"The murals were painted over because he thought they were too welcoming and sent the wrong message."
The correct message presumably being, "We don't regard you as human beings and certainly have no pity for the fact that you are literally familyless children, alone and scared. We apologise for any suggestion we may have thought otherwise."
One of the New Conservatives was being interviewed on a podcast the other day. Emails Maitlis asked how refugees were supposed to get to Britain legally at least three times. The nonentity couldn’t answer, just kept saying that the refugee should have sought asylum in the first safe country.
So basically we don’t care just don’t come here.
A better solution would be to cooperate with the EU on how many refugees each country can take and then transport them legally from the entry point in the EU to the destination. I do agree that the small boats issue is a disgrace and needs to stop, but you have to give asylum seekers a legal route to enter the country.
Which Tyler wrote: ↑Fri Jul 07, 2023 4:38 pm
Do they think that Asylum seekers are risking their lives in order to (legally) enter a hostile country... to see a mural of Mickey Mouse?
Or are they just proud of their sociopathy?
Yep, just the Tories signaling their complete lack of empathy. Again.
Trying to make the lives of traumatised children even more miserable. That's . . . what is the word . . . oh yeah, evil.
Which Tyler wrote: ↑Fri Jul 07, 2023 4:38 pm
Do they think that Asylum seekers are risking their lives in order to (legally) enter a hostile country... to see a mural of Mickey Mouse?
Or are they just proud of their sociopathy?
Yep, just the Tories signaling their complete lack of empathy. Again.
Trying to make the lives of traumatised children even more miserable. That's . . . what is the word . . . oh yeah, evil.
The right of the party think their only chance is to get their base out, so expect far more of this shit.
Which Tyler wrote: ↑Fri Jul 07, 2023 4:38 pm
Do they think that Asylum seekers are risking their lives in order to (legally) enter a hostile country... to see a mural of Mickey Mouse?
Or are they just proud of their sociopathy?
Yep, just the Tories signaling their complete lack of empathy. Again.
Trying to make the lives of traumatised children even more miserable. That's . . . what is the word . . . oh yeah, evil.
The right of the party think their only chance is to get their base out, so expect far more of this shit.
Hopefully it will disgust the centre (and anyone with a heart) and lose them votes overall.
Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Sat Jul 08, 2023 1:25 am
Yep, just the Tories signaling their complete lack of empathy. Again.
Trying to make the lives of traumatised children even more miserable. That's . . . what is the word . . . oh yeah, evil.
The right of the party think their only chance is to get their base out, so expect far more of this shit.
Hopefully it will disgust the centre (and anyone with a heart) and lose them votes overall.
Many centralist Tories I know are either leaving the party or essentially abstaining. There’s a solid core who will vote Tory regardless, but many Tory voters have had enough of the antics and will either stay at home or vote tactically.
If absence is so important to this government's priorities, perhaps they can explain why it was worthwhile them playing hardball over teachers' pay demands, given that it meant almost every child in England missed 6 days of school this year? Surely not being dicks about pay would've been more efficacious in increasing pupil presence than driving to parents' houses?
Headteachers "have a duty" to drive to the homes of absent pupils and bring them into school, the education secretary has said.
The average size of a secondary school in the UK is 986. Average attendance is 86%. So ball park of 140 collections a day?
Because of course a headteacher does nothing during the day. I’m also fairly sure most councils have some kind of truancy officer who would be better placed to do that role.
FPtP is a complete nonsense and it is amongst Starmer's worst bits of "leadership" that he is refusing to countenance even looking at changing it. For all his talk of the iniquities of Conservative rule, he's deliberately evading dealing with the system that elects them so often, because it would also weaken Labour's ability to gain unfettered power as well.
Everyone slides down the right-leaning slope that is the ever changing "centre". Where are our actual advocates in public service? Still prostrate at the altar of neoliberal voodoo economics, that's where.
Matt Hancock loses complaint over Mirror description of him and articles on Covid contracts
The Independent Press Standards Organisation (IPSO) ruled in favour of this newspaper after Matt Hancock objected to being called a "a failed health secretary and cheating husband who broke the lockdown rules he wrote"
Matt Hancock loses complaint over Mirror description of him and articles on Covid contracts
The Independent Press Standards Organisation (IPSO) ruled in favour of this newspaper after Matt Hancock objected to being called a "a failed health secretary and cheating husband who broke the lockdown rules he wrote"
...
ARTICLE CONTINUES
That feels like an absolute Streisand-effect error from Hancock.
IPSO are about as much use as wet toilet paper in an origami competition at the best of times, and have about the same level of strength and integrity, so I am amused that Hancock even bothered complaining to them, given that he must have known it would accomplish nothing.
A govenment in "actually doing something" shocker. I hadn't heard about Spain taking that tack, but it's quite nice to see the approach I've been bleating about being tried in the real world and succeeding.
A govenment in "actually doing something" shocker. I hadn't heard about Spain taking that tack, but it's quite nice to see the approach I've been bleating about being tried in the real world and succeeding.
Puja
Yeah. Unfortunately it isn't going to happen under the Tories. It's not only ideologically impossible, it would be biting the hand that funds.
Whether Starmer's Labour would do it, who knows? They certainly don't want to look like they'll be economically unconventional before the election. Afterwards . . .? Although plenty more damage will have been done by then - more shrinking of the economy in real terms, more of the pain taken by the poor, more businesses going to the wall (not sure where that fits in with Tory goals but hey they've not been rational for a while).
A govenment in "actually doing something" shocker. I hadn't heard about Spain taking that tack, but it's quite nice to see the approach I've been bleating about being tried in the real world and succeeding.
Puja
Our government has devolved the fight against inflation to he BoE. Much easier to fire shots at the bank’s governors.
A govenment in "actually doing something" shocker. I hadn't heard about Spain taking that tack, but it's quite nice to see the approach I've been bleating about being tried in the real world and succeeding.
Puja
Our government has devolved the fight against inflation to he BoE. Much easier to fire shots at the bank’s governors.
That was done about 25 years ago to be fair, Though I don't feel like being fair mostly.
A govenment in "actually doing something" shocker. I hadn't heard about Spain taking that tack, but it's quite nice to see the approach I've been bleating about being tried in the real world and succeeding.
Puja
Our government has devolved the fight against inflation to he BoE. Much easier to fire shots at the bank’s governors.
That was done about 25 years ago to be fair, Though I don't feel like being fair mostly.
Disagree - 25 years ago the interest rates were devolved to the BoE. The government still has plenty of tools to fight inflation in their own hands; they're just pretending they don't and insisting it's up to the BoE to do something.