Quote from: Valmy on Today at 07:31:06 PMQuote from: Sheilbh on Today at 01:51:20 PMThere's definitely been some similar issues in the US. I remember reading a story in the NYT about a town in Michigan which elected a majority Muslim council and Muslim mayor with the support of progressive activists, who then felt very betrayed when the council voted to ban flying the Pride flag on council buildings.
Well there is always that one town that is the exception.
But as Sav pointed out...the town was over 50%+ immigrants largely from Muslim countries. That is a very specific scenario.
And it doesn't seem like that particular alliance between progressive activists and Islamic conservatives lasted longer than one local election.
But on a national and systematic level all dangerous religions of all sorts are dangerously empowered by conservative policies.
Quote from: Valmy on Today at 07:38:28 PMQuote from: Razgovory on August 26, 2025, 12:04:00 PMHe's got a point. The belief that a country inhabited primarily by Jews is horrible is not a left-right issue.
What makes that country horrible is the same thing that makes our country horrible. They keep re-electing a disgusting criminal as their leader that then goes on to do evil things. I presume not every country with Jews in it does that.
Quote from: Neil on Today at 01:21:36 PMThe first is that you're naive, the sort of person who tells people 'it's never been properly implemented'.
Quote from: Sheilbh on Today at 02:03:06 PMAgain I'm just struck by wondering what the leaders of universities and higher education think they're for?
Quote from: Razgovory on August 26, 2025, 12:04:00 PMHe's got a point. The belief that a country inhabited primarily by Jews is horrible is not a left-right issue.
Quote from: Norgy on Today at 03:37:31 PMThis love of tariffs baffles even a left-winger like me.
Quote from: Sheilbh on Today at 01:51:20 PMThere's definitely been some similar issues in the US. I remember reading a story in the NYT about a town in Michigan which elected a majority Muslim council and Muslim mayor with the support of progressive activists, who then felt very betrayed when the council voted to ban flying the Pride flag on council buildings.
Quote from: crazy canuck on Today at 08:55:26 AMBrilliant Pythonesque - what has the ECHR ever done for usWell the ECHR became part of British domestic law in 1998 and I'm not sure it was quite such a seismic moment of Britain from the darkness into the light through the ECHR (I also couldn't help but notice that democracy didn't come up in the lift). There are, astonishingly, even places that have developed those rights without the the ECHR
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DOAmhDbCMQV/?igsh=NHh1MHI5Ymw0Y2Vx
QuoteThis is where we're missing the next step, of stopping people from going to Libya et al in the first place.
Where are the campaigns telling Sub Saharan Africans how bad life actually is in the UK? - I've mentioned before the chat I had with some Rwandan teachers where they were genuinely shocked to hear how expensive things were in Europe and how little teachers were paid, and that they were actually financially considerably better off at home.
Why aren't we doing more to spread the word of how bad the crossing is?
QuoteMaybe not one to be expected right this instant, and rather more one for Europe than the UK, but also how about encouraging development in African countries?- link standards of democracy and human rights to favourable trade deals.This is lovely in theory - and I think what Europeans have described as their aid efforts. I would note that receiving aid from the EU is conditional on accepting deportations of migrants and taking steps to prevent migration to Europe.
QuoteIf we're continuing to boost up asylum and turn it into this overly important issue then that is fighting on ground of Reform's choosing. Its a mistake to go too deep into this. Damage can be limited but Labour will never win.I don't think it's a choice. But I don't think you can do politics by content moderation or just not talking about things. I think you always have to make your case and in government show you're able to do it. As I say I don't think it's about immigration I think it's about control and the sense that things are not in control/the state can't control things. I think it's similar to the low-level crime and anti-social behaviour and I think it's really corrosive. (But again - state capacity is my explanation for everything
The focus should be on delivering what people want in areas where Reform doesn't have a hope in hell of competing.
Quoteedit- just read a fact today. Immigration is down by half in the past year.... but politics has moved the other way.Yeah I've flagged and it's largely changes from Sunak - but it's moved from the highest ever year, to the second highest ever year.
QuoteThough I'd also raise the point that this is just the tip of the ice berg. A tiny fraction of a fraction of stuff on twitter faces any consequence. I'd wager odds are good the amount of twitter-hate that gets prosecuted is nothing next to the more conventional crimes people moan about.I can't see centralised stats on this. But as a comparison shoplifting is increasing rapidly - it's at record levels now and the British Retail Consortium say the stats of reports of shoplifting is significantly undercounting (because people don't believe the police will do anything).
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