lol! Iām rebelling against Papster. Fuck the establishment!
woah this is getting syrious.
Fair dos. I was merely comparing the context that the thread was started with. Not for me, ta. Bazza does a better cold open
Originally posted by @Coxford_lou
No I donāt. Itās a free country, and I can do what I like.
It isnāt, and you canāt. But donāt blame me for that. Blame the people that have made certain parts of speech illegal, and are sending the OB round to arrest people for what theyāve said on Twitter.
If you want to respect me less for it, thatās up to you, Iām fine with that.
I respect the thread less. There are millions of people displaced, no indication as to why you utterly reject the idea of Russia doing what the West has been unable to do (theyāre the bad guys, right? I know. Iāve seen Red Dawn too ) and the narrowing of the argument into Diane fucking Abbot.
Itās a piss poor politically motivated opening to a topic that affects millions of people.
But I definitely donāt have to do what you want me to do.
This is true.
Originally posted by @pap
I respect the thread less. There are millions of people displaced, no indication as to why you utterly reject the idea of Russia doing what the West has been unable to do (theyāre the bad guys, right? I know. Iāve seen Red Dawn too ) and the narrowing of the argument into Diane fucking Abbot.
Itās a piss poor politically motivated opening to a topic that affects millions of people.
Well, clearly I dispute that. I just donāt want to be involved in the thread talking about Russia bombing Syria, where youāre pitching the Russia approach as something to be celebrated. Thatās not me playing funny games, or playing politics. Thatās just straight up where I stand on it.
The Diane Abbott clip is a perfect encapsulation to me of how the Stop The War Coalition and others on the hard left have no interest in hearing the voices of those affected, when those voices donāt fit their moral stance. The Syrians are begging the West to get involved.
I perfectly understand the realpolitik argument of Russia supporting Assad, donāt get me wrong. But the reality of that approach, is those that have been oppressed by a dictator, are now being bombed by friends of Assad. That makes me sick in the stomach. You say you stand for the revolution. This is a real revolution.
You keep asking me to state my position on this, but Iāve already answered that question. I donāt think there is any solution that doesnāt have high risk of failure, whether humanitarian intervention, supporting local uprisings etc etc. But doing nothing doesnāt sit well with me either, and I believe the world should be taking humanitarian responsibility for issues like this. So I watch, I read, I listen, I form view points, and I have hope the region will progress.
And while I occasionally put in a counter argument here when most frustrated, I have zero desire to get sucked into a deep debate about the issue with those who are so far off my viewpoint on it. Or who have a generally anti-West viewpoint.
I donāt know what could be clearer than that.
I bet Diane Abbott likes sausage.
Syria has long been used as a means of proxy war by various Western-leaning interests. If Furball were still here, heād talk about the atrocities that Assadās father committed writ large upon his people. Iām not condoning nor excusing that, but Assad is the recognised head of a nation, and besides, there was a deal on the table last year to take him out of the picture, brokered by the Russians, which the West wanted no part in.
Russiaās presence, at the request of the recognised Syrian authority, is legal under international law. Besides, the West is more than happy to prop up dictatorial regimes when it is in their interests. Weāre top mates with Saudi Arabia, sell crowd control gear to oppressive regimes like Bahrain and historically, have had a history of ignoring human suffering if it is being done in our interests.
So we canāt play the moral card, because when it comes down to it, weāve proven over the decades that we will consistently oust democratically returned governments in favour of something else, such as napalmed warzones dealing with the lingering effects of Agent Orange, dictators like Pinochet being allowed to wreak havoc in Chile for decades, as long as he played ball. Mossadegh, Iran, 1953 - wanted to nationalise the oil interests of his country, ousted and replaced by the Shahās regime, complete with death squads for any relenters.
The sphere of interests that you are protecting routinely goes to war because countries democratically choose leaders they do not like, or adopt new government forms.
You can call me anti-Western for disagreeing with this, but I fundamentally disagree with the arrogance of that position, and the death it has caused.
Who the fuck are we to choose?
You choose the side of democracy and progress, and you criticise it come hell or high water until it does it better. And you choose the side of the people. I thought thatās what youāre all about - not this odd ārecognised head of a nationā respect. Youāre letting your dislike for how things have been done in this past cloud your judgement on the reality of what is happening on the ground. I get the critique of the west. I get the realpolitik argument. But thatās where it ends for me.
Diane Abbott should have listened to the Syrians and she should have argued why she didnāt believe getting involved was the right thing to do even though civilians were being bombed. But she didnāt have the balls. I expect more from the left and from the Labour Party.
I agree she should have listened to the Syrians - but are those Syrians representative of the country? Imagine if someone asked some Brits their thoughts on politics and they chose SWF as their sample group?
Does it matter? If you and your family were being repressed by a dictator would it not be right to hear you, or would there need to be a poll first to check if itās a majority view first.
Clearly this isnāt a one off viewpoint/experience.
Like I said, Abbott should have listened to them. I was merely saying that we/she could listen to them but this woman could have been a nutcase or had some kind of agenda. She could have used her time in front of Abbott to talk about Brewdog or the MOBO awards. We must be careful when listening to people.We should know what theyre all about.
Originally posted by @Coxford_lou
If you and your family were being repressed by a dictator
Ur really taking this too far, pap aināt that bad ffs
Not far from it with his treatment of Furball, in my opinion.
Is there such a thing as fractions on here??
Are you just about to get jizzed on, Bletch? (metaphorically speaking)
Originally posted by @saintbletch
Originally posted by @Coxford_lou
Originally posted by @Bearsy
Originally posted by @Coxford_lou
If you and your family were being repressed by a dictator
Ur really taking this too far, pap aināt that bad ffs
Not far from it with his treatment of Furball, in my opinion.
Originally posted by @Coxford_lou
Does it matter? If you and your family were being repressed by a dictator would it not be right to hear you, or would there need to be a poll first to check if itās a majority view first.
Clearly this isnāt a one off viewpoint/experience.
It does matter, otherwise you end up with this.
The emotive impetus behind going after Saddam the first time was a Kuwaiti citizen talking about live babies being thrown out of incubators and being left to die, a cause taken up with zero fact checking by the Western media. It was completely false.
Now the truth emerges: how the US fuelled the rise of Isis in Syria and Iraq
The war on terror, that campaign without end launched 14 years ago by George Bush, is tying itself up in ever more grotesque contortions. On Monday the trial in London of a Swedish man, Bherlin Gildo, accused of terrorism in Syria, collapsed after it became clear British intelligence had been arming the same rebel groups the defendant was charged with supporting.
The prosecution abandoned the case, apparently to avoid embarrassing the intelligence services. The defence argued that going ahead with the trial would have been an āaffront to justiceā when there was plenty of evidence the British state was itself providing āextensive supportā to the armed Syrian opposition.
That didnāt only include the ānon-lethal assistanceā boasted of by the government (including body armour and military vehicles), but training, logistical support and the secret supply of āarms on a massive scaleā. Reports were cited that MI6 had cooperated with the CIA on a ārat lineā of arms transfers from Libyan stockpiles to the Syrian rebels in 2012 after the fall of the Gaddafi regime.
Clearly, the absurdity of sending someone to prison for doing what ministers and their security officials were up to themselves became too much. But itās only the latest of a string of such cases.