The Politics Thread
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UK government accused of meddling with tradition by axing 2011 Queen's Speech
Read more: news.com.au
Read more: news.com.au
2399 wrote:UK government accused of meddling with tradition by axing 2011 Queen's Speech
Read more: news.com.au

Wasn't sure where to put this, here seemed the best place.
Read two articles by Daniel Hannan, hereand here.
Am I allowed to agree with them, yet still think him an arrogant, odious, see you next tuesday?
Read two articles by Daniel Hannan, hereand here.
Am I allowed to agree with them, yet still think him an arrogant, odious, see you next tuesday?
In a world that has decided
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Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
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Erm, I'm sorry but Stalin's crimes were as odious and equal to Hitler's. There is still a difficulty in the west of understanding or even obtaining the facts relating to the Soviet Union/Eastern Front during Stalin's reign and the second world war. For example, he personally blocked any attempts to calculate the Soviet deathtoll at Stalingrad (believed to be around the million mark) and in a wider context through much of the early part of the war, for fear the population would believe it too high a price to pay. It is only recently that its become possible to start to understand just how murderous and barbaric both his regime and the Eastern front were in that period.
On a secondary note, the Red Army laid waste to much of the territory it conquered/reconquered during the period '43-45, mostly because of the day-to-day brutality with which the Soviet troops lived, and propaganda designed to propogate those actions. Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia had welcomed the Nazi's as liberators from the Soviets, were complicit in their crimes, but also suffered an immense amount of murder and oppression from the Germans. When the pendulum swung the other way, they were seen as collaborators (there were at least 2 SS divisions raised inthe Baltic and around 3 million 'Hiwis' fought for the Germans). They paid a heavy price for 'liberation'.
All in all, I think left wingers have to be careful in putting Stalin in their own camp. After all, he was essentially a right wing economist (the most successful in that countries history) he achieved that by any means necessary, including genocide, mass migration, persecution... Thatcher would be proud of his economic record and his impersonal pursuit of it.
On a secondary note, the Red Army laid waste to much of the territory it conquered/reconquered during the period '43-45, mostly because of the day-to-day brutality with which the Soviet troops lived, and propaganda designed to propogate those actions. Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia had welcomed the Nazi's as liberators from the Soviets, were complicit in their crimes, but also suffered an immense amount of murder and oppression from the Germans. When the pendulum swung the other way, they were seen as collaborators (there were at least 2 SS divisions raised inthe Baltic and around 3 million 'Hiwis' fought for the Germans). They paid a heavy price for 'liberation'.
All in all, I think left wingers have to be careful in putting Stalin in their own camp. After all, he was essentially a right wing economist (the most successful in that countries history) he achieved that by any means necessary, including genocide, mass migration, persecution... Thatcher would be proud of his economic record and his impersonal pursuit of it.
You can judge the whole world on the sparkle that you think it lacks.
Yes, you can stare into the abyss, but it's staring right back.
Yes, you can stare into the abyss, but it's staring right back.
Aye but you'd do well to tell a lot of folk that. All of which is cock-end (but correct) Hannan's point. That said I don't like his implication. Stalin's crimes were as much to do with communism as Hitler's were with socialism. He is on much more solid ground when talking off overbearing statehood.Lord Kangana wrote:Erm, I'm sorry but Stalin's crimes were as odious and equal to Hitler's. There is still a difficulty in the west of understanding or even obtaining the facts relating to the Soviet Union/Eastern Front during Stalin's reign and the second world war. For example, he personally blocked any attempts to calculate the Soviet deathtoll at Stalingrad (believed to be around the million mark) and in a wider context through much of the early part of the war, for fear the population would believe it too high a price to pay. It is only recently that its become possible to start to understand just how murderous and barbaric both his regime and the Eastern front were in that period.
On a secondary note, the Red Army laid waste to much of the territory it conquered/reconquered during the period '43-45, mostly because of the day-to-day brutality with which the Soviet troops lived, and propaganda designed to propogate those actions. Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia had welcomed the Nazi's as liberators from the Soviets, were complicit in their crimes, but also suffered an immense amount of murder and oppression from the Germans. When the pendulum swung the other way, they were seen as collaborators (there were at least 2 SS divisions raised inthe Baltic and around 3 million 'Hiwis' fought for the Germans). They paid a heavy price for 'liberation'.
All in all, I think left wingers have to be careful in putting Stalin in their own camp. After all, he was essentially a right wing economist (the most successful in that countries history) he achieved that by any means necessary, including genocide, mass migration, persecution... Thatcher would be proud of his economic record and his impersonal pursuit of it.
In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
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Stalin's crimes were vile but not in the same category as Hitler's.
Genocide - the destruction of a race of people by virtue of their race, the 'final solution of the Jewish Problem' is a different kind of crime than the barbarism of Stalin which seems to me to have many antecedents in tyrannies throughout the ages.
I don't think Stalin came close to genocide at any stage of his bloodstained tyranny. This is NOT to minimise the sufferings of the millions who died because of his orders.
They were both unspeakable bastards. Hell roast them. Slowly and eternally.
Genocide - the destruction of a race of people by virtue of their race, the 'final solution of the Jewish Problem' is a different kind of crime than the barbarism of Stalin which seems to me to have many antecedents in tyrannies throughout the ages.
I don't think Stalin came close to genocide at any stage of his bloodstained tyranny. This is NOT to minimise the sufferings of the millions who died because of his orders.
They were both unspeakable bastards. Hell roast them. Slowly and eternally.
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I know that claim and I think it's dubious. But I'm not prepared to argue the case very strongly, it somehow feels distasteful, worse than that, when you are dealing with the deaths of huge numbers of real people. I think there is an argument for that definition and I wouldn't criticise anyone for holding that position.Lord Kangana wrote:I believe the treatment of the Tatars in the Crimea is considered an act of genocide.
But I think Stalin's crimes, even this one, were a million miles away from Auschwitz and the attempted industrial murder of an entire race by Hitler.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deportatio ... ean_Tatars
You can almost hear the echoes of "resettlement".
Sorry, their crimes were comparable. Both in their numbers, their inhumanity, their brutality. The one common thread that links the two (and as I have mentioned throws the likes of Thatcher in their camp) is the cult of "strong leadership". You'd be amazed how many eighties policies cross-referenced both these regimes, and indeed how much the two (supposedly ideologically opposed) regimes mirrored each other.
Kind of like the old Life of Brian moment "You don't need to follow me, you don't need to follow anybody". Well people do feel the need and this is what we get.
You can almost hear the echoes of "resettlement".
Sorry, their crimes were comparable. Both in their numbers, their inhumanity, their brutality. The one common thread that links the two (and as I have mentioned throws the likes of Thatcher in their camp) is the cult of "strong leadership". You'd be amazed how many eighties policies cross-referenced both these regimes, and indeed how much the two (supposedly ideologically opposed) regimes mirrored each other.
Kind of like the old Life of Brian moment "You don't need to follow me, you don't need to follow anybody". Well people do feel the need and this is what we get.
You can judge the whole world on the sparkle that you think it lacks.
Yes, you can stare into the abyss, but it's staring right back.
Yes, you can stare into the abyss, but it's staring right back.
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I agree with most of this... And the part i disagree with I've already said and don't need to restate... Though even I, as the most anti-thatcherite I know (!) think edging her into the same camp is highly tenuous...Lord Kangana wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deportatio ... ean_Tatars
You can almost hear the echoes of "resettlement".
Sorry, their crimes were comparable. Both in their numbers, their inhumanity, their brutality. The one common thread that links the two (and as I have mentioned throws the likes of Thatcher in their camp) is the cult of "strong leadership". You'd be amazed how many eighties policies cross-referenced both these regimes, and indeed how much the two (supposedly ideologically opposed) regimes mirrored each other.
Kind of like the old Life of Brian moment "You don't need to follow me, you don't need to follow anybody". Well people do feel the need and this is what we get.
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Yes, I understood that, i still think it's tenuous - there was nothing like the cult of personality around Thatcher as around almost any long-standing dictator...Lord Kangana wrote:Its the ethos of complicity when dealing with problems. It isn't a direct comparison of their crimes, its a psychological explanation of why they attain power.
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Katyn Wood, and similar activity to wipe out the Polish imtelligentsia and officer class, is way up there with Adolf. Both as bad as one another in my view.William the White wrote:I know that claim and I think it's dubious. But I'm not prepared to argue the case very strongly, it somehow feels distasteful, worse than that, when you are dealing with the deaths of huge numbers of real people. I think there is an argument for that definition and I wouldn't criticise anyone for holding that position.Lord Kangana wrote:I believe the treatment of the Tatars in the Crimea is considered an act of genocide.
But I think Stalin's crimes, even this one, were a million miles away from Auschwitz and the attempted industrial murder of an entire race by Hitler.
God's country! God's county!
God's town! God's team!!
How can we fail?
COME ON YOU WHITES!!
God's town! God's team!!
How can we fail?
COME ON YOU WHITES!!
Zulus, this is worth a watch
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katy%C5%84_%28film%29
Its available in the usual places
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katy%C5%84_%28film%29
Its available in the usual places
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The one we funded to do it for a generation? That one?Worthy4England wrote:I'm guessing we were right to take out some tw*t that was gassing Kurds then?
maybe we should have just turned a blind eye?
If you're referring to the invasion of Iraq, we waited a bloody long time to 'liberate' their population from persecution. Considering we encouraged the ethnic minorities of Iraq to rebel against Sadam in '91, then stood by for a decade as he decimated them, complicit in the knowledge of what he was doing. That is of course after decades of our help, as a buttress to the scary Iranians.
f one was a cynic, one might be tempted to believe that the reason we invaded Iraq was because he was the leader of a movement to change oil values to the Euro. Which would have bankrupted America. One might be tempted to think also that the hundreds of thousands of lives lost previously and subsequently were something the American administrtation doesn't give two shiny shites about.
You can judge the whole world on the sparkle that you think it lacks.
Yes, you can stare into the abyss, but it's staring right back.
Yes, you can stare into the abyss, but it's staring right back.
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If one was a cynic one might indeed believe it was motivated by other than "high principals". One could also suggest son just wanted to finish what dad never did. The fact he's no loner there to gas part of his population is a decent enough by-product. Either way, we were right to take the bastard out.Lord Kangana wrote:The one we funded to do it for a generation? That one?Worthy4England wrote:I'm guessing we were right to take out some tw*t that was gassing Kurds then?
maybe we should have just turned a blind eye?
If you're referring to the invasion of Iraq, we waited a bloody long time to 'liberate' their population from persecution. Considering we encouraged the ethnic minorities of Iraq to rebel against Sadam in '91, then stood by for a decade as he decimated them, complicit in the knowledge of what he was doing. That is of course after decades of our help, as a buttress to the scary Iranians.
f one was a cynic, one might be tempted to believe that the reason we invaded Iraq was because he was the leader of a movement to change oil values to the Euro. Which would have bankrupted America. One might be tempted to think also that the hundreds of thousands of lives lost previously and subsequently were something the American administrtation doesn't give two shiny shites about.
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