Why do we even allow people like this to "own" land in the UK?
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View Post
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View PostMONEY (& lots of it) - I assume your question was rhetorical - the Middle east is full of many such who can only be described as sick in mind - recall that one ruler has an arch critic dismembered in an embassy - in my opinion I look at the common feature and that is religion - highly patriarchal in which slavery is still tolerated and women occupy a lower status - such leaders are given support by those who are beneficiaries of his largesse and that includes the City of London and the majority it seems of our politicians.
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View PostI look at the common feature and that is religion - highly patriarchal in which slavery is still tolerated and women occupy a lower status
PS Add my shoes.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostBlaming Islam dissipates the chances of remedy in any given situation.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostQuite. Actually when I saw the title of the thread I immediately assumed that the "people" in question were the British royal family... OK, they aren't known for cruelty in their present incarnations, but when one starts asking how they acquired their "property" originally, some of the answers are pretty shocking.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Fine but my opinion is that Islam as currently practised in larges areas of the world is indeed malign - Pakistani mobs + blasphemy courts?, the vast amount of corruption from Afghanistan through to Nigeria?. Maybe I missed the howls of condemnation aimed from the UK mosques over MbS's method of taking out critics or maybe the 'keeper of the holy places' was merely doing a bit of spring cleaning.Last edited by Frances_iom; 16-02-21, 15:45.
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View PostFine but my opinion is that Islam as currently practised in larges areas of the world is indeed malign - Pakistani mobs + blasphemy courts?, the vast amount of corruption from Afghanistan through to Nigeria?. Maybe I missed the howls of condemnation aimed from the UK mosques over MbS's method of taking out critics or maybe the 'keeper of the holy palces' was merely doing a bit of spring cleaning.
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View PostFine but my opinion is that Islam as currently practised in larges areas of the world is indeed malign - Pakistani mobs + blasphemy courts?, the vast amount of corruption from Afghanistan through to Nigeria?. Maybe I missed the howls of condemnation aimed from the UK mosques over MbS's method of taking out critics or maybe the 'keeper of the holy palces' was merely doing a bit of spring cleaning.
Public howls of condemnation? Unlikely. Who is MbS anyway? How does that concern us?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View PostMONEY (& lots of it) - I assume your question was rhetorical - the Middle east is full of many such who can only be described as sick in mind - recall that one ruler has an arch critic dismembered in an embassy - in my opinion I look at the common feature and that is religion - highly patriarchal in which slavery is still tolerated and women occupy a lower status - such leaders are given support by those who are beneficiaries of his largesse and that includes the City of London and the majority it seems of our politicians.
Presumably the largesse which you call it is in fact due to oil money, which I seem to think must come indirectly from the collective use of oil in many countries around the world. I still don't see why people who misuse their power should be allowed to own property in the UK. I'll leave it there for the moment.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostAnd fair enough to make a comparison. But isn't there a similar equation to be made - that the problem lies most immediately with the harmful misuse of power/influence rather than, for instance, with the system?
The thing about looking at unresolved social and historical... conundrums... systemically rather than via characters and characterisations is that if enough evidence and wisdom can be assembled to garner solutions, then who is standing in the way? If looked at sufficiently convincingly to people in need of persuading from the perspective of exerted unequal power, then the question of blame can be planted where it originates and self-perpetuates, called to account and then dismantled. I always think of that wonderful 70s cartoon in Socialist Worker depicting a French aristocrat on the point of being guillotined, shouting out to the bawling crowd: "You'll never manage without me, you know!" If the ruling classes consider themselves so divinely endowed to lead the rest of humankind that they deserve the privilege that goes with the power, then they can do the ultimate philanthropic thing of putting their gifts and qualities at the service of everyone, and possibly gain another kind of self-respect more enriching than financial and political exclusivity in the process.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post...If the ruling classes consider themselves so divinely endowed to lead the rest of humankind that they deserve the privilege that goes with the power, then they can do the ultimate philanthropic thing of putting their gifts and qualities at the service of everyone, and possibly gain another kind of self-respect more enriching than financial and political exclusivity in the process.
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