Keith Sansum1
- Location: london
- Registered: 25 Aug 2010
- Posts: 23,942
It became clear at PMQ yesterday that the mouse was losing his way,
in an attempt to try to do something he spoke yesterday about reviewing the green tax's presently in place,
Of course this was on the hoof thinking, the energy companies totally unaware of the change, and it isn't going down with there coolition partners in crime.
Then we see Cleggy making a speech today calling for more regulation on free schools after the free school in Derby that failed.
Not looking good for the co-olition, worse for the country
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Guest 715- Registered: 9 Jun 2011
- Posts: 2,438
Dave was battered on PMQs and was definitely squirming , John Major's views on the energy prices all over the press made it easy for Ed.
Audere est facere.
Keith Sansum1
- Location: london
- Registered: 25 Aug 2010
- Posts: 23,942
And today cleggys on the road again distancing himself from the tories
you will see in his interview though its tough headlines
but when you hear him speak he says of course he and the tories will agree the new policy
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Guest 649- Registered: 12 Mar 2008
- Posts: 14,118
I see yet more U-turns on the way.

Guest 684- Registered: 26 Feb 2009
- Posts: 635
Coalition.
howard mcsweeney1- Location: Dover
- Registered: 12 Mar 2008
- Posts: 62,352
cobbled together even.
Brian Dixon
- Location: Dover
- Registered: 23 Sep 2008
- Posts: 23,940
a bodge job more likely.
Guest 725- Registered: 7 Oct 2011
- Posts: 1,418
As Ed Miliband said the other day:
"Many people face the choice this winter between heating and spending money on football outfits of their favourite premiership teams for their kids. These are the ordinary people of this country who this Prime Minister will never meet and whose lives he will never understand."
Keith Sansum1
- Location: london
- Registered: 25 Aug 2010
- Posts: 23,942
of course i listened to what he realy said
but nice try philip
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Brian Dixon
- Location: Dover
- Registered: 23 Sep 2008
- Posts: 23,940
no Philip you have misquoted him again,"its either heating or eating".
howard mcsweeney1- Location: Dover
- Registered: 12 Mar 2008
- Posts: 62,352
i did laugh at that one from philip there is a certain ring of truth in it.
Keith Sansum1
- Location: london
- Registered: 25 Aug 2010
- Posts: 23,942
not much
ALL POSTS ARE MY OWN PERSONAL VIEWS
Guest 725- Registered: 7 Oct 2011
- Posts: 1,418
Just to remind everyone at this time of year what Ed Miliband also said in the commons the other day to check up on elderly neighbours when the cold sets in and check their thermostat is turned down a degree or two in order to help prevent global warming.
Guest 710- Registered: 28 Feb 2011
- Posts: 6,950
There is one way to get a group of elderly neighbours out of their woollies and down to their slips, fans a-fanning...
... Just have them invite Philip round to give then a talk on the impact of Global Warming.

Ignorance is bliss, bliss is happiness, I am happy...to draw your attention to the possible connectivity in the foregoing.
Guest 725- Registered: 7 Oct 2011
- Posts: 1,418
Judas Priest! The very thought of it. I might pass on that Tom, however I'm quite prepared to teach anyone how stupid they are if they still fall for the global warming cult and how expensive and ridiculous the whole premise really is.
It's really quite enlightening and most people I've spoken to about it find themselves both invigorated and tell me how it really has changed their life.
Gone are the worries that were always there at the back of their mind which stopped them moving on with their lives because they considered it rather fruitless and ultimately pointless. Gone are the guilt-ridden chores which compelled them to double check the carbon footprint of every item of food and clothing they bought and intense hours wasted sorting glass from cardboard.
Gone the inability to speak in polite company for fear of being ostracized by Guardian readers who might sneer and look down their noses at the very thought that we might actually not be capable of changing the weather in 100 years time.
It's really quite liberating. It's rather like the feeling when one grows up and stops seeing Che Guevara as a hero but a terrorist and thinking left really is an adolescent fantasy.
Guest 710- Registered: 28 Feb 2011
- Posts: 6,950
I'm warmer already.
So, Philip. We inhabit the best of all possible worlds? Or, if not quite, would the absence of say, Che G for example, or any other left-leaning figure, put the cherry on your dream cake?
Are there any examples at all of right-leaning figures of the past that should have been give freer rein? The better to acheive this Heaven on Earth, this best of all possible worlds.
What sort of world do grown-ups want? Or hasn't The Telegraph told you yet?
Ignorance is bliss, bliss is happiness, I am happy...to draw your attention to the possible connectivity in the foregoing.
Guest 725- Registered: 7 Oct 2011
- Posts: 1,418
Odd response, Tom, but not unexpected. I don't have what you call a "dream cake" whatever one of those is.
I'm an iconoclast so unfortunately for you and your argument I have no "right-leaning" figures that should be given free rein. I'm far too sophisticated to have to rely on figures from history or contemporary politics in order to form my views unlike many who either see Margaret Thatcher or Bevan or other famous folk in the field as one who should be held as an example of where they stand politically.
Oh! hang on maybe Plato or Aristotle or even Herod himself who knows?
As far as the Telegraph is concerned - wrong and no cigar. The Telegraph is just another news sheet alongside others and I share no affinity to it or any other news outlet so I'll let your little sleight pass.
Think for yourself everyone. Don't wait for the BBC, Skynews, CNN, the Mail, the Guardian or any other news media to model your outlook. Read as much as possible and shape your own opinion.
Unfortunately for Guardian readers this is not possible.
Guest 710- Registered: 28 Feb 2011
- Posts: 6,950
You deserve a biscuit Philip, what is your favourite? It'd best be sugar coated, given your 'slight' sensibilities.
For an iconoclast you talk an lot like a pillar-sitting hermit. Off and apart from the world in which we all live.
Ignorance is bliss, bliss is happiness, I am happy...to draw your attention to the possible connectivity in the foregoing.
howard mcsweeney1- Location: Dover
- Registered: 12 Mar 2008
- Posts: 62,352
for those like me that haven't the foggiest what the last few posts have been about, this may help.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IconoclastGuest 698- Registered: 28 May 2010
- Posts: 8,664
Tom Austin wrote:
For an iconoclast you talk a lot like a pillar-sitting hermit. Off and apart from the world in which we all live.
As you frequently demonstrate, Tom, the view afforded from atop one's pillar creates a target-rich environment for any self-respecting iconoclast.
I'm an optimist. But I'm an optimist who takes my raincoat - Harold Wilson