Business & Finance3 mins ago
John Prescott
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No best answer has yet been selected by Dollie. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Under the circumstances I think a mere bartender from Hull should be given a little leeway. Don't you?
not only do I not care who he sleeps with, I don't care that he plays croquet. Is there any country other than Britain where sports are ranked according to social class and you can be booed for playing the wrong one?
He should be sacked because his department has failed in its job, not because he holds a mallet or worked on a ship.
But, yes the main reason that he should go is that he messed up in his job and really doesn't have a position any more!
I cannot say enough times that politicians are ALL the same - snouts in the trough, look after themselves, say one thing but do another, lie through their back teeth, take bungs (yes, they really do!), have the morals of alley-cats - and people are still stupid enougfh to vote them into these positions. Just to compound it and make people like me even more frustrated and puzzled, they then come on forums like this and moan about them!! Pathetic!
I dont think the morality of who somebody has sex with equates in any way to the morality of say committing perjury or attempting to pervert the course of justice as was the case with Aitken.
Let's not even start with Archer!
Of course if you wrap yourself in the flag of family values as many Tories do that's another story!
Ironically though getting filmed playing croquet could be far more damaging to a labour politician than being caught having an affair and the converse is true.
Anybody want to buy pictures of Boris Johnson on the croquet lawn?
As you may have guessed, I am totally apolitical - again, it may seem old fashioned, but I cannot stand liars (back to perjury and adultery?) so I do not vote, and I have no sympathy for people who do and then whinge and moan about politicians .
I know it's another argument, but your seeming disdain for "family values" says a lot about yourself (sorry if that sounds offensive, but you must realise that that is how you have come across.)
Mike there is nothing seeming about my distain for "family values".
This is because the phrase suggests that there are some set of shared values that anybody in a family naturally accepts - this is clearly blithering nonsense.
There are all sorts of families with all sorts of values.
I think, with all due respect, holding on to a myth of a shared set of universal values tells us a lot about you!
When somebody takes a "marriage vow" they most likely intend to keep it. If they subsequently do not keep to them that is not perjury.
Of course espousing family values whilst having it away with Edwina Curry over the filling cabinets isn't perjury either but it is blatent hypocracy.
Furthermore you have twisted or, at least, totally misrepresented what I said about perjury and marriage vows - I DID NOT state that anybody not adhering to their marriage vows commits perjury.
The only thing we can agree on, seemingly, is that politicians are hypocrits.
If he does go,there are already people putting up for deputy PM's job. However,where as I agree with having a deputy PM to fill in King Tony's shoes when he gets a freebie holiday,is it necessary to have a whole department and big mansions for the jub. Why can't,for example (example only) Margaret Beckett still remain Foreign Secretary,but also become Deputy Prime Minster and only use the secondary role in King Tony's absence?
Ta Ta
Marky B