Nigel Farage 15:28 - May 28 with 24059 views | union_jack | Nigel seems to be voicing the opinions of the silent majority of this country. Yes? Or no? | |
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Nigel Farage on 23:04 - Jun 11 with 1427 views | Boundy |
Nigel Farage on 19:00 - Jun 11 by Gwyn737 | He’s nearly perfected the salute 😉 |
I find it strange that someone who's never ever made a policy decision whilst in a government post which has affected voters either positively or negatively can attack some much bile. Pity some are so blind , ignorant or just plain stupid that they're about to elect the same bunch of no hopers ( either colour rossette doesn't matter , we're about to experience the same s***) , politicians with little in mind other than to feather their own nests and further their own ambitions and screw the little man for as long as they can . What Farage has done to his credit was to expose the corruption within the EU which at the time we were part of , opened the eyes of people to the inequalities and the wealth created to certain individuals within that organisation and the fact that our futures were being decided by unelected faceless bureaucrats. | |
| "In a free society, the State is the servant of the people—not the master." |
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Nigel Farage on 01:22 - Jun 12 with 1391 views | Robbie |
Nigel Farage on 23:04 - Jun 11 by Boundy | I find it strange that someone who's never ever made a policy decision whilst in a government post which has affected voters either positively or negatively can attack some much bile. Pity some are so blind , ignorant or just plain stupid that they're about to elect the same bunch of no hopers ( either colour rossette doesn't matter , we're about to experience the same s***) , politicians with little in mind other than to feather their own nests and further their own ambitions and screw the little man for as long as they can . What Farage has done to his credit was to expose the corruption within the EU which at the time we were part of , opened the eyes of people to the inequalities and the wealth created to certain individuals within that organisation and the fact that our futures were being decided by unelected faceless bureaucrats. |
Unless I can hear some real and then kept promises from our potential leaders I will not be voting for either of our current front runners , I will vote on Election Day whatever . Sunak promising for so long to stop the small boats , we have a plan , working of course . Drakeford and Gethin , one a dinosaur and another who will not hold his hand up and admit he made an error of judgement accepting a dodgy donation , tears in the Senedd a no . UKIP /Reform might be my go to X at the ballot box for now , no alternatives either . Hope my Old Man up there in the Heavens , TGWU member like me once , wore a red rosette on Election Day is not staring daggers at me now . | | | |
Nigel Farage on 01:28 - Jun 12 with 1382 views | Joesus_Of_Narbereth |
Nigel Farage on 01:22 - Jun 12 by Robbie | Unless I can hear some real and then kept promises from our potential leaders I will not be voting for either of our current front runners , I will vote on Election Day whatever . Sunak promising for so long to stop the small boats , we have a plan , working of course . Drakeford and Gethin , one a dinosaur and another who will not hold his hand up and admit he made an error of judgement accepting a dodgy donation , tears in the Senedd a no . UKIP /Reform might be my go to X at the ballot box for now , no alternatives either . Hope my Old Man up there in the Heavens , TGWU member like me once , wore a red rosette on Election Day is not staring daggers at me now . |
Your old man wouldn’t even recognise the Labour Party in its current state. It’s so far away from what it was set up to achieve, the great drivers and genuine intellects of that party will be turning in their graves at what it has become. | |
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Nigel Farage on 01:51 - Jun 12 with 1375 views | Robbie |
Nigel Farage on 01:28 - Jun 12 by Joesus_Of_Narbereth | Your old man wouldn’t even recognise the Labour Party in its current state. It’s so far away from what it was set up to achieve, the great drivers and genuine intellects of that party will be turning in their graves at what it has become. |
Threw the towel in with Labour when Blair and his Human Rights lawyer misses opened the door to mass immigration , their view was it was an extra vote at the ballot box tor him . WMP and Iraq , a total farce and cover up and a person took his own life over the issue . Once the hype and fanfare of Cherie and him wore off , true colours emerged , | | | |
Nigel Farage on 06:40 - Jun 12 with 1321 views | Dr_Winston |
Nigel Farage on 01:28 - Jun 12 by Joesus_Of_Narbereth | Your old man wouldn’t even recognise the Labour Party in its current state. It’s so far away from what it was set up to achieve, the great drivers and genuine intellects of that party will be turning in their graves at what it has become. |
The Labour Party has not represented the genuine working class in a long time. Johnson won a landslide in 2019 because the genuine working class believed in what he had to say. It was all nonsense of course, Johnson perfected coming across well to voters whilst being completely out of his depth, but it was pretty clear evidence that the Labour Party of Eddie Izzard, David Lammy, Emily Thornberry and others offers nothing to the blue collar these days, despite Starmer's efforts to purge it of the biggest loonies like Corbyn. I've argued before that the basic instincts of the vast majority of genuine working class people (as opposed to welfare class) are small c conservative. They are generally accepting of skilled immigration but not uncontrolled immigration. They expect those who do migrate to integrate and obey the law. They don't mind being taxed but not too much and they hate seeing it wasted. They have aspirations towards earning more, having a nicer house and a better life for their children. Overall, they prefer the Government not to bother them too much. That stands for people who have historically voted Blue and Red IMO, and both sides have let them down badly on every point for decades. Every single recent by-election in England at least has seen the needle barely twitch on the Labour vote. Hardly anyone is swapping from Conservative to them. They're just not voting Conservative. Different story in Scotland perhaps where disdain for the SNP has people looking for alternatives. It'll be interesting to see the cumulative vote totals after the election to see where, if anywhere outside Scotia, Labours vote has increased. [Post edited 12 Jun 8:06]
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| Pain or damage don't end the world. Or despair, or f*cking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man... and give some back. |
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Nigel Farage on 07:47 - Jun 12 with 1299 views | Whiterockin |
Nigel Farage on 06:40 - Jun 12 by Dr_Winston | The Labour Party has not represented the genuine working class in a long time. Johnson won a landslide in 2019 because the genuine working class believed in what he had to say. It was all nonsense of course, Johnson perfected coming across well to voters whilst being completely out of his depth, but it was pretty clear evidence that the Labour Party of Eddie Izzard, David Lammy, Emily Thornberry and others offers nothing to the blue collar these days, despite Starmer's efforts to purge it of the biggest loonies like Corbyn. I've argued before that the basic instincts of the vast majority of genuine working class people (as opposed to welfare class) are small c conservative. They are generally accepting of skilled immigration but not uncontrolled immigration. They expect those who do migrate to integrate and obey the law. They don't mind being taxed but not too much and they hate seeing it wasted. They have aspirations towards earning more, having a nicer house and a better life for their children. Overall, they prefer the Government not to bother them too much. That stands for people who have historically voted Blue and Red IMO, and both sides have let them down badly on every point for decades. Every single recent by-election in England at least has seen the needle barely twitch on the Labour vote. Hardly anyone is swapping from Conservative to them. They're just not voting Conservative. Different story in Scotland perhaps where disdain for the SNP has people looking for alternatives. It'll be interesting to see the cumulative vote totals after the election to see where, if anywhere outside Scotia, Labours vote has increased. [Post edited 12 Jun 8:06]
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Without a doubt Labour will win the election by default. | | | |
Nigel Farage on 08:03 - Jun 12 with 1295 views | Dr_Winston |
Nigel Farage on 07:47 - Jun 12 by Whiterockin | Without a doubt Labour will win the election by default. |
It's being handed to them on a plate by perhaps the most inept administration since Callaghan. | |
| Pain or damage don't end the world. Or despair, or f*cking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man... and give some back. |
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Nigel Farage on 08:10 - Jun 12 with 1291 views | Gwyn737 |
Nigel Farage on 07:47 - Jun 12 by Whiterockin | Without a doubt Labour will win the election by default. |
It also adds to concerns about our election system as a whole. We could end up with a party getting 40% of the vote yet holding a massive seat majority. That doesn't seem very healthy to me. | | | | Login to get fewer ads
Nigel Farage on 08:55 - Jun 12 with 1267 views | YrAlarch |
Nigel Farage on 08:10 - Jun 12 by Gwyn737 | It also adds to concerns about our election system as a whole. We could end up with a party getting 40% of the vote yet holding a massive seat majority. That doesn't seem very healthy to me. |
It seems to me that the only way to rectify that scenario is to adopt a system of Proportional Representation. | | | |
Nigel Farage on 09:02 - Jun 12 with 1250 views | Dr_Winston | The current system at least offers a change. I see the merits of PR but there are also dangers in a dominant party forming a coalition with nobodies and ruling unrestricted for decades. In a system where voters actually voted on the issues and not tribal grounds then PR would be perfect. If a Government has gone on too long then FPTP generally ensures a new one. There are merits to that. | |
| Pain or damage don't end the world. Or despair, or f*cking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man... and give some back. |
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Nigel Farage on 10:10 - Jun 12 with 1193 views | JumpingJackFlash |
Nigel Farage on 07:47 - Jun 12 by Whiterockin | Without a doubt Labour will win the election by default. |
There’s an old saying that is true - oppositions don’t win elections, governments lose them. | | | |
Nigel Farage on 11:30 - Jun 12 with 1153 views | controversial_jack |
Nigel Farage on 09:02 - Jun 12 by Dr_Winston | The current system at least offers a change. I see the merits of PR but there are also dangers in a dominant party forming a coalition with nobodies and ruling unrestricted for decades. In a system where voters actually voted on the issues and not tribal grounds then PR would be perfect. If a Government has gone on too long then FPTP generally ensures a new one. There are merits to that. |
That is what happened in Germany during the 30s, it allowed the NAZIs to get into office | | | |
Nigel Farage on 20:44 - Jun 13 with 1001 views | waynekerr55 | He's openly saying he wants an insurance based healthcare system. Good luck with that | |
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Nigel Farage on 20:58 - Jun 13 with 986 views | Dr_Winston |
Nigel Farage on 20:44 - Jun 13 by waynekerr55 | He's openly saying he wants an insurance based healthcare system. Good luck with that |
Like in Germany? | |
| Pain or damage don't end the world. Or despair, or f*cking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man... and give some back. |
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Nigel Farage on 21:50 - Jun 13 with 941 views | Wingstandwood |
Interesting this one. Anyone who is NOT a lunatic, who does not belong in some cloud-cuckoo-land parallel universe would realise that insane immigration levels at this rate are catastrophic. Who does NOT raise his hand? Yep! Mr Plaid Cymru yokel and resident village idiot whom is obviously NOT concerned in the slightest by a population increase of (at current yearly rate!) 15 - 20 million by the year 2044. Add that to the 10 million before this vote was taken. And I can only guess the other idiot standing next door to him is another nationalist. Because? Nationalists are as thick as sh1t! | |
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Nigel Farage on 21:54 - Jun 13 with 934 views | Dr_Winston |
Nigel Farage on 21:50 - Jun 13 by Wingstandwood |
Interesting this one. Anyone who is NOT a lunatic, who does not belong in some cloud-cuckoo-land parallel universe would realise that insane immigration levels at this rate are catastrophic. Who does NOT raise his hand? Yep! Mr Plaid Cymru yokel and resident village idiot whom is obviously NOT concerned in the slightest by a population increase of (at current yearly rate!) 15 - 20 million by the year 2044. Add that to the 10 million before this vote was taken. And I can only guess the other idiot standing next door to him is another nationalist. Because? Nationalists are as thick as sh1t! |
Plaid would welcome ten million migrants as long as they weren't English. Cottage burning halfwits best ignored. | |
| Pain or damage don't end the world. Or despair, or f*cking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man... and give some back. |
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Nigel Farage on 22:06 - Jun 13 with 924 views | waynekerr55 |
Nigel Farage on 20:58 - Jun 13 by Dr_Winston | Like in Germany? |
Isn't Germany free at the point of access though? Given his links to the quacks on the right in America do you really believe he'd be moderate in implementing such a system? *Disclaimer - Iain Dale's why can't we get along book has a cracking chapter on NHS reform. I think most sound people agree there's an urgent need for evolution but we simply don't have enough sensible people in power to do what is right | |
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Nigel Farage on 22:14 - Jun 13 with 910 views | Joesus_Of_Narbereth |
Nigel Farage on 21:50 - Jun 13 by Wingstandwood |
Interesting this one. Anyone who is NOT a lunatic, who does not belong in some cloud-cuckoo-land parallel universe would realise that insane immigration levels at this rate are catastrophic. Who does NOT raise his hand? Yep! Mr Plaid Cymru yokel and resident village idiot whom is obviously NOT concerned in the slightest by a population increase of (at current yearly rate!) 15 - 20 million by the year 2044. Add that to the 10 million before this vote was taken. And I can only guess the other idiot standing next door to him is another nationalist. Because? Nationalists are as thick as sh1t! |
That Lib Dem woman is all mouth. | |
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Nigel Farage on 22:14 - Jun 13 with 907 views | Dr_Winston |
Nigel Farage on 22:06 - Jun 13 by waynekerr55 | Isn't Germany free at the point of access though? Given his links to the quacks on the right in America do you really believe he'd be moderate in implementing such a system? *Disclaimer - Iain Dale's why can't we get along book has a cracking chapter on NHS reform. I think most sound people agree there's an urgent need for evolution but we simply don't have enough sensible people in power to do what is right |
You're basing your argument on an assumption, which most people who shudder at the very concept of NHS reform also do. I have no idea one way or another what sort of system that Farage would implement if he had the power to do so. It is however fairly obvious that an "insurance based system" is not necessarily a bad thing. | |
| Pain or damage don't end the world. Or despair, or f*cking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man... and give some back. |
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Nigel Farage on 22:17 - Jun 13 with 894 views | Wingstandwood |
Nigel Farage on 21:54 - Jun 13 by Dr_Winston | Plaid would welcome ten million migrants as long as they weren't English. Cottage burning halfwits best ignored. |
His sort along with YesCymru and other nationalist yokels are a complete and utter embarrassment who lack even the most crudest levels of common sense. Of course in his fantasy world?... Out would come the 'magic cheque' book, because he is a guy, whom it's only natural to assume (bleeding bloody obvious more like!) has absolutely no comprehension about 'real-world' logistical balance and infrastructure to cope with a relentless 700,000+ a year population increase. I'm going to Google his background. I guess it'll be the usual case of a degree in a subject that requires very little common sense and mathematical reasoning, along with a previous job completely detached from number crunching, profit and loss margins and management based upon end results and strategic forward planning. Shocking standards of some modern day politicians! What an absolute joke! | |
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Nigel Farage on 07:40 - Jun 14 with 800 views | waynekerr55 |
Nigel Farage on 22:14 - Jun 13 by Dr_Winston | You're basing your argument on an assumption, which most people who shudder at the very concept of NHS reform also do. I have no idea one way or another what sort of system that Farage would implement if he had the power to do so. It is however fairly obvious that an "insurance based system" is not necessarily a bad thing. |
A well founded assumption though Doc. Farage is one of those Truss free market ideologues. For me it's not the reform that worries me, it's the people who would do the reforming. They couldn't procure a weekly shop with value for money for starters! | |
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Nigel Farage on 09:11 - Jun 14 with 762 views | Whiterockin | So Farage could well be the next leader of the opposition. PMQ will be interesting. | | | |
Nigel Farage on 10:00 - Jun 14 with 731 views | Boundy |
Nigel Farage on 20:44 - Jun 13 by waynekerr55 | He's openly saying he wants an insurance based healthcare system. Good luck with that |
Its openly known that a lot of ordinary people already have that in place , despite of the NHS's existence . | |
| "In a free society, the State is the servant of the people—not the master." |
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