Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! 14:01 - Apr 12 with 11260 views | Sadoldgit | Surely nowJohnson must resign?! He has broken the law and lied to Parliament. It is time for him to go and to take his Chancellor with him. [Post edited 12 Apr 2022 14:01]
| | | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 22:41 - Apr 12 with 1492 views | grumpy |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 22:16 - Apr 12 by Butty101 | Yes of course its a 9-5 job you fcking doughnut |
Who said it was a 9 to 5 job and I will ignore your pathetic name calling. | | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 22:53 - Apr 12 with 1466 views | Bicester_North | Covid was wà nk. Initially Boris said we’re going to live with it and there was uproar and outrage about that, so they went full lockdown as that’s what was demanded. Anyone like Starmer who takes a knee for a photo opportunity to appease American arse kissing cretins is unfit to govern the country. Labour freaks, Tory helmets, F*ck them all, bunch of maggots | |
| |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 22:58 - Apr 12 with 1447 views | Butty101 |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 22:41 - Apr 12 by grumpy | Who said it was a 9 to 5 job and I will ignore your pathetic name calling. |
So its not a 9-5 or a 24-7, prey tell what job is it? Does Boris switch off at the weekend? I guess nothing bad ever happens at the weekend that would need the PM's attention.... ffs | |
| |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 23:05 - Apr 12 with 1443 views | Ron11 |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 14:24 - Apr 12 by kentsouthampton | We do, it's just that half the country are to thick to see it. |
It's 'too' thick, not 'to'. | | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 23:11 - Apr 12 with 1434 views | Bicester_North |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 23:05 - Apr 12 by Ron11 | It's 'too' thick, not 'to'. |
Kent is a skate who has a filthy kitchen, he rarely gets anything right. | |
| |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 23:18 - Apr 12 with 1426 views | Ron11 |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 23:11 - Apr 12 by Bicester_North | Kent is a skate who has a filthy kitchen, he rarely gets anything right. |
And has the temerity to suggest that half the country is thick | | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 23:43 - Apr 12 with 1404 views | MattFinish |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 16:07 - Apr 12 by Butty101 | I dont get the fake outrage to be honest. They hardly do a regular 9 -5 job, and will burn the midnight oil. So they had a few drinks woop woo. I net more than half the country did the same thing. The pub opposite where i live is well known for people having affiars and meeting there. I can tell you even though the pub was shut due to lock down rules plenty of people were meeting up ... |
Yeah but the people in your pub aren't being elected and paid to run the country. They didn't set the Covid lockdown rules and then continually lie about it while the majority of the population were abiding by the law. Johnson and the rest of the corrupt Tory party should stand down if they had any decency, but they haven't. No decency, no shame, no honour, just a bunch of inbred upper class toffs | | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 23:51 - Apr 12 with 1391 views | MattFinish |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 19:33 - Apr 12 by Bazza | Think you lefties ought to stand back and see the facts. Boris was in his home as effectively was Sunak. Nobody died. Whatever rotten rule breaking behaviour happened, grannies in care homes still couldn’t be visited and so are irrelevant. Meanwhile there’s a war going on. So the important question; Starmer or Johnson, who would be a better leader? Is it a good time for an election. Do you think Starmer would win a General Election with Rayner, Lammy etc? Answers to Sadoldgit |
You say no-one died - are you taking the pïss mate? 170,000 people died of Covid including a large amount of NHS staff putting their lives on the line while that c*nt Johnson and his Eton pals were partying it up. Un-fricking-believable | | | | Login to get fewer ads
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 00:00 - Apr 13 with 1389 views | Bicester_North |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 23:43 - Apr 12 by MattFinish | Yeah but the people in your pub aren't being elected and paid to run the country. They didn't set the Covid lockdown rules and then continually lie about it while the majority of the population were abiding by the law. Johnson and the rest of the corrupt Tory party should stand down if they had any decency, but they haven't. No decency, no shame, no honour, just a bunch of inbred upper class toffs |
This is straight from a Viz Student Grant comic strip | |
| |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 00:04 - Apr 13 with 1388 views | Bicester_North |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 23:51 - Apr 12 by MattFinish | You say no-one died - are you taking the pïss mate? 170,000 people died of Covid including a large amount of NHS staff putting their lives on the line while that c*nt Johnson and his Eton pals were partying it up. Un-fricking-believable |
No they didn’t all die of Covid, and not all while the party was going on either. | |
| |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 08:02 - Apr 13 with 1307 views | kentsouthampton |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 18:36 - Apr 12 by Heisenberg | Anyone else ? Are Johnson and co anyone else ? They came up with rules. They are in charge and are supposed to set an example. As for that bint Dorries saying it was for only 10 minutes. That is the same 10 minutes people asked to see dying loved ones for the very last time. This lot are an absolute disgrace. How anyone can make excuses for them beggars belief. |
Thick dickheads can make excuses for them, it's what sets them apart as thick dickheads. | | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 08:05 - Apr 13 with 1300 views | kentsouthampton |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 23:43 - Apr 12 by MattFinish | Yeah but the people in your pub aren't being elected and paid to run the country. They didn't set the Covid lockdown rules and then continually lie about it while the majority of the population were abiding by the law. Johnson and the rest of the corrupt Tory party should stand down if they had any decency, but they haven't. No decency, no shame, no honour, just a bunch of inbred upper class toffs |
This is the same tramp clown who thought it was a wheeze to burn £50 notes in front of homeless people. | | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 08:07 - Apr 13 with 1296 views | SalisburySaint |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 00:04 - Apr 13 by Bicester_North | No they didn’t all die of Covid, and not all while the party was going on either. |
Not only did Boris break the law, but he consistently lied to Parliament and the Country over this matter, something he should be suspended from Parliament for. The man had no morals and has been proved on many occasions over many years,, not just on this matter to be a habitual liar, how can people trust a word he says. He is ultimately unsuitable to be PM and should therefore resign | | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 08:19 - Apr 13 with 1281 views | kentsouthampton | A good week goes bad as PM gets a fixed-penalty notice for a party he didn’t know he had attended It had all been going so well. After his successful, surprise weekend trip to Ukraine, Boris Johnson had been enjoying his newfound status as “The Lion of Kyiv” during a few days off at Chequers. Then had come the news that the Metropolitan police had now issued more than 50 fixed-penalty notices (FPN). And that’s before they had even got to work on the really serious parties. If only he had put the ruthless and forensic Christopher Geidt in charge of the investigation. Then no one would have been any the wiser about any of the parties. Not that there had been any parties. The Suspect had always been very clear about this. In as much as he had ever been very clear about anything. First he had told parliament that he had been as furious as the rest of the country that staff at No 10 could have been having parties that he knew nothing about. Then, when it emerged he had actually attended most of the parties he knew nothing about, he said that he hadn’t been aware that the parties were parties. Because the presence of cakes, booze, trestle tables laden with food and empties littering the flowerbeds weren’t much of a clue. Round about lunchtime, things got a whole lot worse when Johnson discovered that he was one of the crims to be given an FPN. The Suspect was no longer the Suspect. He was the Convict. It was outrageous. Just because he had passed the law forbidding everyone from meeting up during lockdown, there was no reason to imagine that he was expected to obey the rules. Those had only been for the Little People. The suckers. Narcissists like Johnson got to do as they chose. Theirs was a life governed by their own exceptionalism. It hadn’t helped that Carrie had also been given a FPN. Wilfred and Romy would just have to get used to the fact that both their parents were criminals. And he’d have to find out if Lulu Lytle had also been penalised as she would be sure to add it to her bill. As it was she deserved a £10,000 fine for crimes against interior design. Not that he would be paying hers or anybody else’s, of course. Least of all his own. That’s what David Brownlow was for. The only upside was that Rishi Sunak had also been issued with an FPN. The chancellor had been in tears when he had phoned. “What shall I do?” he sobbed. “Just pay it,” the Convict had replied. “It’s alright for you. You’ve got loads of dosh. You can afford it. And you’ll probably find a way to offset it against tax in whatever country — Mauritius, is it? — your family files their returns.” Sunak had then gone on to have a meltdown about having lied to parliament about not having been to a party. What a baby. “I was categoric about it,” he had said. Whatevs. Personally, the Convict couldn’t see what was so bad about having deliberately misled parliament. It was the sort of thing that he did the whole time and none of the Tory MPs seemed that bothered about it. He’d always found that the best way of getting out of a lie was to double down with an even bigger lie. And if that didn’t work, just keep lying until people got bored. But if Rishi wanted to make a martyr of himself — imagine the absurdity of a cabinet minister being expected to have some principles! — then he could be his guest. The chancellor could learn the hard way that Johnson had the knack of invariably dragging anyone close to him down to his level in the end. As for the Convict, he wasn’t going anywhere. Instead he would let some of his useful idiots fill the void. Thank God for Michael Fabricant and Nadine Dorries. While other Tory MPs and cabinet ministers were totally silent — it was as if the Conservative party was totally paralysed with indecision: it’s not every day your leader makes history by being the first prime minister to be found guilty of breaking his own laws. And while MPs knew he ought to resign they didn’t dare to be the first to suggest it as there were no obvious alternatives — these two alone held the fort. Micky F managed to insult every doctor and nurse by suggesting they had spent most of lockdown pìssed while Nad had basically restated Boris’s divine right to do what the fuçk he liked. Nadine was a trooper. Even if Boris killed someone she would find a way of making it the victim’s fault. But come 6pm the Convict was ready to record a short television clip. He was deeply apologetic, he said. Though he didn’t sound like it. Rather, as he toyed with the Toddler haircut, he seemed to blame the police for not having interpreted the law in his favour. In BorisWorld, ignorance of the law is a valid excuse, it seems. Johnson just wanted to move on. It would be wrong to resign now because of Ukraine. Though arguably the UK needed a leader with a strong moral compass more than ever these days. And it wasn’t as if the UK didn’t have a track record of replacing leaders during wartime. Not that we are at war. Johnson was markedly less comfortable when facing questions. Could everyone just forget about the fact that he had lied so many times he had forgotten what he had lied about and broken his own rules on multiple occasions, he begged. After all, he had lied in good faith because he had really, really believed his own lies. Honest. And if we could just ignore the fact he is totally untrustworthy, he would get on with not dealing with the cost of living and energy crisis. I mean, he’d only been to a party for nine minutes: it’s going down all the time. Before too long he won’t have been to it — so surely that didn’t count. Well, fine. Then what excuses would the Convict come up with when he was penalised in the future for attending those parties that went on for hours and where everyone got thoroughly shitfaced. The other parties that Johnson insisted never took place. Boris shook his head. He would lie about that as and when the need arose. | | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 08:20 - Apr 13 with 1278 views | MytchettSaint |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 22:02 - Apr 12 by Butty101 | Exactly - Why most of the population was furloughed - downing street was working 24-7. And people get upset about them having a drink in the garden ffs. Most people are hypocrites as they would have bent the rules, but that dosent count right! |
Some of us worked all through furlough. I’m grateful I had the opportunity to do so. I didn’t manage to get to a works event to celebrate the end of a tough week though. I’d have probably been fined by the police for doing so if I had. I should imagine if I’d tried to say I didn’t think I was breaking any rules they’d have laughed in my face and yours if you’d said the same. To be honest, it’s the fact he’s lied (and all the others) about it. To say he wasn’t fully aware of the rules when ultimately he’s the bloke setting them is taking the public for fools. As custodian of the highest office, the bloke needs to be whiter than white. All politicians are economical with the truth but he’s been caught fibbing repeatedly about it. Once that happens you lose credibility. If you work for a boss who repeatedly lies you don’t trust a word they say. He’s now no different. He should stand aside and let someone who isn’t burdened by the lies lead the country. | |
| |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 08:27 - Apr 13 with 1273 views | City_boy |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 14:24 - Apr 12 by kentsouthampton | We do, it's just that half the country are to thick to see it. |
Assuming Labour got into Government tomorrow, and there is a suitable alternative in the Labour ranks, who out of the current Labour MP's would you have as: PM Foreign Secretary Home Secretary Chancellor Defence Health Transport | | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 08:32 - Apr 13 with 1268 views | Bazza |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 08:07 - Apr 13 by SalisburySaint | Not only did Boris break the law, but he consistently lied to Parliament and the Country over this matter, something he should be suspended from Parliament for. The man had no morals and has been proved on many occasions over many years,, not just on this matter to be a habitual liar, how can people trust a word he says. He is ultimately unsuitable to be PM and should therefore resign |
Salisbury, some considered sensible comments at last. | | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 09:26 - Apr 13 with 1221 views | grumpy |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 22:58 - Apr 12 by Butty101 | So its not a 9-5 or a 24-7, prey tell what job is it? Does Boris switch off at the weekend? I guess nothing bad ever happens at the weekend that would need the PM's attention.... ffs |
You said 'downing street was working 24-7' really! Was this when they were having karaoke parties and bringing in suitcases of wine and cheese and wine parties in the garden ,quizzes etc etc ? | | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 09:26 - Apr 13 with 1220 views | saints__fan__73 |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 08:27 - Apr 13 by City_boy | Assuming Labour got into Government tomorrow, and there is a suitable alternative in the Labour ranks, who out of the current Labour MP's would you have as: PM Foreign Secretary Home Secretary Chancellor Defence Health Transport |
Labour have now reverted to the Blue Tory New Labour of the 90s. So things will be much the same as now even if they do get in. A couple of Labour announcements from the past days, one being how they will be tough on crime and anti-social behaviour and the other how they will prevent Climate activists getting in the way of the motorist. These couldn't be more Conservative policies. I like to keep an eye on the staunch Corbynites on Twitter and, without a doubt, their dislike for Boris pales in comparison to their utter hatred of (Former Head of Public Prosecutions) Starmer. They are far more concerned with getting a Momentum person in as Labour leader than they are about getting a Labour PM. | |
| |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 09:44 - Apr 13 with 1193 views | kentsouthampton |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 08:27 - Apr 13 by City_boy | Assuming Labour got into Government tomorrow, and there is a suitable alternative in the Labour ranks, who out of the current Labour MP's would you have as: PM Foreign Secretary Home Secretary Chancellor Defence Health Transport |
You could probably find six random people off the street better than the current crop of thick as pigshit chancers | | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 09:56 - Apr 13 with 1169 views | 1885_SFC |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 09:26 - Apr 13 by saints__fan__73 | Labour have now reverted to the Blue Tory New Labour of the 90s. So things will be much the same as now even if they do get in. A couple of Labour announcements from the past days, one being how they will be tough on crime and anti-social behaviour and the other how they will prevent Climate activists getting in the way of the motorist. These couldn't be more Conservative policies. I like to keep an eye on the staunch Corbynites on Twitter and, without a doubt, their dislike for Boris pales in comparison to their utter hatred of (Former Head of Public Prosecutions) Starmer. They are far more concerned with getting a Momentum person in as Labour leader than they are about getting a Labour PM. |
Starmer is a wet lettuce. There is no decent opposition in this country which is both sad and worrying. If there was a general election tomorrow - I doubt I'd vote (for the first time in decades). British politics? You can shove it up your arse. | |
| |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 10:04 - Apr 13 with 1143 views | City_boy |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 09:44 - Apr 13 by kentsouthampton | You could probably find six random people off the street better than the current crop of thick as pigshit chancers |
So which of the current Labour Party MP's would you put in the cabinet to replace the 'pig shit chancers' you mention ? I am genuinely interested as I don't think that a high perfuming cabinet could be convened from the shadow cabinet , that would do any better in the current climate of Covid, War, fuel crisis and Inflation. I do accept that some of the current cabinet need changing and that Boris was out of order, but don't believe the opposition (all parties) is strong enough. I am also an advocate of having a strong opposition party to keep the current Govt focussed. [Post edited 13 Apr 2022 10:12]
| | | |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 10:17 - Apr 13 with 1118 views | DellHero_Would |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 10:04 - Apr 13 by City_boy | So which of the current Labour Party MP's would you put in the cabinet to replace the 'pig shit chancers' you mention ? I am genuinely interested as I don't think that a high perfuming cabinet could be convened from the shadow cabinet , that would do any better in the current climate of Covid, War, fuel crisis and Inflation. I do accept that some of the current cabinet need changing and that Boris was out of order, but don't believe the opposition (all parties) is strong enough. I am also an advocate of having a strong opposition party to keep the current Govt focussed. [Post edited 13 Apr 2022 10:12]
|
He doesn’t know. Picking worms out the mud for over 30 years has addled his brain. | |
| |
Bojo, wake me up before you go-go! on 10:22 - Apr 13 with 1105 views | saint901 | Regardless of the semantics that are being and will be used to "defend" BJ's actions, he was at the end of the day indulging in illegal activity. The scale of illegality was minor as is evidenced by the issue of a fine rather than a legal process that may have led to some form of community sentence or jail time, but nonetheless he transgressed. And he was not alone. Sunak was also there. Reports on Linkedin today claim that Sunak was ready to resign because of the FPN and was talked out of it because that would have made BJ's position untenable. If that is true (and I have no proof) then if I were Sunak I would spend a few years in the wilderness just to destroy BJ's political career. Sunak could come back later. We are all outraged because of the hypocrisy of BJ and his bunch of sycophants. On the radio this morning Grant Shapps was desperately trying to defend him and got shredded. BJ though thinks nothing about sending out his umpa lumpas to face the music. We are now in a situation in which those who never wanted the Tories in power (for whatever reason) now have more reasons to claim the moral high ground. Those who are true blue are perhaps shifting uncomfortably in their chairs but know that political interest and memory is short and there are three years before another election. The damage here is with the middle ground of people who were perhaps indifferent to politics (in the misguided belief that it doesn't matter to them) but who now see behaviours they see as "unfair". The fact that many millions of people also transgressed the Covid rules and "got away with it", means nothing. People expect their political leaders to abide by higher moral standards than their own. A two party system always produces extremes. The Tories under Thatcher, Major, Cameron and BJ can be described as far right. Other leaders who sought to bring the party closer to the centre have not lasted long. Labour under Kinnock, Corbyn, Milliband were all too far left for many. Blair knew this and brought in New Labour/Tory light (take your pick) and was electable. Brown ran into a series of crises and whilst at the time he looked like a rabbit in the headlights, viewed in retrospect I think he was better than I thought at the time. Starmer is doing his best to reclaim the centre but his party clings to Corbyn policies and let's be honest unless you are in favour of nationalising everything, higher taxes (yes, even higher), pandering to benefit thieves, etc you don't trust them. I'm not buying the "Europe is in crisis and changing leaders is bad" line either. France is in the middle of elections - not a word about Ukraine derailing them. In a crisis we need leaders who can carry the trust of the people. Whilst it seems petty to say that attending one or more limited parties in contravention of the law is a reason to force him out, it's the tip of the iceberg. BJ has shown that he doesn't understand people and doesn't want to. He wants the trappings and privileges of power without being accountable. That is not leadership. So we are stuck with a lying cheat backed by a party still loyal and who have no ready made challenger to BJ and they will not risk an election whilst the economy is tanking. The opposition has its own issues and frankly I find Starmer's constant assertions of "we would not have done that" juvenile and insulting. OK, we know what you would not have done, but what would you have done and importantly - how would it be paid for? Tempted as I am to do my best to ignore the whole sorry crew and the corrupt system they exploit (all of them), that is akin to what we did against Chelsea and look what that got us. A good hammering. Bad Government is the price people pay for indifference. So I'll continue to contribute and comment in the faint hope that some of my wish list gets ticked off before I die. | | | |
| |