ChatterBank1 min ago
...Just Watch P M Qs......
4 Answers
...bit late had a heavy lunch. As usual the mighty bear swats away the the yapping mongrels. Rodders evokes Star Wars! badly PMSL the problem is that they have no substance on the opposition benches. Still I wonder were the 4th Labour leader to win an election is coming from! Has he been born yet?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As it’s an hour in and nobody has yet indulged your fantasy on this thread I’ll take pity and post.
You really ought to dispense with the Orwellian-metaphors in your weekly wet dream J Arthur-fest about the supposed prowess of the bumbling fool Johnson.
Furthermore, the phrase ‘opposition benches’ is obviously now somewhat blurred in light of the recent vote, their throng has been increased somewhat by 148.
What I did see was Starmer ridiculing the government benches for their recent quotes about the PM.
This from Sky News.
Sir Keir throws comments made by Tory MPs back at the prime minister.
"They are making a lot of noise now but I have a list of what his MPs really think of him," he says.
"Dragging everyone down - who said that? Come on, hands up?
"His authority is destroyed, come on hands up, which of you said that?
"Can't win back trust - they're all very quiet now."
He then moves on to his "personal favourite" from "a document circulated by his backbench in which they call him the Conservative Corbyn".
Pmsl, mighty bear looks more akin to Whinnie The Pooh if the comments from his own MP’s are anything to go by.
You really ought to dispense with the Orwellian-metaphors in your weekly wet dream J Arthur-fest about the supposed prowess of the bumbling fool Johnson.
Furthermore, the phrase ‘opposition benches’ is obviously now somewhat blurred in light of the recent vote, their throng has been increased somewhat by 148.
What I did see was Starmer ridiculing the government benches for their recent quotes about the PM.
This from Sky News.
Sir Keir throws comments made by Tory MPs back at the prime minister.
"They are making a lot of noise now but I have a list of what his MPs really think of him," he says.
"Dragging everyone down - who said that? Come on, hands up?
"His authority is destroyed, come on hands up, which of you said that?
"Can't win back trust - they're all very quiet now."
He then moves on to his "personal favourite" from "a document circulated by his backbench in which they call him the Conservative Corbyn".
Pmsl, mighty bear looks more akin to Whinnie The Pooh if the comments from his own MP’s are anything to go by.
Time for a letter in the Times ( few days ago)
Dear Sir, writes Alistair McGowan, J Marriott ( " The truth about the triumph of twee", June 9) overlooks another example of the infantilisation of British Society: pronunciation. Adults increasingly struggle to put two consonants together in words. During the Pandemic we were constantly told of the dangers posed to the "vunnerable" people, encouraged to 'reckonsie' symptoms and asked to go to 'hospituws'. The word 'didnt' regularly become the infantile "diddernt" "th" has become 'v' in endless words. Linguistic infantilization whever we like it or not."
how true how true
I think "whever" is meant to be wevva
Dear Sir, writes Alistair McGowan, J Marriott ( " The truth about the triumph of twee", June 9) overlooks another example of the infantilisation of British Society: pronunciation. Adults increasingly struggle to put two consonants together in words. During the Pandemic we were constantly told of the dangers posed to the "vunnerable" people, encouraged to 'reckonsie' symptoms and asked to go to 'hospituws'. The word 'didnt' regularly become the infantile "diddernt" "th" has become 'v' in endless words. Linguistic infantilization whever we like it or not."
how true how true
I think "whever" is meant to be wevva