Technology0 min ago
Ok So Partygate Is Over.......
39 Answers
...who's looking forward to Beer/Rubygate? Will Sir Beer Korma regret calling for the PMs resignation?
Answers
The surprise, cowardly, all guns blazing attack on the indomitable force that is Boris has failed. For 6 months, our tax funded "news" provider and the previously untouchable, unrelected, civil service employees have maintained a non stop campaign to usurp an elected leader of out Parliament. I they had got away with it we may as well have scrapped voting...
17:41 Wed 25th May 2022
Johnson broke the law when he was telling everyone else to observe it. He was fined only £60. He broke the law. He was fined. The PM of this country doing that, then openly apologising for doing it? How can anyone defend that? As I said in an earlier post, Johnson is probably living through a bet with his other Bullingdon Buffoons to see which one of them can bluff their way to the top, take the pi ss out of the public, and get away with it. At the moment, he's winning the bet.
Hopkirk at 23.23 "Look at the pictures. Sir Keir's 'crime' is not in the same league."
I agree entirely - the pictures of Starmer's curry and beer social look worse than the pictures published of Johnson yesterday. If what Johnson attended was a "party", it's got to be the worst party ever; pre-packaged sandwiches, hardly anybody there and he didn't have booze in his hand.
Johnson attending "parties" (they look like anything but) and Starmer enjoying a beer and a curry, are total trivialities, the money spent on the investigations is ridiculous, and the righteous indignation, outrage and pearl-clutching expressed here, and in the press, is laughable.
***Unpopular opinion alert***
I don't think the same rules should have applied to BJ, his Government, and all the staffers working in Downing St during the lockdowns and keeping the country running as best they could. If they wanted a glass of wine 5 minutes after work with people they were working next to for the previous 10 hours, well so what.
I agree entirely - the pictures of Starmer's curry and beer social look worse than the pictures published of Johnson yesterday. If what Johnson attended was a "party", it's got to be the worst party ever; pre-packaged sandwiches, hardly anybody there and he didn't have booze in his hand.
Johnson attending "parties" (they look like anything but) and Starmer enjoying a beer and a curry, are total trivialities, the money spent on the investigations is ridiculous, and the righteous indignation, outrage and pearl-clutching expressed here, and in the press, is laughable.
***Unpopular opinion alert***
I don't think the same rules should have applied to BJ, his Government, and all the staffers working in Downing St during the lockdowns and keeping the country running as best they could. If they wanted a glass of wine 5 minutes after work with people they were working next to for the previous 10 hours, well so what.
It is time to acknowledge that for the last 3 years Boris has got the big calls right, whilst the lamentable opposition, and their cheerleaders in the left wing media, have got the little calls wrong every time. Boris was right about the vaccine procurements(much to the jealous fury of the EUSSR), right about the sanctioning of Putin and his cronies, and right about aid and help for the Ukrainian people. All this done calmly and with aplomb whilst under intense pressure from the fixated hate mongers at Broadcasting House and the remnants of the remainiac Brussels worshippers. When the mentally distracted, would be public opinion influencers, decided that attending a gathering of staff in the Downing Street garden and being in his flat whilst his wife was hosting political friends toasting the departure of her foe Cummings was the most important issue of the day, the game was up. The far from stupid general public knew they were clutching at straws as they drowned in a misery of their own construction and wanted no part of it, despite the attempts by the tax funded "news" outlet and the trawling of the streets on a daily basis to coerce some feeble minded, gullible,patsy to agree with them. The British public must never again be subjected such an extended attempt at score settling by the side that lost the EU referendum and its many media cheerleaders. This means that the reforms of our broadcasting laws must be a prority.