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Thread: The 'Tea-Party' movement went a bit hissy spit today in the US, using the 'N' word.

  1. #11
    Politics.ie Regular liamfoley's Avatar
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    True C, but it is on all sides and is not confined to the USA

  2. #12
    Politics.ie Member Oreo Livermore's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Christine Murray View Post
    Regular people are being wound up with buzz-words I reckon and the descent into
    mob-rule looks a pinky away, just wondering who gets to raise the pinky whilst
    enjoying their cuppa?

    I agree with you, it is regular people who are angry. Rednecks from Dixie don't bother their bollox flying to DC to call Barney Frank a faggot. They probably have plenty of faggots to shout at by just sticking their noggin out the window.

    This could well descend into mob riots. Everybody is broke and these fools want the Irish Health care system to be hoisted on us.

    No thanks, keep it


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  3. #13
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    the universities and schools were about Liberty and attracted the best speakers
    from all over the world , now it's huge donations (via Baptists) to Blair, or barbie
    doll Palins lisping horseshyte.

    Creationism is vying with doomsday scenarios and as I said its tawdry, a polarised
    political system more interested in funding than in actual real debate- gosh it is
    like here (no wonder so many of my friends just gave up and left to go to Europe!!)

  4. #14
    Politics.ie Regular liamfoley's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Christine Murray View Post
    the universities and schools were about Liberty and attracted the best speakers
    from all over the world , now it's huge donations (via Baptists) to Blair, or barbie
    doll Palins lisping horseshyte.

    Creationism is vying with doomsday scenarios and as I said its tawdry, a polarised
    political system more interested in funding than in actual real debate- gosh it is
    like here (no wonder so many of my friends just gave up and left to go to Europe!!)
    Now I have no idea what you are talking about. I am a graduate of a private (religiously sponsored) university and a state university and I have never seen any of that. It is easy to emphasize fringe elements while forgetting that most people do not reside on the fringes.

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    did you not know that the Tony Blair Faith Foundation is housed in Princeton and
    minting it via huge right-wing religious donations?

    like where's the poets and artists @Liam ?

    sure maybe politics will go the third way too (into religious facsimile)

    >> http://article.wn.com/view/2010/03/1...ch_faith_offe/

  6. #16
    Politics.ie Regular liamfoley's Avatar
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    How many universities do you think there are in the USA?
    Do you think it would be fair to censor Blair?

  7. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by liamfoley View Post
    How many universities do you think there are in the USA?
    Do you think it would be fair to censor Blair?
    well he has an audience, obviously, doesn't he - and one that people part with billions
    to hear his message, interestingly he hasn't really said much save that he thinks
    that "religion is the new politics"

    but it keeps him rolling in it and that makes everyone happy!!

  8. #18
    Politics.ie Regular cyberianpan's Avatar
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    The Tea Party are also ignorant of reality

    The Misinformed Tea Party Movement - Forbes.com

    cYp
    "Yawn , am I alive yet ?"

  9. #19
    Politics.ie Regular liamfoley's Avatar
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    Cyb, the Teaparty movement is very broad I wouldn't make sweeping statements about them with confidence.

  10. #20
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    Gruppe Krisis have a lot of nuttiness but their "Manifesto Against Labour" contains a a very good analysis of both the "Sarah Pallin" and the "Hugo Chavez/Gerry Adams" wings of Capitalism...

    2. The neo-liberal apartheid society

    Should the successful sale of the commodity "labour power" become the exception instead of the rule, a society devoted to the irrational abstraction of labour is inevitably doomed to develop a tendency for social apartheid. All factions of the comprehensive all-parties consensus on labour, so to say the labour-camp, on the quiet accepted this logic long ago and even took over a strictly supporting role. There is no controversy on whether ever increasing sections of the population shall be pushed to the margin and shall be excluded from social participation; there is only controversy on how this social selection is to be pushed through.

    The neo-liberal faction trustfully leaves this dirty social-Darwinist business to the "invisible hand" of the markets. This conception is utilised to justify the dismantling of the welfare state, ostracising those who can no longer keep abreast in the rat race of competition. Only those who belong to the smirking brotherhood of globalisation winners are awarded the quality of being a human. It goes without saying that the capitalist end-in-itself may claim any natural resources of the planet. When they can no longer be profitably mobilised, they have to lie fallow even if entire populations go hungry.

    The police, salvation sects, the Mafia, and charity organisations become responsible for that annoying human litter. In the USA and most of the central European countries, more people are imprisoned than in any average military dictatorship. In Latin America, day after day an ever-larger number of street urchins and other poor are hunted down by free enterprise death-squads than dissidents were killed during the worst periods of political repression. There is only one social function left for the ostracised: to be the warning example. Their fate is meant to goad on those who still participate in the rat race of fighting for the leftovers. And even the losers have to be kept in hectic moving so that they don't hit on the idea to of rebelling against the outrageous impositions they face.

    Nevertheless, even at the price of self-annihilation, for most people the brave new world of the totalitarian market economy will only provide for a live in shadow as shadow-humans in a "shady" economy. As low-wage-slaves and democratic serfs of the "service society, they will have to fawn on the well-off winners of globalisation. The modern "working poor" may shine the shoes of the last businessmen of the dying labour society, may sell contaminated hamburgers to them, or may join the Security Corps to guard their shopping malls. Those who left behind their brain on the coat rack may dream of working their way up to the position of a service industry millionaire.

    In Anglo-Saxon countries this horror scenario is reality meanwhile as it is in Third World countries and Eastern Europe; and Euroland is determined to catch up in rapid strides. The relevant financial papers make no secret of how they imagine the future of labour. The children in Third World countries who wash windscreens at polluted crossroads are depicted as the shining example of "entrepreneurial initiative" and shall serve as a role model for the jobless in the respective local "service desert". "The role model for the future is the individual as the entrepreneur of his own labour power, being provident and solely responsible for all his own life" says the "Commission on future social questions of the free states of Bavaria and Saxony". In addition: "There will be stronger demand for ordinary person-related services, if the services rendered become cheaper, i.e. if the "service provider" will earn lower wages". In a society of human "self-respect", such a statement would trigger off social revolt. However, in a world of domesticated workhorses, it will only engender a helpless nod.

    Manifesto against Labour - Gruppe Krisis

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