bathsheba666
Fast 'n Bulbous
She was killed by a person with mental health issues.
Yes. He claimed to believe in 'Britain first'
She was killed by a person with mental health issues.
I don't think it's very democratic nor moral to advocate for a system which intentionally blocks a significant minority of people from having power, simply because one doesn't like what those people think...
I repeat, UKIP would not have been significant in the first place if we had not been forced to use PR.
Our democracy nips the extremists in the bud, so that the weak minded, the ‘don’t knows’ or the ‘mutton-heads’ as Arakhor called them, don’t join in the momentum, carried along by the eloquence of extremists like Farage. Give people like him a cause plus PR and you have nothing but trouble.
Without PR I just wonder if the name Farage would have been mentioned on these boards much.
Imperfect though our system is, I would rather keep the extremists out thank you.
Set so in the hope it would prevent any kurdish party in the first place, and only recently was not enough.Then I'll repeat what I said: Keeping people from being represented in parliament because you don't like their opinions sounds undemocratic and immoral.I repeat, UKIP would not have been significant in the first place if we had not been forced to use PR.
Our democracy nips the extremists in the bud, so that the weak minded, the ‘don’t knows’ or the ‘mutton-heads’ as Arakhor called them, don’t join in the momentum, carried along by the eloquence of extremists like Farage. Give people like him a cause plus PR and you have nothing but trouble.
Without PR I just wonder if the name Farage would have been mentioned on these boards much.
Imperfect though our system is, I would rather keep the extremists out thank you.
Nah. UKIP/BNP/NF have existed for a long time, usually as part of the underlying sentiment in the Conservative & Unionist Party, with all that drivel about England standing it alone, 1066, etc. etc. that makes people, to this day, pretend that the British Empire wasn't an organised system for pillaging as much of the world as possible while massacring any resistors, who still believe that WWI was fought in the name of something good instead of just conquering more places, that Churchill did not give away Eastern Europe to Stalin (after the Western Betrayal, of course), and so on… UKIP is just the final corporisation of that movement.I repeat, UKIP would not have been significant in the first place if we had not been forced to use PR.
http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-37858143Boris Johnson said:In the words of our great prime minister... I understood that Brexit means Brexit and we are going to make a Titanic success of it."
Theresa May finds free movement for trade an issue outside EU as well
India, with its historic and cultural ties to Britain, is exactly the sort of country that “hello world” Brexiters claimed the UK could do business with after leaving the European Union.
one important factor was unquestionably linked to migration. India wanted more of its skilled professionals to be able to enter EU countries on six-month visas.
May’s comments on returning Indians who “have no right” to remain in Britain, Indian journalists huddled together comparing notes, asking whether she had really used those words.
May wanted India to hand over trade liberalisation in return for little else. She said the Delhi press pack had expected to hear something warmer, and were surprised by what felt like a somewhat hostile tone.
backlash from some business voices over the issue underlined the complexity of the task ahead. India would love to sign up to a trade agreement with the UK, but only if it is in its economic and social interest. Like the EU example before, the challenges facing Britain in India underline the mountain May has to climb as she attempts to reach the opportunities of a post-Brexit world. Free movement in return for trade isn’t a concept that is limited to the European project that British voters rejected in June.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...y-free-movement-for-trade-an-issue-outside-eu
In which Boris Johnson makes a surprisingly apt analogy for Brexit:
http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-37858143
![]()
Is Britain as dependant on immigration for a sustained labour force as Germany is?