Quote from: Razgovory on December 10, 2025, 07:56:18 PMIs that the position of the Greens or Your Party? "We support you but..."
Quote from: Crazy_Ivan80 on Today at 02:57:10 AMQuote from: Josquius on Today at 02:01:02 AMCurious thing I heard which highlights musks known sympathies....
He was ranting about the EU fining vichy 150 million for breaking the law. Despite the fact they did. And this is pocket change for him.
Someone added a note on this that Russia, Belarus, and many other countries had blocked Twitter....
He personally removed it.
Hopefully someone put it back, and keeps doing so each time Elon nuts removes it
Quote from: Tamas on December 10, 2025, 05:49:13 PMQuote from: Josquius on December 10, 2025, 05:42:47 PMCorrect in terms of stuff like citizen of country X can access the social system of country X, work in country X, buy property in country X, etc...
In terms of what they're doing and constraining fundamental rights of non citizens.... No. That's something that is meant to be universal.
Yes but clearly a revision of practical applications of that is needed in the modern world. The current rules were clearly made with European conflicts in mind. Not when technology and global crisis intertwine to turn those old processes and interpretations into effective vehicles for immigration.
Quote from: Crazy_Ivan80 on Today at 02:55:50 AMQuote from: Josquius on December 10, 2025, 05:42:47 PMIn terms of what they're doing and constraining fundamental rights of non citizens.... No. That's something that is meant to be universal.
That is western thinking though and much, probably most, of the world doesn't follow that philosophy. It is, in other words, wishful thinking.
And something that can be weaponised against against the west.
Quote from: Sheilbh on December 10, 2025, 11:52:38 PMI think this is an example, which I've mentioned to Raz before, of a lot of "identity politics" not being driven by the left but by the centre left.
QuoteOlufemi Taiwo's Elite Capture is fantastic on this. But it just seems like such a weak argument here remove jury trial in certain cases because....woke?Wanting rapists put in jail is woke?Or worse remove jury trial because opposition to it is "not a good look". Not great.
QuoteTwo slightly wider points this made me think of though is the thing about Magna Carta. Which I think is interesting in a wider way because I actually think that "myth" is our constitution in many ways. I think it's Linda Colley who makes the argument (I think it's in her book on constitutions: The Gun, The Pen and The Ship) that the British constitution is fundamentally the Whig narrative of history - and I think she's absolutely right. It's not Magna Carta, or the Bill of Rights or the Great Reform Act - each of these matter in their moment but are, as Fleet points out, of specific significance. What makes them matter is that they form a wider narrative with meaning - that may be a myth but the myth is really significant (just like the myths of, say, the French or American revolutions are in those countries). But Whig history has been in decline for over a century, it is now broadly recognised as "myth" in a perjorative sense and I'm not really sure how our system works without that intellectual underpinning. It feels like a lot of form without any substance or feeling for what works and what doesn't and where the edges are. I think similarly we've embraced many of the forms of a more American constitutional order (Supreme Court, advancing political arguments through the courts etc) without there being an underlying, shared, agreed, consensual basis like the US constitution/Bill of Rights.Its funny though, as this whig view of history is held to by those who have absolutely no interest in progress. They see things as settled and sorted by the turn of the 20th century and any more progress is not wanted.
Other thing is it reminds me of Blair in a weird way. In that Blair always liked to cast his politics (and I think genuinely thinks in these terms) between forces of modernity and progress (him) v their opponents (vested interests, unions, Tories). Whether it's all of his constitutional reforms (Human Rights Act, FOIA, Supreme Court) or embrace of almost unfettered globalisation, public-private partnerships, "cool Britannia" or his desire to join the Euro, I think Blair saw it all as having modernised the Labour Party, New Labour's job was to modernise the country. Ultimately peaking in his absolutely mad conference speech about Britain being a "young country" which seems like nonsense in basically any way you look at it![]()
QuoteI think it's often an effective framing but I think it is a problematic as the experience of this country since Blair left office shows. I'd add that he is still very much of the same view but what constitutions progress has, possibly, shifted. So he's now very focused on embracing tech and AI as the coming wave. I think one of the big problems is the lack of politics in ideas of "progress" or "modernity" - so who is benefiting, where will the gains in power and wealth accrue etc. I think for Blair that was a detail and you just re-distribute the issue away, whereas I think in the last 10 years especially it's become very clear that who has the power matters and it's not just a case of re-distribution.

Quote from: Jacob on Today at 12:39:30 AMThat's definitely Putin and Thiel's read on Europe.
Quote from: Jacob on December 10, 2025, 05:05:23 PMIt worked, reading it now. Thanks
Quote from: Josquius on Today at 02:01:02 AMCurious thing I heard which highlights musks known sympathies....
He was ranting about the EU fining vichy 150 million for breaking the law. Despite the fact they did. And this is pocket change for him.
Someone added a note on this that Russia, Belarus, and many other countries had blocked Twitter....
He personally removed it.
Quote from: Josquius on December 10, 2025, 05:42:47 PMIn terms of what they're doing and constraining fundamental rights of non citizens.... No. That's something that is meant to be universal.
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