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Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent 13:06 - Oct 6 with 6604 viewsThe_Flashing_Smile

For those who support the Tories it ticked every box, had some well-timed jabs at Labour, and was funny in several places. He really is a good speaker if nothing else.

Trust the process. Trust Phil.

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Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 17:26 - Oct 6 with 1485 viewsMullet

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 13:19 - Oct 6 by Illinoisblue

He’s a conniving liar not fit for any kind of office, but sure.


Pricks and racists love it so
The bullshlt world of their BoJo innit

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2
Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 17:28 - Oct 6 with 1475 viewsRyorry

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 17:16 - Oct 6 by Parsley

He's preaching to the converted, doesn't make it a great speech


It's a terrible speech even for most tories themselves if it helps him stay in power, as eventually the general state of the whole country will come back to bite them on the bum.

At the end of the day, they're human beings too (just about) whose families won't be able to remain completely shielded from society generally, and who won't enjoy living in a country where nothing works & there's civil unrest (or worse).

Poll: Why can't/don't we protest like the French do? 🤔

0
Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 17:46 - Oct 6 with 1431 viewsEireannach_gorm

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 13:41 - Oct 6 by ElderGrizzly

Sycophants. Stockholm Syndrome? Which is it?



"His ability to convey things in a totally new way is what people like"
1
Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 18:07 - Oct 6 with 1396 viewsSwansea_Blue

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 17:16 - Oct 6 by Parsley

He's preaching to the converted, doesn't make it a great speech


He's a good entertainer as long as you don't think about what he says or care if there's any truth in it. I've seen him perform live 'at Conference' (don't ask!) when he was London Mayor and it was quite frightening the adoration he had in the party even then. It was the biggest draw of the week with pretty much the whole conference fawning over him. In hindsight you probably could have guessed then that he was destined to end up in the top job despite everyone knowing he's utterly unsuited to a serious role involving any responsibility.

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Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 20:54 - Oct 6 with 1287 viewsHARRY10

Actually it was a bad as you can get. He could have recited the shipping forecast in Sentinelese fto the assemble dbigots for all the cared. They would have calpped like seals after 10 cans of Red Bull washed down with a half dozen double espressos.

The audience he should have been addressing was those NOT in the hall - voters at home, the media here and abroad and anyone else outside of the country who might watch it.

From the right leaning press to right leaning commentators, it has been panned - regarded as an embarrassing failure.

This has been echoed by such diverse figures as the CBI and various union leaders. CEO's of large businesses down to the small pig farmer.

If the idea was to make him look like a clueless cnt, then yes, it achieved that aim. But to be met with so much universal ridicule and contempt does take some doing. Mind you he has had so much practice at that, he is now quite a dab hand at appearing as twt
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Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent. on 21:05 - Oct 6 with 1278 viewsHARRY10

One thing you can say about the bloated bullshtter - he never fails to pad out his waffle with obvious lies

1 “After years of stagnation — more than a decade — wages are going up, faster than before the pandemic began.”

The reality:

The respected Institute for Fiscal Studies says wages are rising no faster than over recent years. Furthermore — while pay is up by about 4 per cent — inflation is above 3 per cent, so there is no “significant wage growth”.

2. We will make this country an even more attractive destination for foreign direct investment. We are already the number one.”

The reality:

Last month’s UN World Investment Report said foreign investment into the UK had “declined for the second year in a row” — leaving the UK the 16th largest recipient, down “five positions”.

3. “It was not the government that made the wonder drug. It was capitalism that ensured that we had a vaccine in less than a year.”

The reality:

The AstraZeneca jab was made by scientists at Oxford University — through a programme that was overwhelmingly funded by taxpayers and charities, with less than 2 per cent from private funding.

4. “We are going to use our Brexit freedoms to do things differently .... we have seen off the European Super League and protected grassroots football. We are doing at least eight freeports.”

The reality:

The Super League had nothing to do with the EU or Brexit — it was a private venture — while freeports were entirely possible as an EU member. In fact, the UK used to have seven.

5. “We have done 68 free trade deals.”

The reality:

All but two are “rollovers” of deals that the UK already enjoyed as an EU member. The Japan deal added no significant extra, trade experts found — while the agreement with the EU itself is vastly inferior, causing a massive slump in exports.

6. “This party that has looked after the NHS for most of its history should be the one to rise to the challenge — 48 new hospitals.”

The reality:

Many of the 48 promised are new units at existing hospitals, or major refurbishments of them, while others are rebuilds of community hospitals. In August, it was revealed that NHS bosses had been ordered to describe all such projects as “a new hospital”.

7.“When I stood on the steps of Downing Street, I promised to fix this [social care] crisis. This government .... is going to get social care done.”

The reality:

In that speech, in July 2019, the prime minister said he already had “a clear plan we have prepared”. The plan took two years to emerge — and the vast majority of new funding will go to the NHS, not social care

8. Labour “decided to oppose step four of the roadmap in July”, which would have meant the UK “would still be in lockdown”.

The reality:

Labour supported the lifting of social distancing restrictions — the key aspect of step four — reserving its criticism for ending the requirement to wear masks in crowded indoor settings and the lifting of work-from-home guidance.

The Independent 6/10/21
6
Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 07:27 - Oct 7 with 1195 viewstractordownsouth

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 13:41 - Oct 6 by ElderGrizzly

Sycophants. Stockholm Syndrome? Which is it?



Lord Frost is the epitome of private school mediocrity promoted way above its station.

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2
Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 07:35 - Oct 7 with 1191 viewstractordownsouth

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 14:50 - Oct 6 by Darth_Koont

High on platitudes, meaningless soundbites and 100% genuine imitation sincerity. From a vacuous chancer who can’t be trusted to stick to his word or put the interests of the country ahead of his own ambitions.

But enough about Starmer, how did Boris’s speech compare?


Not well by the looks of things


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3
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Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent (n/t) on 07:48 - Oct 7 with 1175 viewstractordownsouth

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 14:50 - Oct 6 by Darth_Koont

High on platitudes, meaningless soundbites and 100% genuine imitation sincerity. From a vacuous chancer who can’t be trusted to stick to his word or put the interests of the country ahead of his own ambitions.

But enough about Starmer, how did Boris’s speech compare?


[Post edited 7 Oct 2021 7:48]

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Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 07:57 - Oct 7 with 1153 viewshandslikeplates

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 13:42 - Oct 6 by Timefliesbyintheblue

And if better alternatives are not made available before the next General Election he will be voted in for a third time. It is sad, that so many on here do not seem to grasp that fact and just continue day after day with the same rhetoric against the government and all those that voted for it.
Call us/them as many names as you like and accuse us/them of all sorts of misdemeanors, but your rhetoric will count for nowt. We need credible opposition - at the moment it does not exist.


I actually agree with you in terms of opposition, there no alternative at the moment with any credibility. I’ve never voted Conservative, and probably never will, but the party I’ve supported all my life is a shambles, it will never have a better opportunity to highlight poor decisions and attitudes, it frustrates the hell out of me that we don’t have direction or leadership at the moment.
1
Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent. on 08:26 - Oct 7 with 1123 viewsThe_Flashing_Smile

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent. on 21:05 - Oct 6 by HARRY10

One thing you can say about the bloated bullshtter - he never fails to pad out his waffle with obvious lies

1 “After years of stagnation — more than a decade — wages are going up, faster than before the pandemic began.”

The reality:

The respected Institute for Fiscal Studies says wages are rising no faster than over recent years. Furthermore — while pay is up by about 4 per cent — inflation is above 3 per cent, so there is no “significant wage growth”.

2. We will make this country an even more attractive destination for foreign direct investment. We are already the number one.”

The reality:

Last month’s UN World Investment Report said foreign investment into the UK had “declined for the second year in a row” — leaving the UK the 16th largest recipient, down “five positions”.

3. “It was not the government that made the wonder drug. It was capitalism that ensured that we had a vaccine in less than a year.”

The reality:

The AstraZeneca jab was made by scientists at Oxford University — through a programme that was overwhelmingly funded by taxpayers and charities, with less than 2 per cent from private funding.

4. “We are going to use our Brexit freedoms to do things differently .... we have seen off the European Super League and protected grassroots football. We are doing at least eight freeports.”

The reality:

The Super League had nothing to do with the EU or Brexit — it was a private venture — while freeports were entirely possible as an EU member. In fact, the UK used to have seven.

5. “We have done 68 free trade deals.”

The reality:

All but two are “rollovers” of deals that the UK already enjoyed as an EU member. The Japan deal added no significant extra, trade experts found — while the agreement with the EU itself is vastly inferior, causing a massive slump in exports.

6. “This party that has looked after the NHS for most of its history should be the one to rise to the challenge — 48 new hospitals.”

The reality:

Many of the 48 promised are new units at existing hospitals, or major refurbishments of them, while others are rebuilds of community hospitals. In August, it was revealed that NHS bosses had been ordered to describe all such projects as “a new hospital”.

7.“When I stood on the steps of Downing Street, I promised to fix this [social care] crisis. This government .... is going to get social care done.”

The reality:

In that speech, in July 2019, the prime minister said he already had “a clear plan we have prepared”. The plan took two years to emerge — and the vast majority of new funding will go to the NHS, not social care

8. Labour “decided to oppose step four of the roadmap in July”, which would have meant the UK “would still be in lockdown”.

The reality:

Labour supported the lifting of social distancing restrictions — the key aspect of step four — reserving its criticism for ending the requirement to wear masks in crowded indoor settings and the lifting of work-from-home guidance.

The Independent 6/10/21


Thanks, good to have it all laid out like that.

Trust the process. Trust Phil.

0
Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 08:39 - Oct 7 with 1108 viewsSwansea_Blue

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 07:57 - Oct 7 by handslikeplates

I actually agree with you in terms of opposition, there no alternative at the moment with any credibility. I’ve never voted Conservative, and probably never will, but the party I’ve supported all my life is a shambles, it will never have a better opportunity to highlight poor decisions and attitudes, it frustrates the hell out of me that we don’t have direction or leadership at the moment.


They are ALL better alternatives. It's just that people are told they aren't and fall for it. Look at what the Tories are willfulling doing to both the country as a whole and to some of us in it and you'll see no other party with such destructive and callous policies. Nor such corrupt practices.

Even with all the infighting in Labour and the apparent disappearance of the Lib Dems and small vote shares of the Greens (although they had a storming by-election win recently turning over a massive Tory majority that nobody has spoken about), any of them would still be an improvement.

Quite right that it's frustrating that no other party seems willing to challenge them though. Anyone else would do better, but they don't seem able to tell us.

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4
Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 08:41 - Oct 7 with 1108 viewshype313

All mouth and no trousers.

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Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent. on 09:40 - Oct 7 with 1063 viewsmutters

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent. on 21:05 - Oct 6 by HARRY10

One thing you can say about the bloated bullshtter - he never fails to pad out his waffle with obvious lies

1 “After years of stagnation — more than a decade — wages are going up, faster than before the pandemic began.”

The reality:

The respected Institute for Fiscal Studies says wages are rising no faster than over recent years. Furthermore — while pay is up by about 4 per cent — inflation is above 3 per cent, so there is no “significant wage growth”.

2. We will make this country an even more attractive destination for foreign direct investment. We are already the number one.”

The reality:

Last month’s UN World Investment Report said foreign investment into the UK had “declined for the second year in a row” — leaving the UK the 16th largest recipient, down “five positions”.

3. “It was not the government that made the wonder drug. It was capitalism that ensured that we had a vaccine in less than a year.”

The reality:

The AstraZeneca jab was made by scientists at Oxford University — through a programme that was overwhelmingly funded by taxpayers and charities, with less than 2 per cent from private funding.

4. “We are going to use our Brexit freedoms to do things differently .... we have seen off the European Super League and protected grassroots football. We are doing at least eight freeports.”

The reality:

The Super League had nothing to do with the EU or Brexit — it was a private venture — while freeports were entirely possible as an EU member. In fact, the UK used to have seven.

5. “We have done 68 free trade deals.”

The reality:

All but two are “rollovers” of deals that the UK already enjoyed as an EU member. The Japan deal added no significant extra, trade experts found — while the agreement with the EU itself is vastly inferior, causing a massive slump in exports.

6. “This party that has looked after the NHS for most of its history should be the one to rise to the challenge — 48 new hospitals.”

The reality:

Many of the 48 promised are new units at existing hospitals, or major refurbishments of them, while others are rebuilds of community hospitals. In August, it was revealed that NHS bosses had been ordered to describe all such projects as “a new hospital”.

7.“When I stood on the steps of Downing Street, I promised to fix this [social care] crisis. This government .... is going to get social care done.”

The reality:

In that speech, in July 2019, the prime minister said he already had “a clear plan we have prepared”. The plan took two years to emerge — and the vast majority of new funding will go to the NHS, not social care

8. Labour “decided to oppose step four of the roadmap in July”, which would have meant the UK “would still be in lockdown”.

The reality:

Labour supported the lifting of social distancing restrictions — the key aspect of step four — reserving its criticism for ending the requirement to wear masks in crowded indoor settings and the lifting of work-from-home guidance.

The Independent 6/10/21


Harry, you share some good points at times but why do you always feel the need to include comments about people's size? Especially the Prime Minister?

Devalues your points as body-shaming just isn't the way forward in modern society. Do you think it makes your point more or less valid? Curious to know why you have an obsession with the PMs weight?

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Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 10:59 - Oct 7 with 996 viewsRyorry

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 08:41 - Oct 7 by hype313

All mouth and no trousers.


"Full of sound and fury signifying nothing".

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1
Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 12:48 - Oct 7 with 892 viewsHARRY10

The gut bucketed gobsh yte caught lying, again

"What's Labour's answer [to drug dealing] by the way? To decriminalise hard drugs apparently - to let the dealers off with a caution'

[o]"The suggestion that Labour has a policy to decriminalise hard drugs is not true. The party has confirmed that it does not support this.

We asked the Conservatives for the source of the prime minister's claim. They pointed us to an interview from last month in which Keir Starmer was asked about a scheme in Scotland to give people caught with Class A drugs a police warning. Scottish Labour supported this.

In the interview, the Labour leader said: "It is not unusual in any legal system for those caught with a small amount of cannabis not to be prosecuted... there is a world of difference between that and saying 'do you think the drugs laws should be scrapped?' - to which my answer is 'no'".

Asked whether he welcomed Scotland's decision, which was about Class A drugs and not cannabis, he said it was "probably the right thing to do" but was an "independent decision".


Where the problem lies (no pun)is not so much fatso lying, but it is symptomatic of how the right fills the idiot heads of the simple minded with misinformation.

Because the bloated buffoons words were in the public domain they have been challenged - though there it is no guarantee that righty thickos will take on board the truth. as is seen with all manner of nutjob guff about Covid vaccines they repeat.

No, the problem is we have little idea of the sh it these halfwits are taking onboard from crank websites. No idea what is in their heads when they go to vote or take to the streets.

All we do know is that we have a supine and useless lower house speaker in Parliament, and opposition parties without the guts to do anything about lies in Parliament, never mind in parts of the media. And no PR guff will address that, either.
[Post edited 7 Oct 2021 16:31]
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Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 12:48 - Oct 7 with 895 viewsmonytowbray

Can I borrow £100 Dollers, promise I’ll pay it back!

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Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 12:53 - Oct 7 with 883 viewsRyorry

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 10:59 - Oct 7 by Ryorry

"Full of sound and fury signifying nothing".


When I quoted that line (spoken by Macbeth) I'd forgotten the full speech and context which, when I looked it up just now, absolutely blew my mind with its relevance (not the first time Shakespeare's done that to millions of people!)

'Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow
Creeps in this petty pace from day to day
To the last syllable of recorded time.
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle.
Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.'

Poll: Why can't/don't we protest like the French do? 🤔

2
Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 13:15 - Oct 7 with 847 viewsThe_Flashing_Smile

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 12:48 - Oct 7 by monytowbray

Can I borrow £100 Dollers, promise I’ll pay it back!


Another one who's failed to read my post properly. Sigh.

Trust the process. Trust Phil.

0
Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent. on 15:01 - Oct 7 with 777 viewsblueislander

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent. on 08:26 - Oct 7 by The_Flashing_Smile

Thanks, good to have it all laid out like that.


Thanks to a copy and paste from the BBC News site.
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Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 17:26 - Oct 7 with 733 viewsHARRY10

Here is more on the Opinium polling from last night suggesting that voters preferred Sir Keir Starmer’s conference speech to Boris Johnson’s.

Opinium released the figures for their poll on the Starmer speech last week. This is how they compare with the figures for Johnson.

Agreed with what he had to say

Starmer

Agreed: 63%

Disagreed: 29%

Net: +34

Johnson

Agreed: 51%

Disagreed: 41%

Net: +10

Came across as strong

Starmer

Strong: 57%

Weak: 26%

Net: +31

Johnson

Strong: 53%

Weak: 30%

Net: +23

Seemed to care about ordinary people

Starmer

Cares: 68%

Doesn’t care: 19%

Net: +49

Johnson

Cares: 46%

Doesn’t care: 42%

Net: +4

Seemed to be in touch with people’s concernsStarmer

In touch: 60%

Out of touch: 29%

Net: +31

Johnson

In touch: 44%

Out of touch: 45%

Net: -1

Seemed interesting

Starmer

Interesting: 41%

Boring: 28%

Net: +13

Johnson

Interesting: 40%

Boring: 22%

Net: +18

The two surveys involved showing people a video with highlights from the speech, and then asking them questions based on what they had seen. Both surveys involved around 1,300 respondents, and the results were weighted to make them representative of the population."


The thought is this was one of those defining moments that tend to haunt people. Perhaps not so fatally as others have done, but looking back it will certainly se seen, as it already is, as one of the worst political speeches of our time.

A classic 'Nero fiddles while Rome burns', where the talking points have been in exposing the numerous lies, and the lack of anything that suggests has a clue about the carnage his government have caused. It was David Brent in all his glory.

To have faithful poodles like the Mail and the Telegraph deriding his words demonstrates just how bad this drivel was. Instead of any clear direction and purpose, we were given a ragbag of blatant untruths and third rate puns.

It was if the consultant had turned up at your hospital bedside not to give expert medical advice on how your vital treatment would progress, but appeared dressed as a clown with a red nose and silly wig thinking you would appreciate an effort to try and cheer you up instead.

Sadly that is all he has to offer, and all he ever has offered. A serial failure in both his private and public office.

From his earliest days of being sacked for lying to years of incompetence as an MP and as mayor. Removed from the Foreign Office for being an embarrassment, it should come as no surprise that his shallow self interest should be exposed so plainly yesterday.

If he had any sense he would get out now, as things are going to get a lot worse over the coming months, and possibly years. He should pay heed of the words of Leo Amery (paraphrasing Cromwell)

"You have sat too long for any good you have been doing lately. Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go!"
2
Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 19:24 - Oct 7 with 673 viewsEdwardStone

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 17:26 - Oct 7 by HARRY10

Here is more on the Opinium polling from last night suggesting that voters preferred Sir Keir Starmer’s conference speech to Boris Johnson’s.

Opinium released the figures for their poll on the Starmer speech last week. This is how they compare with the figures for Johnson.

Agreed with what he had to say

Starmer

Agreed: 63%

Disagreed: 29%

Net: +34

Johnson

Agreed: 51%

Disagreed: 41%

Net: +10

Came across as strong

Starmer

Strong: 57%

Weak: 26%

Net: +31

Johnson

Strong: 53%

Weak: 30%

Net: +23

Seemed to care about ordinary people

Starmer

Cares: 68%

Doesn’t care: 19%

Net: +49

Johnson

Cares: 46%

Doesn’t care: 42%

Net: +4

Seemed to be in touch with people’s concernsStarmer

In touch: 60%

Out of touch: 29%

Net: +31

Johnson

In touch: 44%

Out of touch: 45%

Net: -1

Seemed interesting

Starmer

Interesting: 41%

Boring: 28%

Net: +13

Johnson

Interesting: 40%

Boring: 22%

Net: +18

The two surveys involved showing people a video with highlights from the speech, and then asking them questions based on what they had seen. Both surveys involved around 1,300 respondents, and the results were weighted to make them representative of the population."


The thought is this was one of those defining moments that tend to haunt people. Perhaps not so fatally as others have done, but looking back it will certainly se seen, as it already is, as one of the worst political speeches of our time.

A classic 'Nero fiddles while Rome burns', where the talking points have been in exposing the numerous lies, and the lack of anything that suggests has a clue about the carnage his government have caused. It was David Brent in all his glory.

To have faithful poodles like the Mail and the Telegraph deriding his words demonstrates just how bad this drivel was. Instead of any clear direction and purpose, we were given a ragbag of blatant untruths and third rate puns.

It was if the consultant had turned up at your hospital bedside not to give expert medical advice on how your vital treatment would progress, but appeared dressed as a clown with a red nose and silly wig thinking you would appreciate an effort to try and cheer you up instead.

Sadly that is all he has to offer, and all he ever has offered. A serial failure in both his private and public office.

From his earliest days of being sacked for lying to years of incompetence as an MP and as mayor. Removed from the Foreign Office for being an embarrassment, it should come as no surprise that his shallow self interest should be exposed so plainly yesterday.

If he had any sense he would get out now, as things are going to get a lot worse over the coming months, and possibly years. He should pay heed of the words of Leo Amery (paraphrasing Cromwell)

"You have sat too long for any good you have been doing lately. Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go!"


We live in hope that he will disappear soon

A shallow, vain, vacuous excuse of a human being

The Tories can be quite ruthless when they perceive their leader to be liability....let us hope that the Men in Grey Suits are sharpening their knives
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Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 20:46 - Oct 7 with 625 viewsHARRY10

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 19:24 - Oct 7 by EdwardStone

We live in hope that he will disappear soon

A shallow, vain, vacuous excuse of a human being

The Tories can be quite ruthless when they perceive their leader to be liability....let us hope that the Men in Grey Suits are sharpening their knives


Actually I hope he stays on a bit longer - as the fck up he has brought about through lying, and appointing the most inept and incompetent ministers will play out whether the odious slug is removed, or not

Like the post WWI German myth of the 'stab in the back', without this carnage playing out there is every thought that this scumbag will be seen as some kind of jolly chap who was a success up until outside forces colluded against him. A few more months of this and he will not be able to slip away blameless, as previously.

The contempt for cancer patients, pig farmers and those on universal credit expressed in the past couple of days or so give rise to the thought that Cummings claim of Johnson talking of 'let the bodies pile high' was accurate.

While history will then judge him for what he truly was, the question that follows is will it be able to offer up any explanation as to why so many were fooled by such a charlatan. It is not as if they had no inkling of his habitual lying, and his failure in every other sphere of his life.

When your own family openly state that you are not to be trusted and that you are a persistent liar it might just give you a clue, you would think.
0
Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 08:36 - Oct 8 with 516 viewsYou_Bloo_Right


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Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 12:08 - Oct 8 with 460 viewsHARRY10

Have to hand it to him, Boris's speech was excellent on 08:36 - Oct 8 by You_Bloo_Right



The condemnation continues

Following pretty universal ridicule and attacks, last nights QT saw brexit voters slamming him for making a speech that was little more than a series of lame puns, and feeble jokes - rather than ot being a suggestion that there is some grasp of the continuous shrinking of the economy or the troubles ahead.

Like Chamberlain waving his 'piece of paper' at Croydon in 1938, this idiocy will come to define Johnsons time as PM.

A man totally out of his depth
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