Strangely enough Hollande's approval in the polls went up 20% following the attacks, this didn't translate into election results though. The political system here is totally broken, the same old losers are recycled indefinitely and there is no political vision and no results. All the traditional parties know how to do is tax, spend, and put a maximum in their own pockets. The FN, seen as as alternative, is no better as they are all career politicians and are only interested in power and replacing the traditional parties in skimming the maximum of cash. Add to that the multiplication of political levels (municipal, agglomeration, department, region, legislature, senate, European) that result in continual elections and the same old candidates due to cumul of political mandates (I think the record is about 25) there is a sense of disgust. Quite a mess, when we are desperately in need of strong leadership.rhubroma said:What did I say in the immediate wake of the Paris terrorist strike? The sure thing was that it was going to consideratly boost Le Pen's electoral support. Bingo.
rhubroma said:blackcat said:yeah, I was just being a ****. thats my raison d'etre, aint it Glenn?
'nother caveat: not as **** ******** like David Millar my avatar tho...
Some would say this world needs ***** as a raison d'etre to save it from taking itself too seriously, the root of all evil.
frenchfry said:Strangely enough Hollande's approval in the polls went up 20% following the attacks, this didn't translate into election results though. The political system here is totally broken, the same old losers are recycled indefinitely and there is no political vision and no results. All the traditional parties know how to do is tax, spend, and put a maximum in their own pockets. The FN, seen as as alternative, is no better as they are all career politicians and are only interested in power and replacing the traditional parties in skimming the maximum of cash. Add to that the multiplication of political levels (municipal, agglomeration, department, region, legislature, senate, European) that result in continual elections and the same old candidates due to cumul of political mandates (I think the record is about 25) there is a sense of disgust. Quite a mess, when we are desperately in need of strong leadership.rhubroma said:What did I say in the immediate wake of the Paris terrorist strike? The sure thing was that it was going to consideratly boost Le Pen's electoral support. Bingo.
Sources in Ankara said Monday that Turkey has begun pulling out bulk of its troops from northern Iraq after Baghdad threatened to pursue the case in full capacity. A report on the website of the Turkish daily Hurriyet cited sources as saying that a total number of 600 troops Turkey had stationed in a camp around the Iraqi city of Mosul some 350 have been withdrawn.
rhubroma said:These times call for a leadership though that is decidedly superior (and a voting public that is better educated and discerning). Unfortunately the reactionary public votes for the nationalists after such an affair, also because the other parties have little to offer, which is their big failure in the post-ideological, one-thought system age. Nationalism always thrives on fear and uncertainty. What I don't like is we could be witnessing a recrudescense of fascism under a new and contemporary form, but sinister nonetheless. [...]
The people don't like to take a hard look at the broader picture, however, and vote with their guts prefering the "strong" leader who comes in to defend the nation - rather than vote for serious change.
Echoes said:rhubroma said:These times call for a leadership though that is decidedly superior (and a voting public that is better educated and discerning). Unfortunately the reactionary public votes for the nationalists after such an affair, also because the other parties have little to offer, which is their big failure in the post-ideological, one-thought system age. Nationalism always thrives on fear and uncertainty. What I don't like is we could be witnessing a recrudescense of fascism under a new and contemporary form, but sinister nonetheless. [...]
The people don't like to take a hard look at the broader picture, however, and vote with their guts prefering the "strong" leader who comes in to defend the nation - rather than vote for serious change.
I translate:
The common people are too stupid to vote correctly and to realize where their interests are and who would represent them at best because they are reactionary (good to notice that fact). Only the better educated and discerning people should be entitled to vote.
Echoes said:Lol a "translation" suggests you adopt the addressee's point of view, so if you say "I translate", you shouldn't start with "Echoes baseness".![]()
But at least, that must be the first admition to political correctness I've ever seen. Yes there are "well-educated" reactionaries (like me). However "working class authoritarianism" is a well known phenomenon observed by many sociologists. Christopher Lasch summed it up all these works in his "The True & Only Heaven". That's why the Left hates the working class and always has.
I don't even have to debunk all your errors of analysis, here. The idea that the FN has boosted up is already an error. So obviously the recent attacks did not boost the FN because the FN did not get more vote than before. Next of course the FN has NEVER advocated for EU exit, which means never for Euro exit. And obviously, the masks are falling. You advocate for the euro with all its consequences it had on the relocation of our industry overseas, on mass unemployment, our inability to export because the euro has long been to expensive, etc etc. I am in favour of total euro exit, total EU exit and total NATO exit. You side the capitalists, I side the working class.![]()
Echoes said:rhubroma said:These times call for a leadership though that is decidedly superior (and a voting public that is better educated and discerning). Unfortunately the reactionary public votes for the nationalists after such an affair, also because the other parties have little to offer, which is their big failure in the post-ideological, one-thought system age. Nationalism always thrives on fear and uncertainty. What I don't like is we could be witnessing a recrudescense of fascism under a new and contemporary form, but sinister nonetheless. [...]
The people don't like to take a hard look at the broader picture, however, and vote with their guts prefering the "strong" leader who comes in to defend the nation - rather than vote for serious change.
I translate:
The common people are too stupid to vote correctly and to realize where their interests are and who would represent them at best because they are reactionary (good to notice that fact). Only the better educated and discerning people should be entitled to vote.
If that idiot gets elected President, I'm moving...blutto said:....find below a post from the US Politics thread....and do remember Trump is real popular among the, uhhh, general populace...
----------------------------------------------------------------------
"Trump is the perfect hoax.
Everything he says feels like a caricature of what some redneck republican would say, and still he sails so high in the polls. It must be the 'moderate' republican's worst fear come through: discovering that the republican voters are, in reality, even more stupid, close-minded and xenophobic than the worst clichés portray them to be."
Cheers
Irondan said:If that idiot gets elected President, I'm moving...![]()
Irondan said:If that idiot gets elected President, I'm moving...blutto said:....find below a post from the US Politics thread....and do remember Trump is real popular among the, uhhh, general populace...
----------------------------------------------------------------------
"Trump is the perfect hoax.
Everything he says feels like a caricature of what some redneck republican would say, and still he sails so high in the polls. It must be the 'moderate' republican's worst fear come through: discovering that the republican voters are, in reality, even more stupid, close-minded and xenophobic than the worst clichés portray them to be."
Cheers![]()
Good point....the delgados said:Irondan said:If that idiot gets elected President, I'm moving...blutto said:....find below a post from the US Politics thread....and do remember Trump is real popular among the, uhhh, general populace...
----------------------------------------------------------------------
"Trump is the perfect hoax.
Everything he says feels like a caricature of what some redneck republican would say, and still he sails so high in the polls. It must be the 'moderate' republican's worst fear come through: discovering that the republican voters are, in reality, even more stupid, close-minded and xenophobic than the worst clichés portray them to be."
Cheers![]()
Then you would be a victim of his foreign policies.
Best to have rational minds fight ignorance and bigotry from within.
Echoes said:Lol a "translation" suggests you adopt the addressee's point of view, so if you say "I translate", you shouldn't start with "Echoes baseness".![]()
But at least, that must be the first admition to political correctness I've ever seen. Yes there are "well-educated" reactionaries (like me). However "working class authoritarianism" is a well known phenomenon observed by many sociologists. Christopher Lasch summed it up all these works in his "The True & Only Heaven". That's why the Left hates the working class and always has.
I don't even have to debunk all your errors of analysis, here. The idea that the FN has boosted up is already an error. So obviously the recent attacks did not boost the FN because the FN did not get more vote than before. Next of course the FN has NEVER advocated for EU exit, which means never for Euro exit. And obviously, the masks are falling. You advocate for the euro with all its consequences it had on the relocation of our industry overseas, on mass unemployment, our inability to export because the euro has long been to expensive, etc etc. I am in favour of total euro exit, total EU exit and total NATO exit. You side the capitalists, I side the working class.![]()
President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that the Calibre cruise missiles launched from the submarine could be equipped with nuclear warheads but said he hoped they would "never be needed in the fight against terrorism
Speaking in Washington, Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said: "We were given advanced notice that they would be carrying out strikes." He added: "We appreciate that," particularly because the Kremlin was not required to do so under a memorandum of understanding signed by Russia and the US
Glenn_Wilson said:Just read something where Putin says or makes reference to Nukes against ISIL. Or more to the point that his missiles from the Mediterranean submarines can be armed with nukes.
Found the link.
http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/625465/Islamic-State-Russia-Vladimir-Putin-threatens-bomb-ISIS-nuclear-weapons
Agree.python said:glenn, the source you linked to is likely hyping.
here's how the independent source i often use translated vlad:
http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/russia-launches-first-syria-strikes-submarine-minister-856521507
President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that the Calibre cruise missiles launched from the submarine could be equipped with nuclear warheads but said he hoped they would "never be needed in the fight against terrorism
the real meaning of the russian sub shooting the criuse missile (and its nuclear capability) had zero to do with isis. they could destroy the same targets at 1/10 the cost with their su-24 stationed in syria...
it was, just like those cruise missiles they have been shooting from the caspian, a message to nato about russia's increased capability.
in a more specific purely military sense, it was a demonstration that not only their giant nuclear subs can shoot the cruise missile submerged (a fact long known), but also their small (much quieter and stealthier), diesel-electric boats as well (a quality only the us could boast up to date). the nuclear capability is more posturing in the same direction...and the message was received (from the same source):
Speaking in Washington, Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said: "We were given advanced notice that they would be carrying out strikes." He added: "We appreciate that," particularly because the Kremlin was not required to do so under a memorandum of understanding signed by Russia and the US
wonder why the russians 'over-communicated ? they knew too well that the syrian sky is filled with the us airborne 'eyes' and 'ears' (in addition to the space-based intel). they were eager to show off the accuracy of strikes (of course holding back other capability like anti-missile maneuverability, terrain radar signatures etc)
Understand that. Like I said in my reply to python.Amsterhammer said:Glenn_Wilson said:Just read something where Putin says or makes reference to Nukes against ISIL. Or more to the point that his missiles from the Mediterranean submarines can be armed with nukes.
Found the link.
http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/625465/Islamic-State-Russia-Vladimir-Putin-threatens-bomb-ISIS-nuclear-weapons
Glenn, the Express, aka the Daily Getsmuchworse, is not a reliable source, and not only because it's a right wing rag.
Irondan said:If that idiot gets elected President, I'm moving...blutto said:....find below a post from the US Politics thread....and do remember Trump is real popular among the, uhhh, general populace...
----------------------------------------------------------------------
"Trump is the perfect hoax.
Everything he says feels like a caricature of what some redneck republican would say, and still he sails so high in the polls. It must be the 'moderate' republican's worst fear come through: discovering that the republican voters are, in reality, even more stupid, close-minded and xenophobic than the worst clichés portray them to be."
Cheers![]()
rhubroma said:I'm well aware of the iter of global capitalism. Relocation of industry was long taking place before the Euro, as were the dismantling of trade barriers in the name of liberalism.
Article 63
(ex Article 56 TEC)
1. Within the framework of the provisions set out in this Chapter, all restrictions on the movement of capital between Member States and between Member States and third countries shall be prohibited.
2. Within the framework of the provisions set out in this Chapter, all restrictions on payments between Member States and between Member States and third countries shall be prohibited.
rhubroma said:This is precisely the well from which FN draws its water, as does Beppe Grillo and the Lega Nord in Italy, Farnge in Britain - so you're in good company - while at the fringe looms the various Podemos and then there are the pirates. The system is based on consensus, however, which only knows how to plan for the next elections. But in a tripartite system FN's consensus has grown by 6%, which is not unsubstantial. Come on, Marine's platform has always been staunchly anti-EU.
rhubroma said:Your concept of "working class authoritarianism" only has validity to (losing) monarchists like yourself, which is eminently hypocritical.
The masses today have lost interest in revolution. Indeed, their political instincts are demonstrably more conservative than those of their self-appointed spokesmen and would-be liberators. It is the working and lower middle classes, after all, who favor limits on abortion, cling to the two-parent family as a source of stability in a turbulent world, resist experiments with ‘alternative lifestyles,’ and harbor deep reservations about affirmative action and other ventures in large-scale social engineering.
rhubroma said:Yours is authoritarianism tout court and consequently fascist.
rhubroma said:And this is where your siding with the working class, as you view it, is a perversion of its very struggle for emancipation. No, Ehcoes, you don't side with the working class, but a return of Manzoni's Innominato and clerical reign over the serfs.
blutto said:....find below a post from the US Politics thread....and do remember Trump is real popular among the, uhhh, general populace...
