Khan is a 'self-serving slimeball' to the extent Corbyn is a working-class hero, Boris is charming, Trump is principled, Nige is straightforward and Bernie Sanders is a crypto-communist. Incidentally, all of them retained speechwriters and repeated themselves frequently on air: a reasonable communications strategy appropriate for the medium, where one can face one or both of the two significant obstacles to one's message: hostile interlocutor; short attention spans in the audience. Moreover, running for London Mayor and jumping behind the losing side of a leadership contest -- with the process, scrutiny and public engagement this entails -- is a funny way of making a 'quick buck' for a qualified lawyer, just sayin'.
As a person who thinks most lawyers are slimeballs not exactly something I can ascribe to.
Djack said:To Khan's credit: he did face the media; didn't hide in toilets; answered claims and criticisms against him directly; defined himself and his stance on issues publicly; did not avoid debates; and canvassed broadly, including in majority conservative areas. Yes, there will be recurring attack themes against Corbyn; just as there will be common attack themes against Smith. If neither candidate had to face up to anything uncomfortable, it'd have been a pointless exercise. Indeed, if there was nothing uncomfortable for Corbyn to face up to, and he commanded the confidence of his own party, we wouldn't be in this mess to begin with.
And in this media he trashed Corbyn at every opportunity while surfing the wave of Labour support generated undisputedly by the very man he loathes. The difference of course is that he was given air time. Corbyn has been blacked out where possible until his tie is loose at an event, or he has a prior engagement and so must hate the queen. Its all narrative.
DJack said:That's just wishful thinking.
The days of amateur demagogues and mob rule aren't about to return any time soon, either. It's a full-time, demanding job; and although professional, academic and life experience outside politics is admirable and valuable, experience, competency and communication skills in the job are not optional -- it's called public office for a reason, and why hopefuls for MP candidacy are often advised to stand for local councils first, for example.
I now think of it as a system of how much can we get away with without rioting... What can we take and get away with it. Its actually a very rational thought that's backed with a plethora of evidence relating to political insouciance.
DJack said:it is through representatives with the above qualities, that can take public office, you obtain lasting change in a representative democracy, safeguarded against regression. Waving placards, taking part in petty vandalism, ranting on social media or, in extreme cases, killing MPs, acts of war and terrorism can only take one so far.
Depends on conviction really and am quite intrigued as to the Jo Cox reference... Its purpose or point?
DJack said:, sir, you've discovered organised societies and markets, though you seem to be missing a few arrows on your conceptual diagram! It's more grey than that: concentrated voting, value and group identification and consumer behaviour can flip the power pyramid any which way, even under neoliberal norms you seem to rail against often enough. However, what democracy is ought to be tomorrow doesn't free you from the historical effects of bad choices (as you perceive anyway) by other people today, nor swallowing their consequences in the system as it stands. This negative effect of democratic freedom cannot be eliminated regardless of the form of democracy you adopt or how closely representative it is.
I'm going to have to disagree, that's not organised markets. A system that you called organised markets that operates like : Corporations>Government>People is not a democratic system. I bet you must by default agree with Citizens United for example.
The system should be: People>Government>Corporations... Without the people and their will... The other two would be damned.
DJack said:fact, it's not the 'establishment' that needs dismantling or defending as such, but rather the opposite extreme case of people being fundamentally rational and able to coexist in social groups without superstructures of state and industry, whilst reaping the full benefits of the two, that requires proving and backing with empirical evidence. (For that's where most bottom-up arguments find their root.) Or putting the problem more succinctly: an unintended consequence for every libertarian; a dictator for every populist.
So rational thought... Needs dismantling? The rest of this quote is just obfuscation and an enigma.
DJack said:you think creative destruction, protest and the vague 'voice of the people' is a viable solution that can be put into a working social model and policies; I wish the very best of luck to you in your noble endeavour.
Except for the fact that almost every major western powerhouse is built on that vague voice that you spit on.
Corbyn is, of course, a dedicated politician who has never had a job outside of politics whereas Smith has had a successful career outside politics, as has Khan for that matter. Funny how these things work.
I have fundamental disagreements with lawyers in the best of days. Morality with most in the legal profession seems to be rock bottom or below.
Depends how much you are prepared to consider for Smith on what narrates success. A lobbyist isn't someone I think is prepared to uphold values when being paid to press for what their master wishes.
Raoh makes exceptions for 'nice guys'.![]()
Nice guys... You'll have to explain that one further or are you going down the road again?