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Nick Clogg's propaganda line against Nigel Farage: the second EU referendum debate on British TV
#1
In a stunning display of sophisticated propaganda - the product, one half suspects, of the distilled wisdom of those pillars of the British state, the FO and the intelligence services - Deputy PM and Libdem leader Nick Clogg tonight sought to win the second televised debate with UKIP leader (and MEP), Nigel Farrage, courtesy of a complex argument carefully crafted to appeal to the electorate's better angels. It amounted to this:

Quote:Priapic Cossacks Menace Maidenhead!!!!

Or as Clogg himself put it:

Quote:"Putin, Putin, Putin, Putin, conspiracy theorist, Syrian chemical weapons, Putin, Putin, conspiracy theories, Putin, Putin, and, er, Putin."

Good to see McCarthyism is dead in the UK.

Even worse was - is - the commentariat's ignorance of the roots of Farage's profound scepticism with respect to US foreign policy: He was, briefly, the election campaign driver of Enoch Powell.

The first debate:

[video=youtube_share;Hkhtn_NtDZM]http://youtu.be/Hkhtn_NtDZM[/video]

The second (tonight's) to follow.
"There are three sorts of conspiracy: by the people who complain, by the people who write, by the people who take action. There is nothing to fear from the first group, the two others are more dangerous; but the police have to be part of all three,"

Joseph Fouche
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#2
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/vide...eace-video
"There are three sorts of conspiracy: by the people who complain, by the people who write, by the people who take action. There is nothing to fear from the first group, the two others are more dangerous; but the police have to be part of all three,"

Joseph Fouche
Reply
#3
The problem Paul, is that you can't have ordinary members of the public voting AND making foreign and government policy?

The world and business would fall apart wouldn't it.

Democracy is not meant to be taken seriously. Obviously.

Democracy means that once in every five years you get to cast vote - something like casting a spell I suppose, but less efficacious --- assuming spells ever work anyway? The one I once cast resulted with the immediate arrival of a 10 inch pianist. And I thought my diction was good, even exemplary although I'd had a wee dram or two admittedly. It just goes to show you, right.

And at that time of voting you are allotted about 2 minutes to scratch a tick in a box next to a candidate's name, or otherwise deface a piece of paper with any number of appropriate obscenities, while you're standing in a cheaply constructed wooden voting kennel which they grandly call a "booth".

Btw, does Putin really have a big chopper? I ask because I want to know how you.... Never mind.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
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#4
David Guyatt Wrote:Btw, does Putin really have a big chopper? I ask because I want to know how you.... Never mind.

Everything I know about Cossack choppers, I owe to this site:

http://home.kpn.nl/cossack-web-museum/we...aponry.htm

Shashka Rigby
"There are three sorts of conspiracy: by the people who complain, by the people who write, by the people who take action. There is nothing to fear from the first group, the two others are more dangerous; but the police have to be part of all three,"

Joseph Fouche
Reply
#5
Paul Rigby Wrote:The first debate:

[video=youtube_share;Hkhtn_NtDZM]http://youtu.be/Hkhtn_NtDZM[/video]

The second (tonight's) to follow.

[video=youtube_share;fd9rsmD4HiM]http://youtu.be/fd9rsmD4HiM[/video]
"There are three sorts of conspiracy: by the people who complain, by the people who write, by the people who take action. There is nothing to fear from the first group, the two others are more dangerous; but the police have to be part of all three,"

Joseph Fouche
Reply
#6
Nigel Farage a natural Tory on course to drive the Tories from power
The Ukip leader is a gadfly who will one day go to ground. But before then it is Cameron, not Miliband, who has most to fear from his sting

Simon Jenkins
The Guardian, Thursday 3 April 2014 19.05 BST

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree...fear-sting

Quote:There is nothing new about Nigel Farage. He is just another politician adept at exploiting the gap that so easily opens between public opinion and a ruling class grown detached and introverted. Polls show his Ukip appealing not just to disgruntled Tories but a range of the politically dispossessed, particularly those who did badly from recession and expect little from recovery. Across Europe, most recently in France, rightwing parties are drawing on such a well of nationalist revanchism. Farage has proved an articulate exponent of the genre. He will not last and does not care about lasting. That is what makes him so dangerous to the established parties.

Wednesday night's second debating triumph of Farage over Nick Clegg pitted wild exaggeration (about Europe) against wild generalisation (about Europe). It could be mind-numbingly dull, but exaggeration proved the winner. What was mildly encouraging was that such gladiatorial exposure seems able actually to move opinion, a rare occurrence in politics.

Clegg's tactic was odd. He may have thought it smart to accuse his foe of wanting a return to the days of WG Grace and the gold standard. The audience knew this was untrue and yet might have welcomed such a prospect. For his part, Farage's style was direct, jargon-free and sardonic, a talent shared with Scotland's Alex Salmond and London's Boris Johnson. Britain's three most effective modern politicians seem a million miles from the cliches and robotic phraseology of Westminster. There is a fortune awaiting anyone who can teach British MPs how to speak.

Farage is in a long line of political eccentrics, from Enoch Powell, the SDP's "gang of four", and even early Clegg. They dazzle, fizzle and eventually fall, crushed by the potency of the two-party system. But they can have remarkable short-term impact. In 1968 Powellism won Lambeth council for the Tories by 62 seats to eight. In the 1980s the gang of four's SDP split Labour and kept the Tories in power for a decade. Clegg's Liberal Democrats denied the Tories a majority in 2010.

Predictions hold that Ukip's hour is at hand. In May's European elections it might emerge with the biggest vote, the first time a maverick party has done that in any nationwide election. The vote will be a referendum on Europe in all but name. Yet Europe does not lie at the core of Farage's appeal: in polls just a third even mention the issue.

As Robert Ford and Matthew Goodwin point out in their new study, Revolt on the Right, Ukip appeals not so much to Eurosceptics as to the Victor Meldrew persuasion, the "pessimistariat" of mostly former Tories, many working class, who were Thatcher's urban bedrock. To them Europe is merely code for a miasma of menaces to themselves and their way of life, from immigration to bureaucracy and central planning.

Farage has given this appeal a shrewdly rebellious overlay reminiscent of Wilkes, Cobbett and even Tony Benn. He claims that the EU had made the working class "effectively an underclass". He calls on everyone to "Come and join the people's army! Let's topple the establishment!". Clegg looked as if he would rather bury his head in the cushions of a Brussels salon.

Conventional wisdom holds that Ukip draws support from everyone and so threatens none. Roughly half its voters are former Tories, the rest spread equally across the other parties (and undecideds). Yet as YouGov's Peter Kellner points out in the latest edition of Prospect magazine, while "Tories may not be the only source of Ukip support, they are by far the biggest". They donate to Ukip four times more supporters than Labour.

If Ukip holds on to its current 12% in next year's general election, says Kellner, "it will probably cost Cameron the election". Ed Miliband can gain power on just 35% of the poll, as did Tony Blair in 2005. Cameron simply must reduce Farage's support to half its present level to stand a chance. Of the 32 crucial Tory-held marginals identified by the party's private pollster, Lord Ashcroft, all have experienced a tripling in Ukip vote share since 2010. Farage has offered a deal in which he does not put up candidates against Eurosceptic MPs. He has little to lose as he is not going to win the election, but if he can help a few Eurosceptics save their seats, he will win over many Tories for being a decent chap. Cameron has vetoed the deal.

At the same time Cameron comes up with hamfisted promises on immigration and EU renegotiation, promises he has made before and not kept. He also leaves naked his flank to Farage's lethal skirmishes on matters such as HS2, wind turbines and rural planning laws, all of which are infuriating local Conservatives. Farage claims that every time the planning minister, Nick Boles, opens his mouth another thousand votes switch to Ukip.

Farage's party is a classic political corrective. He has seized on the nation's present discontents and is riding them for all they are worth. He has no answers, but he asks telling questions. He is a standing rebuke to politicians whose casual promises are made only to be broken. He is patently a Tory who should by rights be challenging Cameron from inside the party, not outside. A contest for the leadership between him and Boris Johnson would add vastly to the entertainment of the nation.

Until that day, the gadfly will continue to sting. It will one day go to ground, but before then it seems likely to humiliate Cameron's party in May and, next year, possibly drive it from power. The Tories are mad to underrate him.

Given the long-standing ties between the Tory Party and British intelligence, one wonders at Farage's prospects of making it in one piece to the General Election. Another plane crash, perhaps?

Or are the deep politics of Farage's rise more complicated still?
"There are three sorts of conspiracy: by the people who complain, by the people who write, by the people who take action. There is nothing to fear from the first group, the two others are more dangerous; but the police have to be part of all three,"

Joseph Fouche
Reply
#7
Is there a more loathsome and bland human being than the ultimate career politician that is nick clegg? I refuse to capitalise his name, he is a cunt. It still amazes me beyond utter belief how he is able to show his face in public, let alone still have a career in politics. Anything he says has zero credibility, no matter what. So what's the point of him?

And I agree with you on Farage, Paul. A similar thing happened to a right wing politician in Austria I believe - Jorg Haider.
Reply
#8
Let me fix those quotes of Jenkins.

Jenkins balls:

Quote:Farage is in a long line of political eccentrics, from Enoch Powell, the SDP's "gang of four", and even early Clegg. They dazzle, fizzle and eventually fall, crushed by the potency of the two-party system.


Reality:

Quote:Farage is in a long line of political eccentrics, from Enoch Powell, the SDP's "gang of four", and even early Clegg. They dazzle, fizzle and eventually fall, crushed by the control of the ruling elite who determine political outcomes


Jenkins balls:

Quote:...
Quote:Ukip appeals not so much to Eurosceptics as to the Victor Meldrew persuasion, the "pessimistariat" of mostly former Tories, many working class, who were Thatcher's urban bedrock. To them Europe is merely code for a miasma of menaces to themselves and their way of life, from immigration to bureaucracy and central planning.


Reality:

Quote:...Ukip appeals not so much to Eurosceptics as to the Victor Meldrew persuasion, the "pessimistariat" of mostly former Tories, many working class, who were Thatcher's urban bedrock, but to the ever growing band of the politically dispossessed - who's needs and wants are ignored at every opportunity.


Oh dear, as I read further through the article I see there are just too many Jenkins balls to correct without fully rewriting the piece from start to finish.

***

Really Riggers, do you really think Fags Farage would be allowed to entertain us with two prime time TV performances versus the Tory Boy II cardboard cutout lightening rod, if he hadn't been security cleared for smoke and mirrors political action?

Now excuse me while I return to luxuriously dribbling over my fine antique collection of voting hutches and those strange small pencil stubs - attached to said hutches by no expense spared lengths of string - that are used by the voting public to scrawl obscenities on the toilet paper quality perforated ballot papers (of which I also have a fine collection) upon both parts of which are printed codes that later allows both parts to be married back together, thus allowing someone (nudge and wink) to determine who voted for whom.

It does the cockles of my heart nothing but good to know that our blessed and godly ever so not entirely secret voting system remains open to full scrutiny by the powers that be...
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
Reply
#9
David Guyatt Wrote:Really Riggers, do you really think Fags Farage would be allowed to entertain us with two prime time TV performances versus the Tory Boy II cardboard cutout lightening rod, if he hadn't been security cleared for smoke and mirrors political action?

Agreed. So what is the game here? Why is the British establishment pushing him?
"There are three sorts of conspiracy: by the people who complain, by the people who write, by the people who take action. There is nothing to fear from the first group, the two others are more dangerous; but the police have to be part of all three,"

Joseph Fouche
Reply


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