Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Mark wrote:- And what would suggest we do, if we can, to help alleviate the establishment corruption?



I would put in honest and straight people at the top who have a proven track record in that field, not an old etonian establishment figure.

Encourage and reward open and honest government.

Punish to the extent of the law and remove from their post (without pension)all wrong doers.

Make the law accessible to the man in the street and not a strangely archaic language.

Huguenot wrote:- In the wider debate 'rampant corruption' is a silly way to describe the UK.



Do you really believe that Huguenot, when 90+ percent of MP's have been found fiddling the expenses and have gone unpunished.


It was criticised by the man in charge that the information on the expenses had come to the notice of the general public. He lost his job but not his pension rights, and many believe he was the scapegoat for the greater good of the offenders.

angetastic wrote:-

None of these things has anything to do with ethnicity - if you are poor you are poor - and if you are first second or third generation migrant you are more likely to be poor than otherwise.


According to what I see angetastic, plenty of them appear to have large expensive vehicles to drive in.


I wonder if they feel they can speak their mind as this post is about 'gagging and freedom of speech'.

  • 4 months later...

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

    • I normally vote Lib Dem and will continue to do so.
    • the reason Tories have lost votes is because they have lost trust primarily. the voters didn't vote for what the Tories did, but what they promised. you can't blame the voters for the outcome, just because they voted for the party. Labour are in a position of influence so we will have to see what they do.  Reform are there, as quite a presence should Labour continue to fail. It feels as if we are on a very thin line
    • I agree with that The voters authorised strong austerity in 2010 and kept voting for it for 14 years - for that reason alone, given Labour have been in power for only months I can't find my else able to equate them as bad as each other. Yet. It may happen and given Labour's poor decision making and comms to date I wouldn't be surprised if they end up that way Problem is the voters say they want one thing (lower prices/better public services/things working) but then don't reward any government that tries to deliver -  and they explicitly said they wanted higher prices with Brexit and lower public services by voting Cons in for 14 years - so they got what they wanted, they just don't like the reality Whoever is elected now has to find a way to address those years of underinvestment and diminished growth - there is no painless way out. But blaming immigration for everything (Reform speciality) is only making everything worse
    • That’s good to know, but it just wasn’t clear to me.  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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