Cornflakes Anybody???
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Post
-
-
Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI didn't vote for Boris
Comment
-
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostYou seem to be on first-name terms with him though - he doesn't deserve that from you surely! What does this character need to do to convince everyone that he's a scheming bastard and not an amiable buffoon - a Hitler salute?
Comment
-
-
amateur51
Apparently people vote for him because he makes them laugh.
I do wonder about my fellow humans sometimes.
There is a piece of film of him outside one of the Clapham tube stations in London after the London riots. He wanted to be photographed with local people armed with brushes & pans who were clearing up the rubbish from the streets. They demanded to know why he, as the Mayor and Chair of the London Police Authority had largely abandoned them and their community the night before. He didn't wait to listen to these hard-hitting questions for long, and he certainly didn't offer any response. Instead turning on his heel he stalked off down the road, with minders trotting after him.
I hope that piece of film is on youtube so it can be played on a loop at any election where he is standing for office.
Comment
-
amateur51
-
I don't know what all the fuss is about. Boris is simply stating the fact that some people are less likely to succeed because they are of low I.Q., and others will probably do better because they are more intelligent. I should have thought that is a given. And he goes on to say that envy of those who are better off, and a wish to increase one's own personal wealth and standard of living, can be a spur to encourage people to get off their arses and go out and earn some money.
It's common sense and it's simple truths, but as always the Liberal lefties who have pretty much taken over these boards don't get it.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
Comment
-
-
Richard Barrett
Thank you for that explanation Pee but actually I do get it - the speech was a blatant act of ingratiation with the loony right of the Tories whom Johnson hopes will help him in his ambition to become party leader; it also shows the extent to which the empty rhetoric of UKIP has infected Tory thinking (or do I mean "thinking"?); it indicates a wholesale backtracking to the exaltation of greed which during the Thatcher régime became the default setting for political discourse in the UK; above all it's a farrago of sheer economic illiteracy - the ongoing financial crisis and the ongoing increase in inequality feed into one another. Of course Johnson knows that, he isn't stupid, however he may act - it's just that social inequality suits him and his chums very well, and the more of it the better.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostI don't know what all the fuss is about. Boris is simply stating the fact that some people are less likely to succeed because they are of low I.Q., and others will probably do better because they are more intelligent. I should have thought that is a given. And he goes on to say that envy of those who are better off, and a wish to increase one's own personal wealth and standard of living, can be a spur to encourage people to get off their arses and go out and earn some money.
It's common sense and it's simple truths, but as always the Liberal lefties who have pretty much taken over these boards don't get it.
There are plenty of intelligent people who are not raking in loadsamoney; some of them are musicians, for example - others teach - many more of them are not overpaid, overbonussed and over here CEOs or City slickers and, for that matter, no small proportion of those who are said CEOs and City slickers are not necessarily all that intelligent either.
When envy and/or greed become spurs to anything positive and welcome, the world will have turned upside down or the official meaning of those words changed out of all recognition. Plenty of people don't need any additional spur to go out and earn some money in any case, least of all from the likes of Blustering Boris; there are plenty of people who either cannot get work, cannot get enough work or cannot get work that's well enough paid - and that includes an embarrassing number of people with at least one university degree. Those with the heavy burden of student loans (presumably not unintelligent people for the most part, otherwise they'd not have survived university) struggle to "improve their personal wealth" even if they have reasonably paid work in any case.
"Common sense"? Ah, yes, I remember it well, from the halcyon days of Prof. Says of Université Noix-Bois. BJ's rant as is discussed here is neither on a simple matter nor is most of it a truthful representation of the current state of affairs in Britain; in fact, it's one of the most absurd things that I've heard from him.
Leaving aside the validity or otherwise of his argument for an estuary airport, where might be found the "common sense" or "simple truth" in the idea of naming such a thing Margaret Thatcher International? If ever it does get built with the money that the present government seem determined to allocate to the quaintly named HS2 project, I hope that there will be plenty of secure cycle parking places for those of its users who "get on their bikes" to travel from there...
If indeed BJ's aim was indeed to cosy up to the Tory loony right in order to boost his chances of wrenching the party leadership from David Cameron (frying pans and fires, anyone?) as suggested by Richard Barrett, it seems to me that, in damaging his own credibility as perhaps only he could, he's contrived to score quite an own goal here.
Comment
-
-
amateur51
Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostI don't know what all the fuss is about. Boris is simply stating the fact that some people are less likely to succeed because they are of low I.Q., and others will probably do better because they are more intelligent. I should have thought that is a given. And he goes on to say that envy of those who are better off, and a wish to increase one's own personal wealth and standard of living, can be a spur to encourage people to get off their arses and go out and earn some money.
It's common sense and it's simple truths, but as always the Liberal lefties who have pretty much taken over these boards don't get it.
Greed is good. So is envy. So says Boris Johnson, who told the Centre for Policy Studies that the two deadly sins were “a valuable spur to economic activity”. Boris was invoking behavioural economics to…
But it's all a Liberal-leftie conspiracy (on this Board no less!) so that's OK.
Comment
Comment