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Page 9 of 53

posted on 22/11/19

comment by kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)
posted 4 minutes ago
JC was one of the first MP's to understand that dialogue was the only way to resolve the troubles in NI, his actions of openly speaking to memeber of the Ra council was a stepping stone to bringing all parties to the table and the ultimate result was the GFA.

Not saying he made it happen, but his actions were certainly part of it.

It says an awful lot that the biggest attacks on JC are based on this notion of him being a "terrorist sympathizer".

I can see why people might not like JC, but anyone who thinks the TOries are a better option because they don't like JC (or believe what is written in some circles) is deluded.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

I think it's like choosing between a punch in the face and a kick in the balls.

posted on 22/11/19

**Copy and Paste**
If your reason for not backing Jeremy Corbyn is because you believe the media slander...

1. In October 1936, Jeremy Corbyn’s mother participated in the battle of Cable Street in defence of British Jews after British fascists had staged an assault on the area. Corbyn was raised in a household passionately opposed to antisemitism in all its forms.

2. In 23rd April 1977, Corbyn organised a counter-demonstration to protect Wood Green from a neo-naaaaazi march through the district. The area had a significant Jewish population.

3. On 7 November 1990, Corbyn signed a motion condemning the rise of antisemitism in the UK.

4. In 2002 Jeremy Corbyn led a clean-up and vigil at Finsbury Park Synagogue which had been vandalised in an anti-Semitic attack.

5. On 30 April 2002, Corbyn tabled a motion in the House of Commons condemning an anti-Semitic attack on a London Synagogue.

6. On 26 November 2003, Jeremy Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion condemning terrorist attacks on two synagogues.

7. In February 2009, Jeremy Corbyn signed a parliamentary motion condemning a fascist for establishing a website to host antisemitic materials.

8. On 24th March 2009, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion praising British Jews who resisted the Holocaust by risking their lives to save potential victims.

9. Nine years ago, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion praising “Jewish News”for its pioneering investigation into the spread of antisemitism on Facebook.

10. On 9 February 2010, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion calling for an investigation into Facebook and its failure to prevent the spread of antisemitic materials on its site.

11. On 27 October 2010, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion praising the late Israeli Prime Minister for pursuing a two state solution to the Israel/Palestine question.

12. On 13 June 2012, Corbyn sponsored and signed a motion condemning the BBC for cutting a Jewish Community television programme from its schedule.

13. 1 October 2013, Corbyn appeared on the BBC to defend Ralph Miliband against vile antisemitic attacks by the UK press.

14. Five years ago Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion condemning antisemitism in sport.

15. On 1 March 2013, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion condemning and expressing concern at growing levels of antisemitism in European football.

16. On 9 January 2014, Jeremy Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion praising Holocaust education programs that had taken 20,000 British students to Auschwitz.

17. On 22 June 2015, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion expressing concern at the neo-naaazi march being planned for an area of London with a significant Jewish population.

18. On 9 October 2016, Corbyn, close to tears,
commemorated the 1936 Battle of Cable Street and recalled the role his mother played in defending London’s Jewish community.

19. On 3 December 2016, Corbyn made a visit to Terezin Concentration Camp where Jewish people were murdered by the Naaazis. It was Jeremy’s third visit to such a camp, all of which were largely unreported in the most read UK papers.
20. Last year, a widely-endorsed 2018 academic report found ninety-five serious reporting failures in the reporting of the Labour antisemitism story with the worst offenders The Sun, the Mail & the BBC.

21. On 28 February 2016, five months after becoming leader, Jeremy Corbyn appointed Baroness Royall to investigate antisemitism at Oxford University Labour Club.

22. On 27 April 2016 Corbyn suspended an MP pending an investigation into antisemitism.

23. A day later, Corbyn suspended the three times Mayor of London after complaints of antisemitic comments.

24. On 29 April 2016, Corbyn launched an inquiry into the prevalence of antisemitism in the Labour Party. In spite of later changes in how the inquiry was reported, it was initially praised by Jewish community organisations.

25. In Corbyn’s first seven months as leader of the Labour Party, just ten complaints were received about antisemitism. 90% of those were suspended from the Labour Party within 24 hours.

26. In September 2017, Corbyn backed a motion at Labour’s annual conference introducing a new set of rules regarding antisemitism.

27. In the six months that followed the introduction of the new code of conduct, to March 2018, 94% of the fifty-four people accused of antisemitism remained suspended or barred from Labour Party membership. Three of the fifty-four were exonerated.

28. When Jennie Formby became general secretary of the party last year, she appointed a highly-qualified in-house Counsel, as recommended in the Chakrabarti Report.

29. In 2018, Labour almost doubled the size of its staff team handling investigations and dispute processes.

30. Last year, to speed up the handling of antisemitism cases, smaller panels of 3-5 NEC members were established to enable cases to be heard more quickly.

31. Since 2018, every complaint made about antisemitism is allocated its own independent specialist barrister to ensure due process is followed.

32. The entire backlog of cases outstanding upon Jennie Formby becoming General Secretary of the Labour Party was cleared within 6 months of Jennie taking up her post.

33. Since September 2018, Labour has doubled the size of its National Constitutional Committee (NCC) – its senior disciplinary panel – from 11 to 25 members to enable it to process cases more quickly.

34. Under Formby and Labour’s left-run NEC, NCC arranged elections at short notice to ensure the NCC reached its new full capacity without delay.

35. Since later 2018, the NCC routinely convenes a greater number of hearing panels to allow cases to be heard and finalised without delay.

36. In 2018, the NEC established a ‘Procedures Working Group’ to lead reforms in the way disciplinary cases are handled.

37. The NEC adopted the IHRA working definition of antisemitism and all eleven examples of antisemitism attached to it.

38. A rule change agreed at Conference in 2018 means that all serious complaints, including antisemitism, are dealt with nationally to ensure consistency.

39. Last year, Jennie Formby wrote to the admins and moderators of Facebook groups about how they can effectively moderate online spaces and requested that any discriminatory content be reported to the Labour Party for investigation.

40. Since last year, no one outside Labour’s Governance and Legal Unit can be involved in decision-making on antisemitism investigations. This independence allows decisions free from political influence to be taken.

posted on 22/11/19

comment by Winston (U16525)
posted 3 minutes ago
comment by kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)
posted 4 minutes ago
JC was one of the first MP's to understand that dialogue was the only way to resolve the troubles in NI, his actions of openly speaking to memeber of the Ra council was a stepping stone to bringing all parties to the table and the ultimate result was the GFA.

Not saying he made it happen, but his actions were certainly part of it.

It says an awful lot that the biggest attacks on JC are based on this notion of him being a "terrorist sympathizer".

I can see why people might not like JC, but anyone who thinks the TOries are a better option because they don't like JC (or believe what is written in some circles) is deluded.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

I think it's like choosing between a punch in the face and a kick in the balls.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I'd disagree, JC is a far better man than BJ.

posted on 22/11/19

Do you Britts really want more of the Tories, like what will actually change if you vote them in?

When people at the highest levels of your national services are constanly calling out the damage Tory cuts have done to them, how can anyone consider them to be the ones to fix problems.

20'000 police they say! They cut 22'000...

posted on 22/11/19

comment by kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)
posted 3 minutes ago
comment by Winston (U16525)
posted 3 minutes ago
comment by kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)
posted 4 minutes ago
JC was one of the first MP's to understand that dialogue was the only way to resolve the troubles in NI, his actions of openly speaking to memeber of the Ra council was a stepping stone to bringing all parties to the table and the ultimate result was the GFA.

Not saying he made it happen, but his actions were certainly part of it.

It says an awful lot that the biggest attacks on JC are based on this notion of him being a "terrorist sympathizer".

I can see why people might not like JC, but anyone who thinks the TOries are a better option because they don't like JC (or believe what is written in some circles) is deluded.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

I think it's like choosing between a punch in the face and a kick in the balls.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I'd disagree, JC is a far better man than BJ.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
But i can never turn down a BJ

posted on 22/11/19

comment by kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)
posted 2 minutes ago
comment by Winston (U16525)
posted 3 minutes ago
comment by kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)
posted 4 minutes ago
JC was one of the first MP's to understand that dialogue was the only way to resolve the troubles in NI, his actions of openly speaking to memeber of the Ra council was a stepping stone to bringing all parties to the table and the ultimate result was the GFA.

Not saying he made it happen, but his actions were certainly part of it.

It says an awful lot that the biggest attacks on JC are based on this notion of him being a "terrorist sympathizer".

I can see why people might not like JC, but anyone who thinks the TOries are a better option because they don't like JC (or believe what is written in some circles) is deluded.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

I think it's like choosing between a punch in the face and a kick in the balls.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I'd disagree, JC is a far better man than BJ.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Not to some parts of the population he isn't.

But that's besides the point. As parties, I think they're both fecking useless at this present moment and for different reasons, would be harmful.

posted on 22/11/19

comment by kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)
posted 1 minute ago
comment by Winston (U16525)
posted 3 minutes ago
comment by kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)
posted 4 minutes ago
JC was one of the first MP's to understand that dialogue was the only way to resolve the troubles in NI, his actions of openly speaking to memeber of the Ra council was a stepping stone to bringing all parties to the table and the ultimate result was the GFA.

Not saying he made it happen, but his actions were certainly part of it.

It says an awful lot that the biggest attacks on JC are based on this notion of him being a "terrorist sympathizer".

I can see why people might not like JC, but anyone who thinks the TOries are a better option because they don't like JC (or believe what is written in some circles) is deluded.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

I think it's like choosing between a punch in the face and a kick in the balls.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I'd disagree, JC is a far better man than BJ.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
To be fair a lama would probably be a more competent PM than Johnson.

posted on 22/11/19

comment by Winston (U16525)
posted 5 minutes ago
comment by kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)
posted 2 minutes ago
comment by Winston (U16525)
posted 3 minutes ago
comment by kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)
posted 4 minutes ago
JC was one of the first MP's to understand that dialogue was the only way to resolve the troubles in NI, his actions of openly speaking to memeber of the Ra council was a stepping stone to bringing all parties to the table and the ultimate result was the GFA.

Not saying he made it happen, but his actions were certainly part of it.

It says an awful lot that the biggest attacks on JC are based on this notion of him being a "terrorist sympathizer".

I can see why people might not like JC, but anyone who thinks the TOries are a better option because they don't like JC (or believe what is written in some circles) is deluded.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

I think it's like choosing between a punch in the face and a kick in the balls.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I'd disagree, JC is a far better man than BJ.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Not to some parts of the population he isn't.

But that's besides the point. As parties, I think they're both fecking useless at this present moment and for different reasons, would be harmful.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Yeah that's true Winston in some areas JC is seen as the devil, that's decades of tabloids constantly having a go at him.

posted on 22/11/19

kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)

No, it's related to antisemitism.

posted on 22/11/19

comment by Winston (U16525)
posted 3 minutes ago
kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)

No, it's related to antisemitism.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Weird how he’s been in public office for 45 years, yet the first claims of antisemitism have been in the past 5 years or so..

comment by Mons (U21799)

posted on 22/11/19

If you think that making everything free is an actual solution you are severely mistaken and just plain dumb. how it fack is that sustainable.

corbyn will kill industry , increase unemployment, dumb people will vote for him and kids will vote becuase they will think they have to work less.

also, free childcare for over 2 year olds? child care is expensive becuase people are giving up thei rmost precious things m their children to the care of strangers so they can go to work and provide for them.

who is going to pay for the huge discrepancy from on avg 600 per month per child to free ? and who is going to pay for it/ the quality of care will plummett and the only people forced to do it are low income families who wont need it anyway cuz corbyn will pay them for doing nothing anyway.

id love free childcare but its not sustainable and i dont want the quality of private childcare to go down. plus if i did have that them our household income goes over 80k so corbyn will increase my tax to pay for druggie allan and alice who dont want to work for a living

posted on 22/11/19

Wiston

How do you feel about this?

1. In October 1936, Jeremy Corbyn’s mother participated in the battle of Cable Street in defence of British Jews after British fascists had staged an assault on the area. Corbyn was raised in a household passionately opposed to antisemitism in all its forms.

2. In 23rd April 1977, Corbyn organised a counter-demonstration to protect Wood Green from a neo-naaaaazi march through the district. The area had a significant Jewish population.

3. On 7 November 1990, Corbyn signed a motion condemning the rise of antisemitism in the UK.

4. In 2002 Jeremy Corbyn led a clean-up and vigil at Finsbury Park Synagogue which had been vandalised in an anti-Semitic attack.

5. On 30 April 2002, Corbyn tabled a motion in the House of Commons condemning an anti-Semitic attack on a London Synagogue.

6. On 26 November 2003, Jeremy Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion condemning terrorist attacks on two synagogues.

7. In February 2009, Jeremy Corbyn signed a parliamentary motion condemning a fascist for establishing a website to host antisemitic materials.

8. On 24th March 2009, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion praising British Jews who resisted the Holocaust by risking their lives to save potential victims.

9. Nine years ago, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion praising “Jewish News”for its pioneering investigation into the spread of antisemitism on Facebook.

10. On 9 February 2010, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion calling for an investigation into Facebook and its failure to prevent the spread of antisemitic materials on its site.

11. On 27 October 2010, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion praising the late Israeli Prime Minister for pursuing a two state solution to the Israel/Palestine question.

12. On 13 June 2012, Corbyn sponsored and signed a motion condemning the BBC for cutting a Jewish Community television programme from its schedule.

13. 1 October 2013, Corbyn appeared on the BBC to defend Ralph Miliband against vile antisemitic attacks by the UK press.

14. Five years ago Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion condemning antisemitism in sport.

15. On 1 March 2013, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion condemning and expressing concern at growing levels of antisemitism in European football.

16. On 9 January 2014, Jeremy Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion praising Holocaust education programs that had taken 20,000 British students to Auschwitz.

17. On 22 June 2015, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion expressing concern at the neo-naaazi march being planned for an area of London with a significant Jewish population.

18. On 9 October 2016, Corbyn, close to tears,
commemorated the 1936 Battle of Cable Street and recalled the role his mother played in defending London’s Jewish community.

19. On 3 December 2016, Corbyn made a visit to Terezin Concentration Camp where Jewish people were murdered by the Naaazis. It was Jeremy’s third visit to such a camp, all of which were largely unreported in the most read UK papers.
20. Last year, a widely-endorsed 2018 academic report found ninety-five serious reporting failures in the reporting of the Labour antisemitism story with the worst offenders The Sun, the Mail & the BBC.

21. On 28 February 2016, five months after becoming leader, Jeremy Corbyn appointed Baroness Royall to investigate antisemitism at Oxford University Labour Club.

22. On 27 April 2016 Corbyn suspended an MP pending an investigation into antisemitism.

23. A day later, Corbyn suspended the three times Mayor of London after complaints of antisemitic comments.

24. On 29 April 2016, Corbyn launched an inquiry into the prevalence of antisemitism in the Labour Party. In spite of later changes in how the inquiry was reported, it was initially praised by Jewish community organisations.

25. In Corbyn’s first seven months as leader of the Labour Party, just ten complaints were received about antisemitism. 90% of those were suspended from the Labour Party within 24 hours.

26. In September 2017, Corbyn backed a motion at Labour’s annual conference introducing a new set of rules regarding antisemitism.

27. In the six months that followed the introduction of the new code of conduct, to March 2018, 94% of the fifty-four people accused of antisemitism remained suspended or barred from Labour Party membership. Three of the fifty-four were exonerated.

28. When Jennie Formby became general secretary of the party last year, she appointed a highly-qualified in-house Counsel, as recommended in the Chakrabarti Report.

29. In 2018, Labour almost doubled the size of its staff team handling investigations and dispute processes.

30. Last year, to speed up the handling of antisemitism cases, smaller panels of 3-5 NEC members were established to enable cases to be heard more quickly.

31. Since 2018, every complaint made about antisemitism is allocated its own independent specialist barrister to ensure due process is followed.

32. The entire backlog of cases outstanding upon Jennie Formby becoming General Secretary of the Labour Party was cleared within 6 months of Jennie taking up her post.

33. Since September 2018, Labour has doubled the size of its National Constitutional Committee (NCC) – its senior disciplinary panel – from 11 to 25 members to enable it to process cases more quickly.

34. Under Formby and Labour’s left-run NEC, NCC arranged elections at short notice to ensure the NCC reached its new full capacity without delay.

35. Since later 2018, the NCC routinely convenes a greater number of hearing panels to allow cases to be heard and finalised without delay.

36. In 2018, the NEC established a ‘Procedures Working Group’ to lead reforms in the way disciplinary cases are handled.

37. The NEC adopted the IHRA working definition of antisemitism and all eleven examples of antisemitism attached to it.

38. A rule change agreed at Conference in 2018 means that all serious complaints, including antisemitism, are dealt with nationally to ensure consistency.

39. Last year, Jennie Formby wrote to the admins and moderators of Facebook groups about how they can effectively moderate online spaces and requested that any discriminatory content be reported to the Labour Party for investigation.

40. Since last year, no one outside Labour’s Governance and Legal Unit can be involved in decision-making on antisemitism investigations. This independence allows decisions free from political influence to be taken.

posted on 22/11/19

comment by gratedbean (U4885)
posted 44 seconds ago
comment by Winston (U16525)
posted 3 minutes ago
kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)

No, it's related to antisemitism.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Weird how he’s been in public office for 45 years, yet the first claims of antisemitism have been in the past 5 years or so..
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Not at all - when you become leader of your party, and you effect the direction of that party, you face far greater scrutiny.

If you're trying to imply that this is fiction created by the media then you really need to step back and research the matter properly.

comment by Mons (U21799)

posted on 22/11/19

comment by Scruttocks (U19684)
posted 22 minutes ago
**Copy and Paste**
If your reason for not backing Jeremy Corbyn is because you believe the media slander...

1. In October 1936, Jeremy Corbyn’s mother participated in the battle of Cable Street in defence of British Jews after British fascists had staged an assault on the area. Corbyn was raised in a household passionately opposed to antisemitism in all its forms.

2. In 23rd April 1977, Corbyn organised a counter-demonstration to protect Wood Green from a neo-naaaaazi march through the district. The area had a significant Jewish population.

3. On 7 November 1990, Corbyn signed a motion condemning the rise of antisemitism in the UK.

4. In 2002 Jeremy Corbyn led a clean-up and vigil at Finsbury Park Synagogue which had been vandalised in an anti-Semitic attack.

5. On 30 April 2002, Corbyn tabled a motion in the House of Commons condemning an anti-Semitic attack on a London Synagogue.

6. On 26 November 2003, Jeremy Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion condemning terrorist attacks on two synagogues.

7. In February 2009, Jeremy Corbyn signed a parliamentary motion condemning a fascist for establishing a website to host antisemitic materials.

8. On 24th March 2009, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion praising British Jews who resisted the Holocaust by risking their lives to save potential victims.

9. Nine years ago, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion praising “Jewish News”for its pioneering investigation into the spread of antisemitism on Facebook.

10. On 9 February 2010, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion calling for an investigation into Facebook and its failure to prevent the spread of antisemitic materials on its site.

11. On 27 October 2010, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion praising the late Israeli Prime Minister for pursuing a two state solution to the Israel/Palestine question.

12. On 13 June 2012, Corbyn sponsored and signed a motion condemning the BBC for cutting a Jewish Community television programme from its schedule.

13. 1 October 2013, Corbyn appeared on the BBC to defend Ralph Miliband against vile antisemitic attacks by the UK press.

14. Five years ago Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion condemning antisemitism in sport.

15. On 1 March 2013, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion condemning and expressing concern at growing levels of antisemitism in European football.

16. On 9 January 2014, Jeremy Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion praising Holocaust education programs that had taken 20,000 British students to Auschwitz.

17. On 22 June 2015, Corbyn signed a Parliamentary motion expressing concern at the neo-naaazi march being planned for an area of London with a significant Jewish population.

18. On 9 October 2016, Corbyn, close to tears,
commemorated the 1936 Battle of Cable Street and recalled the role his mother played in defending London’s Jewish community.

19. On 3 December 2016, Corbyn made a visit to Terezin Concentration Camp where Jewish people were murdered by the Naaazis. It was Jeremy’s third visit to such a camp, all of which were largely unreported in the most read UK papers.
20. Last year, a widely-endorsed 2018 academic report found ninety-five serious reporting failures in the reporting of the Labour antisemitism story with the worst offenders The Sun, the Mail & the BBC.

21. On 28 February 2016, five months after becoming leader, Jeremy Corbyn appointed Baroness Royall to investigate antisemitism at Oxford University Labour Club.

22. On 27 April 2016 Corbyn suspended an MP pending an investigation into antisemitism.

23. A day later, Corbyn suspended the three times Mayor of London after complaints of antisemitic comments.

24. On 29 April 2016, Corbyn launched an inquiry into the prevalence of antisemitism in the Labour Party. In spite of later changes in how the inquiry was reported, it was initially praised by Jewish community organisations.

25. In Corbyn’s first seven months as leader of the Labour Party, just ten complaints were received about antisemitism. 90% of those were suspended from the Labour Party within 24 hours.

26. In September 2017, Corbyn backed a motion at Labour’s annual conference introducing a new set of rules regarding antisemitism.

27. In the six months that followed the introduction of the new code of conduct, to March 2018, 94% of the fifty-four people accused of antisemitism remained suspended or barred from Labour Party membership. Three of the fifty-four were exonerated.

28. When Jennie Formby became general secretary of the party last year, she appointed a highly-qualified in-house Counsel, as recommended in the Chakrabarti Report.

29. In 2018, Labour almost doubled the size of its staff team handling investigations and dispute processes.

30. Last year, to speed up the handling of antisemitism cases, smaller panels of 3-5 NEC members were established to enable cases to be heard more quickly.

31. Since 2018, every complaint made about antisemitism is allocated its own independent specialist barrister to ensure due process is followed.

32. The entire backlog of cases outstanding upon Jennie Formby becoming General Secretary of the Labour Party was cleared within 6 months of Jennie taking up her post.

33. Since September 2018, Labour has doubled the size of its National Constitutional Committee (NCC) – its senior disciplinary panel – from 11 to 25 members to enable it to process cases more quickly.

34. Under Formby and Labour’s left-run NEC, NCC arranged elections at short notice to ensure the NCC reached its new full capacity without delay.

35. Since later 2018, the NCC routinely convenes a greater number of hearing panels to allow cases to be heard and finalised without delay.

36. In 2018, the NEC established a ‘Procedures Working Group’ to lead reforms in the way disciplinary cases are handled.

37. The NEC adopted the IHRA working definition of antisemitism and all eleven examples of antisemitism attached to it.

38. A rule change agreed at Conference in 2018 means that all serious complaints, including antisemitism, are dealt with nationally to ensure consistency.

39. Last year, Jennie Formby wrote to the admins and moderators of Facebook groups about how they can effectively moderate online spaces and requested that any discriminatory content be reported to the Labour Party for investigation.

40. Since last year, no one outside Labour’s Governance and Legal Unit can be involved in decision-making on antisemitism investigations. This independence allows decisions free from political influence to be taken.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
identity politics

the worst kind

look at his policys and his policys only

posted on 22/11/19

Scruttocks (U19684)

Why ask me that?

I suggest you re-read what I wrote because it seems that you've wasted an awful lot of time.

posted on 22/11/19

comment by Winston (U16525)
posted 8 minutes ago
kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)

No, it's related to antisemitism.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Can you show me JC being anti semitic, or tanglible example sof it under his labour party?

posted on 22/11/19

comment by MTC 2.0 (U21799)
posted 1 minute ago
If you think that making everything free is an actual solution you are severely mistaken and just plain dumb. how it fack is that sustainable.

corbyn will kill industry , increase unemployment, dumb people will vote for him and kids will vote becuase they will think they have to work less.

also, free childcare for over 2 year olds? child care is expensive becuase people are giving up thei rmost precious things m their children to the care of strangers so they can go to work and provide for them.

who is going to pay for the huge discrepancy from on avg 600 per month per child to free ? and who is going to pay for it/ the quality of care will plummett and the only people forced to do it are low income families who wont need it anyway cuz corbyn will pay them for doing nothing anyway.

id love free childcare but its not sustainable and i dont want the quality of private childcare to go down. plus if i did have that them our household income goes over 80k so corbyn will increase my tax to pay for druggie allan and alice who dont want to work for a living


----------------------------------------------------------------------
How is it not sustainable? Lots of posters saying this. Labour have costed it. Show me figures to disapprove it?

To put these spending plans into context it’s less than what the French and Swedish government are spending.

posted on 22/11/19

“plus if i did have that them our household income goes over 80k so corbyn will increase my tax to pay for druggie allan and alice who dont want to work for a living“

🤦‍♂️

posted on 22/11/19

I've asked this question on here multiple times in th epast 6 months and not one person has ever shown me actual tangible evidence of JC, or his partybeing antisemitic bar Labour criticizing isreal.

Criticizing Israel is not anti semetic, they're a disgusting nation.

comment by Mons (U21799)

posted on 22/11/19

comment by Chelsea1 (U22265)
posted 16 seconds ago
comment by MTC 2.0 (U21799)
posted 1 minute ago
If you think that making everything free is an actual solution you are severely mistaken and just plain dumb. how it fack is that sustainable.

corbyn will kill industry , increase unemployment, dumb people will vote for him and kids will vote becuase they will think they have to work less.

also, free childcare for over 2 year olds? child care is expensive becuase people are giving up thei rmost precious things m their children to the care of strangers so they can go to work and provide for them.

who is going to pay for the huge discrepancy from on avg 600 per month per child to free ? and who is going to pay for it/ the quality of care will plummett and the only people forced to do it are low income families who wont need it anyway cuz corbyn will pay them for doing nothing anyway.

id love free childcare but its not sustainable and i dont want the quality of private childcare to go down. plus if i did have that them our household income goes over 80k so corbyn will increase my tax to pay for druggie allan and alice who dont want to work for a living


----------------------------------------------------------------------
How is it not sustainable? Lots of posters saying this. Labour have costed it. Show me figures to disapprove it?

To put these spending plans into context it’s less than what the French and Swedish government are spending.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
wahl your opinion doesnt count

posted on 22/11/19

comment by kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)
posted 21 minutes ago
Do you Britts really want more of the Tories, like what will actually change if you vote them in?

When people at the highest levels of your national services are constanly calling out the damage Tory cuts have done to them, how can anyone consider them to be the ones to fix problems.

20'000 police they say! They cut 22'000...
----------------------------------------------------------------------
You Britts!!!

Good man knee doing your piece for Anglo Ireland relations

posted on 22/11/19

comment by Winston (U16525)
posted 4 minutes ago
comment by gratedbean (U4885)
posted 44 seconds ago
comment by Winston (U16525)
posted 3 minutes ago
kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)

No, it's related to antisemitism.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Weird how he’s been in public office for 45 years, yet the first claims of antisemitism have been in the past 5 years or so..
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Not at all - when you become leader of your party, and you effect the direction of that party, you face far greater scrutiny.

If you're trying to imply that this is fiction created by the media then you really need to step back and research the matter properly.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

What’s your research?

posted on 22/11/19

comment by MTC 2.0 (U21799)
posted 6 seconds ago
comment by Chelsea1 (U22265)
posted 16 seconds ago
comment by MTC 2.0 (U21799)
posted 1 minute ago
If you think that making everything free is an actual solution you are severely mistaken and just plain dumb. how it fack is that sustainable.

corbyn will kill industry , increase unemployment, dumb people will vote for him and kids will vote becuase they will think they have to work less.

also, free childcare for over 2 year olds? child care is expensive becuase people are giving up thei rmost precious things m their children to the care of strangers so they can go to work and provide for them.

who is going to pay for the huge discrepancy from on avg 600 per month per child to free ? and who is going to pay for it/ the quality of care will plummett and the only people forced to do it are low income families who wont need it anyway cuz corbyn will pay them for doing nothing anyway.

id love free childcare but its not sustainable and i dont want the quality of private childcare to go down. plus if i did have that them our household income goes over 80k so corbyn will increase my tax to pay for druggie allan and alice who dont want to work for a living


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How is it not sustainable? Lots of posters saying this. Labour have costed it. Show me figures to disapprove it?

To put these spending plans into context it’s less than what the French and Swedish government are spending.
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wahl your opinion doesnt count
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What?

posted on 22/11/19

comment by kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)
posted 1 minute ago
comment by Winston (U16525)
posted 8 minutes ago
kneerash-23 Cara Gold (U6876)

No, it's related to antisemitism.
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Can you show me JC being anti semitic, or tanglible example sof it under his labour party?
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Why?

I'm not making the accusation - I'm just advising you why some parts of the population may not necessarily regarding him as a better person.

I'm not getting into a debate about whether those views are valid, but the strength of feeling in parts of the Jewish community about this would perhaps be your best place to start in trying to understand it.

posted on 22/11/19

comment by Winston (U16525)
posted 17 seconds ago
Scruttocks (U19684)

Why ask me that?

I suggest you re-read what I wrote because it seems that you've wasted an awful lot of time.
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It took all of 10 seconds to copy and paste that don't worry

I believed you were calling Corbyn anti Semitic, apologies if that was a mix up.

Either way whoever it was, it would be great if they could reply regarding the above

Corbyn may be a lot of things but he's not remotely anti Semitic. In fact he's one of those irritating people who accepts pretty much every culture and religion going, no matter how daft religion actually is...

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