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The Daily Mail



Seagull on the wing

New member
Sep 22, 2010
7,458
Hailsham
Again - lazy stereotyping.
Really...you write 3 words...I write about 70...and you call me lazy...The highlighted area you put on my post was the reply to your ...

"What is this obsession about being a 'socialist leftie' and having a few quid? Is that not allowed?
There are good and bad on both sides of the political spectrum....I do not class all left wing wingers communist.....but the left scream racist,anti semetic at the right...
 




User removed 4

New member
May 9, 2008
13,331
Haywards Heath
'You're own'...why don't you expand on what you mean by that, how do you as a person define 'you're own'?
It's "your" own , so if thats a cheap comment on my grammar , which it seems it is , then you've failed, my own ? The white working class of this country , particularly in the inner cities , who've been spectacularly shat upon , by both tory and labour governments .
 






Nibble

New member
Jan 3, 2007
19,238
You were if you wanted a job with unions involved and in my line of work at that time it was being part of a Union or no job

Yes but no-one was forcing you! You even read like a Mail headline!

ENTIRE GENERATION FORCED TO JOIN UNIONS OR STARVE
 




DavidinSouthampton

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 3, 2012
16,780
So you do read the Mail....you think that it peddles lies...thats funny because they have exposed all the Lying that has been going on in the Labour party between Brown and his compatriots...and really,the Daily Mirror...the beacon of truth....yer..OK.

The Mail did not "expose" anything. It was all extensively and fully covered in the left-leaning but relatively FAIR-MINDED Guardian. A range of newspapers across the political spectrum actually seek the truth. The Daily Mail is not one of them. How it can seek to turn all this in to accusations of Ed Miliband wanting to gag the press beggars belief.
 


The Large One

Who's Next?
Jul 7, 2003
52,343
97.2FM
Really...you write 3 words...I write about 70...and you call me lazy...The highlighted area you put on my post was the reply to your ...

"What is this obsession about being a 'socialist leftie' and having a few quid? Is that not allowed?
There are good and bad on both sides of the political spectrum....I do not class all left wing wingers communist.....but the left scream racist,anti semetic at the right...

Please - why are you writing using ellipses? Weren't you taught written sentence construction?

The number of words I've used to counter your argument is by the by.

And the bit I've emboldened - like your previous effort, you're over-simplifying political agendas, as if only 'left' and 'right' exist. Many people with conservative (with a large and small 'C') 'scream' - as you put it - about anti-semitism and racism. Nor is anti-semitism a monopolied preserve of the 'right'.

How big of you not to class all left-wingers 'communist', because of the obvious consideration that they're not all communist. Nor do they all 'scream' at the right. One or two even have reasoned debates, you know.
 


Mellotron

I've asked for soup
Jul 2, 2008
32,063
Brighton
The Daily Mail and Express really are in a differente category to pretty much all other non-tabloid papers. It's impossible to take them seriously.
 




Nibble

New member
Jan 3, 2007
19,238
The Mail peddles right wing fantasy for those who are too weak to face reality but consider themselves strong. Except at weekends, when it seems to devote the entire paper and suppliment to Downton Abbey and what nic-nacs Gloria Hunniford has in her study.
 




soistes

Well-known member
Sep 12, 2012
2,646
Brighton
It's "your" own , so if thats a cheap comment on my grammar , which it seems it is , then you've failed, my own ? The white working class of this country , particularly in the inner cities , who've been spectacularly shat upon , by both tory and labour governments .

But don't you live in Haywards Heath?
 




Nibble

New member
Jan 3, 2007
19,238
What a loser. The Mail sees the Right, quite correctly under scrutiny. Thinks "We'll have a bit of that" and spectacularly mis-judges it all. Fascist twats.
 








Nibble

New member
Jan 3, 2007
19,238
Yes, yes I do , I also used to live in the inner city , as did all my extended family , not too difficult a concept for you to grasp is it ?

So that argument is good enough for you when you need it but not for anyone else? You don't change do you eh Bushy. I almost admire it.
 


DavidinSouthampton

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 3, 2012
16,780
I have only just watched the snippet from Newsnight.

I expected to see something different, I felt that the newspaper guy stayed quite calm whilst Campbell ranted and tripped over some sentences, seemed a bit forced when he twice mentioned ''best of and worse of'' rehearsed buzz sentence.

Not sure if I care too much about the piece or the relevance of the Milibands fathers political position, but I didnt think Campbell was particularly good in this.

I have just watched the snippet on I-player as well. I thought the deputy editor of the Mail was pathetic. Quite apart from Campbell, Emily Maitlis was clearly quite contemptuous of what the mail had done, or the conclusions they had reached. She was actually pointing out some of the inadequacies of their argument and their conclusions - such as "How can you say he hated this country when he signed up and fought for it as a refugee?"

If Alistair Campbell was tripping over his words sometimes, it was probably because he was (justifiably) angry. The calmness of the Mail deputy editor could not cover up the paucity or illogicality of his arguments. I think the Mail could well have done itself more harm than good in this.
 


Nibble

New member
Jan 3, 2007
19,238
Unfortunately I doubt it will affect the readership at all. The typical Mail reader will merely agree with the piece and turn over to the Cotton Traders catalogue.
 


mikeyjh

Well-known member
Dec 17, 2008
4,538
Llanymawddwy
If Alistair Campbell was tripping over his words sometimes, it was probably because he was (justifiably) angry. The calmness of the Mail deputy editor could not cover up the paucity or illogicality of his arguments. I think the Mail could well have done itself more harm than good in this.

My thoughts exactly, quite why some people judge passion as a negative, I don't know. I agree entirely with your comments on the Asst Editor - Calm, collected and completely vacuous.
 




DavidinSouthampton

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 3, 2012
16,780
My thoughts exactly, quite why some people judge passion as a negative, I don't know. I agree entirely with your comments on the Asst Editor - Calm, collected and completely vacuous.

vacuous is exactly the right word.
 


soistes

Well-known member
Sep 12, 2012
2,646
Brighton
Unfortunately I doubt it will affect the readership at all. The typical Mail reader will merely agree with the piece and turn over to the Cotton Traders catalogue.

Too true.

However, the whole episode and the coverage it's received across the rest of the media and politics, which seems to have been overwhelmingly against the Mail (with the exception of a few senior Tories who half defended it in a mealy-mouthed sort of way), has probably generated a certain amount of sympathy for Milliband, and reminded those who might have forgotten about the underlying nastiness of the Tory world and its media supporters. If it helps to push a few more fair-minded apolitical centrist voters away from the Tories come 2015, it might be that the Mail will come to see that its actions were a bit counter-productive.
 


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