Jeremy Corbyn....

RobFZS

Member
As long as she delivers brexit, she's got nothing to worry about, labour don't know what they're doing and thus, Ukip will eat in to them and internal polling in Scottish labour puts them at 15%, so labour is essentially over for this decade.

Brexit has been a long time coming and Trump just plays smart with what the people in the states he needed wanted, Corbyn offers unlimited migration, some odd join ups with the IRA and a partial renationalisation of the railways that appeals to not many.
 

banjo

Member
Location
Back of beyond
I have to admit in liking Corbyn, when you stick to your principles even when everyone is attacking you it's the measure of someone.
I don't agree with his ideas though, I just like his honesty that's what everyone hates. He was correct about brexit and hit the public mood, and also about workers rights.
I do not vote labour these days, but his aproach of helping the workers is admirable after all thars what the Labour Party was born for. Milibean f**ked up the Labour Party when he joined with the other party's in the Scottish referendom, they will never trust labour again there and that's when the power went in Westminster.
The country has always been pretty right wing and the trouble isn't Corbyn, it's all MPs in Westminster, they are basicly the same now, from every party. They have no idea what they stand for and quite frankly they could all stand in each other's party and no difference would be noticed. It's called the middle politics, everyone wants the middle voter and the left and the right are told to f**k off, not anymore though !
Corbyn is different, he won't last long but at least he has some principles.
We will end up with a clone of milibean next, an oily person who agrees with everything and disagrees with no one and has no opinion, and makes you feel better because he'd rob you behind your back, but not to your face, back to normal strokers again!
 

czechmate

Member
Mixed Farmer
Certainly would not, however cannot remember last time a put money on anything, except potatoes, onions etc :):):)

I have a personal theory, that Leicester bought the title through betting fixes. The owner is rich enough and South East Asia is famous for such things.I will say no more of this, don't want to be the John Watling of the football world :):):)


I think that is the worst post you have ever made
 
Sorry if this in the wrong place, but it has to be said, seriously now, someone please explain to me what planet this bloke and Mcdonnell are on?

No Trident renewal, 250 billion extra spending (yeah because spending worked so well last time), nationalise the railways again (another raging success if history is anything to go by) and so on.

Banging your gums about globalisation is all well and good but trade puts money in people's pockets and food on the table, it is as simple as that.

Corbyn openly stated he wanted to revert to the country as it was in the 1970's.

I wasn't even alive then, an neither were a lot of the Labour voters and apparent fan club, the difference is however that I recognise that the country was in dark times in the 60's and 70's, which should not be repeated in any way shape or form. Your average Corbyn supporter today is about 19 years old, has no clue about anything whatsoever, if they have ever had a job (doubtful) at all, much less any real life experience. This is the kind of muppet we have directing the destiny of the opposition.

Sad times, we have no effective opposition to the government and I feel that many of the sound Labour MPs who have done sterling service and public servants will now be marginalised or forced to conform to this new socialist nonsense which benefits no one.

The sooner the SNP end this charade and make Labour unelectable forever the better.
I feel sorry for labour corbyn taking the party into the wilderness years
 

jendan

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Northumberland
I feel sorry for labour corbyn taking the party into the wilderness years
On the news tonight,Corbyn is a political satirist/cartoonists dream.He was looking at the camera partially sideways,one eye popeyed,and squinting out of his other eye. He just does not look the part,and would not make any difference if he was talking sense or not.No wonder Blair wants to make a comeback.The sooner they can get Keir Hardie/Starmer in,or the ex para bloke,the better.
 

Ley253

Member
Location
Bath
Unless they shoot him,Compo Corbyn is a fixture.There too many blinkered clowns who vote for him, and always will. As they see it, if he fails, he is not being left wing enough, because his party are not behind him, so, the clowns will try to get more Corbyn clones elected, and that will marginalise the Labour party even more.
 

RobFZS

Member
Unless they shoot him,Compo Corbyn is a fixture.There too many blinkered clowns who vote for him, and always will. As they see it, if he fails, he is not being left wing enough, because his party are not behind him, so, the clowns will try to get more Corbyn clones elected, and that will marginalise the Labour party even more.
Yes, John Mccdonnel will jump in to Corbyns shoes the day he steps down, there's no getting away from it now, they've made their bed, they've got to lie in it.
 

alex04w

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Co Antrim
I have to admit in liking Corbyn, when you stick to your principles even when everyone is attacking you it's the measure of someone.
I don't agree with his ideas though, I just like his honesty that's what everyone hates. He was correct about brexit and hit the public mood, and also about workers rights.
I do not vote labour these days, but his aproach of helping the workers is admirable after all thars what the Labour Party was born for. Milibean fudgeed up the Labour Party when he joined with the other party's in the Scottish referendom, they will never trust labour again there and that's when the power went in Westminster.
The country has always been pretty right wing and the trouble isn't Corbyn, it's all MPs in Westminster, they are basicly the same now, from every party. They have no idea what they stand for and quite frankly they could all stand in each other's party and no difference would be noticed. It's called the middle politics, everyone wants the middle voter and the left and the right are told to fudge off, not anymore though !
Corbyn is different, he won't last long but at least he has some principles.
We will end up with a clone of milibean next, an oily person who agrees with everything and disagrees with no one and has no opinion, and makes you feel better because he'd rob you behind your back, but not to your face, back to normal strokers again!

You always have to have respect for someone who stands by what they believe, even if you do not agree with them in the slightest.

They are the sort of people who you know what they will say before you even ask them the question. There were / are very few of them about. A classic example was Tony Benn. Another was Ian Paisley (although he changed to become / when he became one of the Chuckle Brothers).

Too many politicians will say what they think the people want to hear, rather than say what they themselves truly believe. If we had more conviction politicians they would command better respect and the country would be a better place.
 

RobFZS

Member
Wants a million quid wage cap now, all those working class football supporters will be pee'd when the premier league resembles league 2 once all the big players have gone abroad.
 

JP1

Member
Livestock Farmer
15941258_643357969181983_7895804288895596803_n.jpg
 

JP1

Member
Livestock Farmer
I have to admit in liking Corbyn, when you stick to your principles even when everyone is attacking you it's the measure of someone.
I don't agree with his ideas though, I just like his honesty that's what everyone hates. He was correct about brexit and hit the public mood, and also about workers rights.
I do not vote labour these days, but his aproach of helping the workers is admirable after all thars what the Labour Party was born for. Milibean fudgeed up the Labour Party when he joined with the other party's in the Scottish referendom, they will never trust labour again there and that's when the power went in Westminster.
The country has always been pretty right wing and the trouble isn't Corbyn, it's all MPs in Westminster, they are basicly the same now, from every party. They have no idea what they stand for and quite frankly they could all stand in each other's party and no difference would be noticed. It's called the middle politics, everyone wants the middle voter and the left and the right are told to fudge off, not anymore though !
Corbyn is different, he won't last long but at least he has some principles.
We will end up with a clone of milibean next, an oily person who agrees with everything and disagrees with no one and has no opinion, and makes you feel better because he'd rob you behind your back, but not to your face, back to normal strokers again!
As Clarkson famously described all the previous leader candidates "milk bottles in suits"
 

SFI - What % were you taking out of production?

  • 0 %

    Votes: 104 40.6%
  • Up to 25%

    Votes: 93 36.3%
  • 25-50%

    Votes: 39 15.2%
  • 50-75%

    Votes: 5 2.0%
  • 75-100%

    Votes: 3 1.2%
  • 100% I’ve had enough of farming!

    Votes: 12 4.7%

May Event: The most profitable farm diversification strategy 2024 - Mobile Data Centres

  • 1,522
  • 28
With just a internet connection and a plug socket you too can join over 70 farms currently earning up to £1.27 ppkw ~ 201% ROI

Register Here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-mo...2024-mobile-data-centres-tickets-871045770347

Tuesday, May 21 · 10am - 2pm GMT+1

Location: Village Hotel Bury, Rochdale Road, Bury, BL9 7BQ

The Farming Forum has teamed up with the award winning hardware manufacturer Easy Compute to bring you an educational talk about how AI and blockchain technology is helping farmers to diversify their land.

Over the past 7 years, Easy Compute have been working with farmers, agricultural businesses, and renewable energy farms all across the UK to help turn leftover space into mini data centres. With...
Top