Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Yes- experts are what is needed not a load of people trying to make political capital out of a tragedy.

And as for Yvette Williams -whoever she is- it is probably her and her stirrers that say the survivors are becoming increasingly angry, because the survivors are more than likely glad to have survived and are just waiting patiently to be dealt with

Yvette Williams MBE is a policy adviser to the Crown Prosecution Service and spokesperson for Justice4Grenfell, a group which has widespread community backing including from many of the survivors.


And sorry, no the survivors are not "just waiting patiently to be dealt with," much as you and your fellow Tories probably think they should and be grateful they're given anything at all: the merest glance at the news demonstrates that many of them are bloody furious and rightly so. I apologise for previously having said you've a one-eyed view of things - turns out you're completely blind.


ETA Just listening to PM and hearing victims complaining vociferously about the way they are being treated. Not "stirrers," actual victims: they are enraged.

JohnL Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

>

> May looks so lonely whenever she's abroad these

> days - maybe she should just sit in front of the

> water cannon with the protesters.


She's never looked comfortable on the global stage. She's a funny old stick.

rendelharris Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I notice - returning to my original point on this

> thread - that today May has intimated there will

> be no vote on foxhunting either. Good, say I and

> many others, I've no doubt, but again, how many

> votes in rural areas were swayed (or more likely

> how many who don't usually vote were persuaded to

> turn out) by a promise which has proved completely

> false?


Honestly, I would have though almost none. What's more it was a ridiculous potential net vote loser of a policy. a massive 84% of the UK population are reported to still be in favour of the fox hunting ban. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/fox-hunting-boxing-day-poll-opposition-all-time-high-theresa-may-hunting-ban-act-vote-a7495336.html



The policy would have put way more people off voting Conservative than would have been swayed into voting for them under false pretences hoping there would be a (pointless and bound to fail) free vote on repealing the ban.


I also think that of the very few people that actively yearn for the reinstatement of fox hunting (as opposed to those who might support it but don't really give a toss) most of them probably would have voted Tory anyway, whether or not there would have been a free vote. I think they would recognise from the polls that there is no way parliament would have legalised fox hunting even if there had been a vote - therefore it was all a bit academic. Actually, pretty bizarre May should think it a live issue anymore. Shows just how stupid she is.

I don't know, and obviously there's no way to find out. I would suspect that there were very few Tory voters who switched their vote on the sole issue of foxhunting, whereas I can imagine rural voters who usually wouldn't bother to vote turning out on that single issue. Otherwise, as you say, why would she have bothered with a massively unpopular policy if she thought there was no advantage to it?


In any case that's a minor point compared to my original one - how many voters were swayed by the promise of grammar schools and now find they're not going to get what they voted for?

Interesting article here: http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/june2017/2017/05/fox-hunting-deeply-unpopular-so-why-does-theresa-may-care-so-much-about (though obviously hardly an unbiased summation, written as it is by a Labour frontbencher) - posits that it was a cheap and easy way to pretend to be the party of the rural communities and cover their neglect of same.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • https://www.letslinkuk.net/ I'm interested to know why the OP didn't find this sort of scheme to work, as I would have thought it was much harder to find someone to do a direct exchange with? Does anybody else have experience of a scheme like this? Happy to be persuaded! 
    • I personally think is a great idea Bobbly and would love if there was a section for it. I wouldn't offer free gardening under the "for sale" section as I would expect something in exchange and wouldn't expect our cat being looked after for free under the "wanted" section, as an example.
    • Looking for used decking boards. Should be hardwood
    • I have fond memories of Govinda's I used to go there  back in the 90's (maybe earlier) for an affordable tasty lunch..I was wondering if its still around. Now I have to make a point of going there. Does anyone else remember a really affordable basement cafe run by the church in a street off of Golden Square? parallel to Regent Street? I also used to love the Vegetarian cafe on Neal Street in the basement (Neal Street Cafe?) and there was an inczredible inexpensive authentic Japanese resturant I use to go to with my Japanese friends (who introduced me to it) tucked away behind Long Acre where that brown brick modern building ('modern' I think it went up in the 90's!) now stands that fronts Long Acre and Neal Street..I think it was called Asakasa or something?
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...