in property, if you don't live here then you cannot buy. All those empty, overpriced properties in London is a crime! The UK is the whore of the property world.
I don't even particularly want him to be Prime Minister. Taking it that regardless of it moving left or right and whoever leads the party it stands zero chance of winning an election (the loss of Scotland, the coming constituency boundary changes which 'disappear' a disproportionate number of safe Labour seats, and the U.K.'s swing to the right) it's high on impossible anyway.I get the impression Mr Corbyn does not want to be Prime Minister but is content with protest politics. He is an idealist, and in British politics on the left, they are ultra keen to spend other folks money, just not very good at spending it lol
I suppose we are likely to see quite a dip in overseas investment if London loses its place as the banking centre of Europe. I imagine protecting that will be top of the list of Brexit priorities though. They'll sacrifice pretty mnuch anything to keep the financial services industry strong.
Well since we don't have a strong industrial manufacturing base any more we have to make something. Customers want cheap goods from Primark/Matalan/ASDA and Tesco and you won't get that making them in the UK.I suppose we are likely to see quite a dip in overseas investment if London loses its place as the banking centre of Europe. I imagine protecting that will be top of the list of Brexit priorities though. They'll sacrifice pretty mnuch anything to keep the financial services industry strong.
'Safely park' or launder lolIf the pound keeps plummeting, that may well happen, since the entire reason foreigners buy property overseas is to safely park their money. The money isn't safely parked if the value of the real estate drops!
'Safely park' or launder lol
Or vote "lime."^Gave into curiosity and took the test. Look like I should vote Green at the next election!![]()
The goal (imho) should be to get cost down inside the industry, and not insist on some kind of group/taxpayer payment plan. Broke my forearm couple of years ago, hundreds of dollars for two xrays and some plaster.Healthcare in the US is atrocious
My understanding is that for younger "millennials" (my group) that's exactly what we for the most part do. Few in my age group seem to give a damn about political parties.I think it flows from a false premise that people tend to vote based on values rather than party allegiances
Really?My understanding is that for younger "millennials" (my group) that's exactly what we for the most part do. Few in my age group seem to give a damn about political parties.
Went to the site (www.politicalcompass.org) to take the test myself, oh my God the phrasing of those questions are loaded!
Instead of "If economic globalisation is inevitable, it should primarily serve humanity rather than the interests of trans-national corporations." it could have been "If economic globalization is inevitable, should it primarily serve humanity or should it primarily serve the purpose of free trade?"
Or something more like that?
The original phrasing heavily steers the test-taker, shouldn't the phrasing be as neutral as possible?And if one of us girls does any (or all) of these thing, is it "girls will be girls?
If given the chance to do so, how many will be changing their votes?
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