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Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Mon Jul 29, 2024 7:30 pm
by Tubby Isaacs
Were those cuts actually made in the end? They certainly had a good go at raiding the school sports budget, but the Tory Sports Minister, Hugh Robertson, to his credit, publicly opposed and they had to row back. I do remember Cameron trying to make out they were only scrapping the likes of "Indian dancing".
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Sat Aug 10, 2024 7:01 am
by Andy McDandy
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... ed-on.html
Delusional crap. Lots of both sides equivocation, mixed with Johnson's own version of reality. Cunt.
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Sat Aug 10, 2024 7:28 am
by Youngian
What stupidity is this? Aren’t the boat crossing his legacy?
Time to pack the Factor 50, Keir, check out of Britain - and reflect on the frenzy of utter stupidity Labour's embarked on
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Sat Aug 10, 2024 1:08 pm
by satnav
This must be the most cliched load of bollox he has ever written and the competition is pretty stiff.
I don't know where the Starmer family were going last Monday, when the rioters were so uncivilised as to delay their holiday. Possibly, it was somewhere in the European Union – to signal the 'reset' in relations that is apparently under way.
Perhaps there is a gite in the Dordogne still awaiting the Starmer arrival, the welcome bottle of rosé pathetically unopened in the fridge door; or there could be some golf balls in the Algarve, still hoping for the honour of being thwacked into the rough by the Starmer clubs.
Maybe there is a brace of empty sun-loungers on a Greek beach, still yearning for Sir Keir and his wife to sink them deeper into the sand as they lie back and toast each other with their pina coladas and 'Keir' royales.
Across the resorts of the world, the bartenders and hotel staff are all asking themselves – will it be us? Will we be the lucky ones? Will the human bollard come and park himself here?
Far-Right protesters hold a demo in Sunderland last weekend, monitored by riot police
Far-Right protesters hold a demo in Sunderland last weekend, monitored by riot police
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I have, as I say, no idea which part of the world Sir Keir will favour with his custom. But I have strong views about when that holiday should take place – and the answer is now. This minute.
Is it inappropriate for Starmer to go on holiday?
Yes
No
Come on, Starmer, man or mouse? Never mind the blasted 'optics' of the situation. Fight down this cowardly anxiety about your personal ratings, and whether the public will mark you down for going on holiday.
Think of your family! Stop worrying that Britain is supposed to be in a state of 'tinderbox' combustibility. It's time to pack the Autan and the Factor 50 – and whoosh, cabin crew doors to manual, and check out of Britain.
Now is the moment to go on holiday, Prime Minister, because it has become ever clearer, over the past week, that your presence has made no difference whatever to the disturbances – or, if anything, made things marginally worse.
The police have got the thing under control, as they always do. The thugs and miscreants are now being processed through the courts with ruthless efficiency.
Rather than holding any more meetings and giving any more of your stunned-mullet press conferences, it is time for you to recharge the batteries. You need to scrunch the sand between your toes, squint at the sea and think.
You need to reflect on the events of the past month, and the whole strategy of the Labour Government, because it is starting to look like a frenzy of utter stupidity.
You might want to start with the bonkers plan to cancel the prison-building programme, and simultaneously release thousands of serious criminals before they have completed their sentences.
Where are you going to put all these rioters, once they have been convicted? Butlin's?
And what happens when the thousands of prematurely liberated prisoners decide – as, sadly, so many of them do – to re-offend? Where do they go?
You are going to need more prison places, not fewer – or else people will start to conclude that your critics were right all along, and that the Government is now in the hands of Lefty human rights lawyers who are basically soft on crime.
And then you need some space to think about the meaning of these riots, and their causes.
You say it is all a form of 'far-Right thuggery', and I agree that anyone offering violence and intimidation needs to be banged up. The riots have been disgraceful. They are a criminal justice problem that demands a criminal justice solution, and they are getting one. But is that the whole story?
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I saw an astonishing statistic that 34 per cent of the public actually support the protests – if not the violence associated with it.
Does that mean that more than a third of the UK population are 'far-Right' in their views?
I know that there are some people who claim it is 'far-Right' to believe in Brexit, or to support the existence of the state of Israel, or to share the views of J.K. Rowling about who exactly a woman is these days.
There may even be some Left-wingers who believe that 34 per cent of the population is 'far-Right' in that they actually hold racist or bigoted views.
I don't believe that for a second. I believe that Britain is, on the whole, a remarkably loving, welcoming and generous society. So how the hell can a third of Britons apparently support these protests? What has gone wrong?
It is time to reflect, PM, as you sip your sundowner, on whether you struck exactly the right note on illegal immigration, and I mean illegal immigration, the kind that is resented especially by many who have brought their families here perfectly legally.
You kicked off your premiership by announcing with glee that you were cancelling the Rwanda plan – even though it is the only idea that has any chance of working, and stopping the cruel cross-Channel gangs, and which is now being imitated by plenty of other governments.
You announced that about 100,000 asylum seekers were going to be given an amnesty, instead of being deported.
You closed the Bibby Stockholm ship where some of the illegal arrivals were being held.
Whatever you may have intended by all this, you gave the clear impression of a man who has no plan to stop illegal immigration, because he simply doesn't care.
Indeed, Yvette Cooper, the new Home Secretary, offered the extraordinary suggestion that we should stop talking about 'illegal' immigration, and only about 'irregular' immigration. That is an insult to those, as I say, who have come here legally.
Nothing excuses the behaviour of the rioters, and they deserve to be banged up. But nothing excuses a Government that seems deaf to public concerns, and that suggests, moreover, that they actively dislike all members of the public who share those concerns.
All this bears mulling over, Sir Keir; and while you are at it you might re-think your whole economic approach.
You have bunged a huge increase in public-sector pay, with no increase in productivity, as a sop to your union paymasters, while cancelling the previous Conservative plan: which was to begin to trim the vast expansion in the size of Whitehall bureaucracy by 66,000 jobs.
We all know that 80 per cent of public-sector spending is on the salaries of public-sector workers, and yet Labour, again, has no plan whatever for reform – but axes building new hospitals instead.
You are about to pay for all this pay inflation with blatantly unnecessary growth-choking taxes, on pensions and investments and much else. It is madness.
It is the last thing we need now, after all the misery and expense of Covid. In a pathetic attempt to justify your tax hikes, you have lied about the state of the economy – and been caught out.
You have already put back the cause of free speech at universities, by revoking the Act that had just been passed to protect it.
You have appointed cronies – people who have personally given money to you or to your Chancellor, Rachel Reeves – to government posts.
Stop all this nonsense, and go on holiday, Prime Minister. Stand not upon the order of your going, but go at once.
Have some guts, face down your critics, and acquire the perspective that comes with distance and a kilo of retsina.
Go now, and don't come back till you have bucked up your ideas.
How do you get a kilo of Retsina given that Retsina is wine?
This is the same ex-prime minister who disappeared for two weeks at the start of the COVID crisis so he could write a book.
I wonder if Johnson has found the time in the last couple of years to reflect on how he managed to spaff away a 80 seat majority and achieve absolutely nothing positive during his time in office.
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Sat Aug 10, 2024 1:46 pm
by Youngian
There may even be some Left-wingers who believe that 34 per cent of the population is 'far-Right' in that they actually hold racist or bigoted views.
I don't believe that for a second. I believe that Britain is, on the whole, a remarkably loving, welcoming and generous society. So how the hell can a third of Britons apparently support these protests? What has gone wrong?
It is time to reflect, PM, as you sip your sundowner, on whether you struck exactly the right note on illegal immigration, and I mean illegal immigration, the kind that is resented especially by many who have brought their families here perfectly legally.
Those chucking stones at Philippine NHS nurses for living in a Travelodge and looking foreign are your people, Boris. There may well be many people who want a “remarkably loving, welcoming and generous society” but they’re unlikely to vote for a rancid evil conman like Johnson.
And there’s nothing remarkable about people who don’t firebomb neighbours because they’re foreigners.
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Sat Aug 10, 2024 1:55 pm
by Yug
How on earth did you get to the end of that column? I got as far as the empty sun loungers in Greece and gave up. It's so fucking tedious.
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Sat Aug 10, 2024 4:07 pm
by satnav
What I didn't realise until today is that if you try and copy the top bit of an article that is behind a paywall it actually copies the entire article. I'll have to try that on a few more articles.
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Sat Aug 10, 2024 5:49 pm
by Andy McDandy
You have appointed cronies – people who have personally given money to you or to your Chancellor, Rachel Reeves – to government posts.
Well, if anyone should know...
BTW that's some impressive word padding there. Surprised it didn't end mid-sentence with "1000 words inv. enc."
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Sat Aug 10, 2024 5:54 pm
by davidjay
You'd think Johnson would steer well clear of a topic that combines Prime Ministers and holidays. Then you remember it's Johnson.
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Sat Aug 10, 2024 6:50 pm
by Watchman
The man has no fucking shame, he is a total cunt!
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Mon Aug 12, 2024 5:20 pm
by satnav
Apparently Johnson has been sounded out about a job at the Telegraph once the paper has been taken over by the group lead by Nadhim Zahawi. His job titles would be the 'Telegraph's global editor-in-chief'. This sounds like a complete non-job. The paper just want him on board to pull a few strings.
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Mon Aug 12, 2024 6:05 pm
by Youngian
Telegraph has long ceased to be a serious newspaper so Johnson’s their man.
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Mon Aug 12, 2024 6:20 pm
by Andy McDandy
That sounds very much like "contact your rich mates and ask them to write articles for us; in return we'll comp you some plane tickets".
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Mon Aug 12, 2024 7:01 pm
by Abernathy
That cunt always manages to end up with a cushy non-job paying him squillions.
Cunt that he is.
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Mon Aug 12, 2024 7:44 pm
by Andy McDandy
Yet it never seems to be enough. It can't all be going on alimony; there's got to be something else and very expensive going on.
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Mon Aug 12, 2024 8:44 pm
by Youngian
There is a school of thought that bumbling Boris is really very shrewd with money and has millions stashed away, especially as he’s a chiseler like Trump who never pays his debts.
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Tue Aug 13, 2024 12:58 am
by davidjay
Youngian wrote: ↑Mon Aug 12, 2024 8:44 pm
There is a school of thought that bumbling Boris is really very shrewd with money and has millions stashed away, especially as he’s a chiseler like Trump who never pays his debts.
It tallies with the idea that everything about his public personality is an act. I'm not so sure - I think he's not that bright but hides it with his sheer arrogance and self-belief.
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Tue Aug 13, 2024 2:12 pm
by Crabcakes
Youngian wrote: ↑Mon Aug 12, 2024 8:44 pm
There is a school of thought that bumbling Boris is really very shrewd with money and has millions stashed away, especially as he’s a chiseler like Trump who never pays his debts.
I suspect he has more than he lets on. But that he is also not super rich, simply because if he was he would have bragged about it. He’s too much of a show off to be able to hold back.
Also, Sunak being so much better off than him was *clearly* a very sore point.
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Tue Aug 13, 2024 3:50 pm
by Watchman
Be interesting what his debit side of “the books” look like
Re: The overpaid scrawlings of disgraced former PM Alexander Johnson
Posted: Sat Aug 24, 2024 8:59 am
by Andy McDandy
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/arti ... 4-ill.html
You can't say anything these days, and words are beginning to mean their opposite.
For instance, there's "get Brexit done" and "my Rwanda plan was working".