Post by cherenkov on Mar 27, 2012 1:19:26 GMT
"Hard" Talk.
The new Scargill is now Len McLuskey a congenital unionised socialist hardliner who wants to protest during the Olympics and has, as his ultimate masturbatory fantasy, the intention of restoring union power back to the good old days when any government the TUC didn't like, be it Heath or Callaghan, were brought down by TUC 'industrial action'.
While I was impressed, given the fact that several times the BBC interviewer allowed him to stray into controversial territory, I would have been reassured if at some point in the 'interview' the words 'electoral democracy' had entered the fray.
This fascist of the Left believes he and his members have some kind of right to ignore the wishes of the British people as expressed in the last election and use the tactics of threats, disruption, and intimidation to turn this country into a socialist economic backwater in which he and his members would enjoy the highest standard of living in an essentially bankrupt country.
The moron talked about growth and was unchallenged about whether he understood that growth created by government borrowing would increase government debt, increase uncertainty among our creditors, thus leading to higher interest repayments on our borrowings which would leave us even worse off against the increase in tax returns, which comprised money that came from government borrowing in the first place!
The way the BBC allow their moronic Leftist Conservative-hating friends to serially insult the intelligence of the UK public will, when we finally collapse into the mire of national insolvency, not come back at them. They know how to play the game of seeming neutral but actually being biased to the core.
I mean it's called Hard Talk! Couldn't they at least have pointed out to the militant prick that in the last TWO general elections the Conservative party got more VOTES than anyone else?
www.historylearningsite.co.uk/2005_british_general_election.htm
Do the Labour movement in the UK want us to be a democracy or not? Well you won't hear the BBC asking them that question.
The new Scargill is now Len McLuskey a congenital unionised socialist hardliner who wants to protest during the Olympics and has, as his ultimate masturbatory fantasy, the intention of restoring union power back to the good old days when any government the TUC didn't like, be it Heath or Callaghan, were brought down by TUC 'industrial action'.
While I was impressed, given the fact that several times the BBC interviewer allowed him to stray into controversial territory, I would have been reassured if at some point in the 'interview' the words 'electoral democracy' had entered the fray.
This fascist of the Left believes he and his members have some kind of right to ignore the wishes of the British people as expressed in the last election and use the tactics of threats, disruption, and intimidation to turn this country into a socialist economic backwater in which he and his members would enjoy the highest standard of living in an essentially bankrupt country.
The moron talked about growth and was unchallenged about whether he understood that growth created by government borrowing would increase government debt, increase uncertainty among our creditors, thus leading to higher interest repayments on our borrowings which would leave us even worse off against the increase in tax returns, which comprised money that came from government borrowing in the first place!
The way the BBC allow their moronic Leftist Conservative-hating friends to serially insult the intelligence of the UK public will, when we finally collapse into the mire of national insolvency, not come back at them. They know how to play the game of seeming neutral but actually being biased to the core.
I mean it's called Hard Talk! Couldn't they at least have pointed out to the militant prick that in the last TWO general elections the Conservative party got more VOTES than anyone else?
www.historylearningsite.co.uk/2005_british_general_election.htm
Do the Labour movement in the UK want us to be a democracy or not? Well you won't hear the BBC asking them that question.