Originally posted by Bryn
View Post
May is nearly out and so is May
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
-
Originally posted by Bryn View PostBBC NI News have just used Berlioz SF (that's Symphonie Fantastique, rather than Sinn Féin) as the backdrop to their summing up of the Tory debacle. The rationale being that it was claimed to be popular the last time they (the Tories) fared so badly.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by cloughie View PostCould be Nigel having ‘un bal’ or the ‘Scene aux Champs’ as Theresa boldly walks through a wheat field, or maybe Spells bing cast on Boris by rivals in the ‘Rondes du Sabbat’.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_ApologistThen the time has come for me to take a break from the forum, apart from the regular samizdat on the jazz bored.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_ApologistI am sure french frank can reply and tell us if my #201 is patronising!
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Padraig View PostS_A, a bad election result is worse than being hit by a bus - and I'm thinking about the poor voter. It takes a little while to get over it. I console myself by remembering that I, the poor voter, will still be rowing the boat. And are my arms tired!
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by DracoM View PostI keep seething about what this will mean for the poor, the inevitably unemployed, but above all our children and grandchildren.
What on earth have we done to this nation?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_ApologistI am sure french frank can reply and tell us if my #201 is patronising!
I don't know how I could be clearer: I do not find Jeremy Corbyn's policies in any way 'extreme' or in opposition to social changes that I myself would like to see. I do find his stance over Brexit to have been fundamentally equivocal; I saw the clip of his yesterday's comment about a second referendum, couched in such terms that I would not be persuaded that he was in favour (mentioned in the same sentence as a general election so it was still unclear what 'a public vote' meant; and promising to put the matter before the Labour party conference - which begins on Sept 21 and ends on the 25th: no time for a general election or a second referendum before we leave on 31 October).
This being my own view of Jeremy Corbyn as a politician, I am bewildered at how others could possibly have any confidence in him as a leader. That is a personal opinion about his practical competence as a politician. And I expressed the apparently offensive view that it must be because he professes to be - and undoubtedly is - a committed socialist, as committed as any other member of the PLP. I respect that as a political stance. But I think he is a terrible leader and his equivocations have been significantly responsible for Labour's awful performance in the EU elections.
I apologise in advance if that does offend anyone. I'm sure people will take a diametrically opposite point of view: if they explain it I'm happy to discuss it further; if they don't think it worth even bothering to respond to such comments, I respect their point of view.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.
Comment
-
Comment