Stato
Well-known member
- Dec 21, 2011
- 7,722
Could I recommend a book?I've never felt the need to apologise for being British.
Could I recommend a book?I've never felt the need to apologise for being British.
Wait until Farage wins our GE in 4 years time.Last week I was in a restuarant in Angers, France and got talking to an American couple on a holiday. They kept apologising for being American and that they did their bit to try and stop Trump winning. Now we've had our own shit leaders in the UK but I've never felt the need to apologise for being British.
I guess I have something in common with Trump, in that case.Trump back on the Canada 51st state comment again, does he want Carney to win?
I guess I have something in common with Trump, in that case.
It’s going to be fun watching Carney against Trump. He’s a smart, straight talking and strong cookie and will not pander to Trump’s bullshit. He’ll out smart Trump at every turn, all Trump will have is his name calling and his “failed” prefix.Quite the turnaround for the Liberal Party. Trudeau had become unpopular, and Carney undoubtedly appealed more to voters, but a LOT of this has got to be down to Canadians pushing back against Trump and his “51st state”/tariffs agenda. Great to see.
If you are anti-establishment, the profound failure of right wing populists like Johnson, Truss and Trump is going to ensure that establishment politics get elected in the west for generations.Carney has won on the backlash to Trump. Not on who he is or what his internal policies will be. He's head of a party which is unpopular and he is very much a centre right, paid up member of 'the establishment'. He simply does not have the solutions to the problems that made Trudeau so unpopular. Basically hes's another Starmer/Macron/Biden (all of whom won with little real enthusiasm from voters, but via the path of 'not being as bad as the alternative'). Like those other centre right Western leaders I'd predict he's going to become unpopulular and potentially open the door to a far more nationalist/right wing options in future. All that said, the next few years are likely to be a bit different from the last few years, and an external threat can do wonders for a leaders popularity (see Churchill, Zelensky, Thatcher) so who knows. He may yet be forced into actions he is not instinctively comfortable with.
It's quite clear he won (partly) due to the current political situation with the US. Looking at the turn-out it's without doubt a 'reaction', to both the previous government and anti-Trump sentiment. But, all things considered I'm pleased he has won and look forward to him dealing with Trump.Carney has won on the backlash to Trump. Not on who he is or what his internal policies will be. He's head of a party which is unpopular and he is very much a centre right, paid up member of 'the establishment'. He simply does not have the solutions to the problems that made Trudeau so unpopular. Basically hes's another Starmer/Macron/Biden (all of whom won with little real enthusiasm from voters, but via the path of 'not being as bad as the alternative'). Like those other centre right Western leaders I'd predict he's going to become unpopulular and potentially open the door to a far more nationalist/right wing options in future. All that said, the next few years are likely to be a bit different from the last few years, and an external threat can do wonders for a leaders popularity (see Churchill, Zelensky, Thatcher) so who knows. He may yet be forced into actions he is not instinctively comfortable with.
The changes once Trump suddenly started banging on about making Canada the 51st state in January are stark
If you are anti-establishment, the profound failure of right wing populists like Johnson, Truss and Trump is going to ensure that establishment politics get elected in the west for generations.
Like all politicians who are 'around too long' Trudeau became unpopular. The fact that his party is going to win implies that it was him personally the voters got tired with and not the party and policies.
This is a shame to an extent, because the US could do with a Bernie Saunders.
Well, no leader in any country is going to do well anymore.
They face problems that can’t be fixed or there’s no will to fix. Or both.
The climate. The 1%. Workers rights.
To me, it’s a given that humans probably have less than a hundred years left of existence and those 100 years are going to be filled with pain, fear, and unimaginable suffering on a global scale.
If we don’t blow each other up first.
SorryThis is the kind of motivational pep talk I need on a Tuesday morning![]()
I didn't apologise but in the weeks immediately following the Brexit vote I found myself in a bar in Berlin explaining to some locals that I too had no idea why the country was doing it had decided to do.I've never felt the need to apologise for being British.