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Re: PM Boris
Originally Posted by Novocastrian
(Post 12751432)
You're entirely right, but it may take a ruling from the Scottish Court to point out the issue to Jakob and Boris. Jolyon Maugham has a time slot set aside by the Court for tomorrow.
I'm just looking forward to seeing JRM's face when he learns that the current deal is unlawful because of his own amendment. I don't know of the legal arguments being put forward, but I would be amazed if a Court decides that legislation that has not been passed yet is unconstitutional. |
Re: PM Boris
Originally Posted by BristolUK
(Post 12751255)
The point I'm making, and one which you agree on, is the effect that one's newspaper - in this case the mail is the example used - has if one sees something as fact.
Originally Posted by DaveLovesDee
(Post 12751306)
What's nonsense is claiming it's new. Its not, it's merely different, and worse.
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Re: PM Boris
Originally Posted by dave_j
(Post 12751439)
And... your point is that Boris' deal isn't the same as May's?
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Re: PM Boris
Originally Posted by DaveLovesDee
(Post 12751517)
No. You claimed this deal had never existed until last week, and I pointed out you were wrong.
To date there have been two deals agreed between the EU and the UK that could be a final Brexit leaving agreement. Boris' deal was finally agreed with EU on 17th October, today is 20th October and less than a week has passed. No doubt you argue that Boris' deal has been tabled before but this cannot be true, something similar may have been offered but it won't have entered detailed discussions and as such will not be comparable to Boris' deal and thus it cannot have existed before the 17th. |
Re: PM Boris
Originally Posted by dave_j
(Post 12751532)
I applaud your persistence but arguing that black is white will not make it so.
To date there have been two deals agreed between the EU and the UK that could be a final Brexit leaving agreement. Boris' deal was finally agreed with EU on 17th October, today is 20th October and less than a week has passed. No doubt you argue that Boris' deal has been tabled before but this cannot be true, something similar may have been offered but it won't have entered detailed discussions and as such will not be comparable to Boris' deal and thus it cannot have existed before the 17th.
Originally Posted by dave_j
(Post 12751208)
Q. Is Boris' deal identical to May's deal?
A. No, therefore it is different and since it didn't exist before last week it can be described as being New. To argue otherwise is nonsense. |
Re: PM Boris
I'm losing the will to live. Can we just agree that:
- any Brexit is a daft idea and arguing about the manner of Brexit is deckchairs on the Titanic - Boris Johnson is a loathsome careerist who doesn't himself think Brexit is a good idea except inasmuch as it advances him towards his personal goals - Trump's deals are always lose-lose so pinning the country's future trade on an arrangement with him won't go well |
Re: PM Boris
Originally Posted by dbd33
(Post 12751584)
I'm losing the will to live.
Originally Posted by Belfast Telegraph
To sort fact from fiction, the House of Commons library has produced a report. It says that “only two Articles in the main Withdrawal Agreement have changed from the November 2018 text, and the changes are minorâ€.
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Re: PM Boris
Originally Posted by dave_j
(Post 12751439)
If the reader chooses to read into a headline something that isn't there, it's not the fault of the newspaper but the reader. .
Unless, of course, you write it as an opinion. "I believe Trump is acting like an idiot and he must stop it"...that would be a clear opinion. But that's not the way you gave the example and you likely wrote it the way you did because that's the way the Mail would write it. Remember this one? https://cimg1.ibsrv.net/gimg/british...09ead41210.png There's nothing there to say it's opinion. The judges apparently defied voters. No they didn't, they made a ruling upon the case brought before them. 17m voters were not involved in the case. The accompanying text - for those that get that far and don't just roll their eyes thinking more treachery because that's what the paper has been telling them regularly - does say that a constitutional crisis might be triggered but it's the newspaper saying the judges are the enemies of the people and it's the newspaper with that 'out of touch' although that may be referred to on page 2 for those that get that far, so for that part you may be right in thinking the paper is taking advantage of its readers. But the meaning of the words on that page is that the judges have defied (or betrayed) voters and are enemies of the people. Nowhere does it say it's opinion. |
Re: PM Boris
Originally Posted by dbd33
(Post 12751584)
I'm losing the will to live. Can we just agree that:
- any Brexit is a daft idea and arguing about the manner of Brexit is deckchairs on the Titanic - Boris Johnson is a loathsome careerist who doesn't himself think Brexit is a good idea except inasmuch as it advances him towards his personal goals - Trump's deals are always lose-lose so pinning the country's future trade on an arrangement with him won't go well You will get your will back then. |
Re: PM Boris
Originally Posted by BristolUK
(Post 12751591)
But that something is there. You gave an example. Trump must stop being an idiot. That was the one you gave. You cannot stop doing something if you are not doing it. It's not a personal interpretation that he is doing something idiotic it's the only interpretation.
Unless, of course, you write it as an opinion. "I believe Trump is acting like an idiot and he must stop it"...that would be a clear opinion. But that's not the way you gave the example and you likely wrote it the way you did because that's the way the Mail would write it. . As for the second example about Judges, in the UK they are clearly not enemies of the people and yet the headline says so, so what are we to make of it? If the headline is taken as fact then the newspaper is clearly making a false statement and no doubt you would argue that anyone who believes it is misled. But I would argue that you would have to be predisposed to believe the headline to be true in order to believe something that is patently not true. It's an interesting discussion this. It's clear that newspapers seek to influence their readers whilst maintaining their readership. They do this by giving their readers what they believe their readers want to read. The likes of the Mail wouldn't last long if they lost support of those that pay the bills. It's only when others, who disagree with what's being published are given the opportunity to comment on it that accusations such as 'it's misleading' are made. Q. If a headline is considered misleading to some and not to others, can it be considered misleading at all? After all it's either misleading or it's not, and who's to judge? A Judge? |
Re: PM Boris
Originally Posted by dave_j
(Post 12751640)
The example I gave was "Trump should stop behaving like an idiot" not "Trump must stop being an idiot". Do you note the difference?
Of course there is also the added probability that someone who behaves like an idiot is an idiot. At least some of the time. :nod: |
Re: PM Boris
Originally Posted by dbd33
(Post 12751584)
I'm losing the will to live. Can we just agree that:
- any Brexit is a daft idea and arguing about the manner of Brexit is deckchairs on the Titanic - Boris Johnson is a loathsome careerist who doesn't himself think Brexit is a good idea except inasmuch as it advances him towards his personal goals - Trump's deals are always lose-lose so pinning the country's future trade on an arrangement with him won't go well |
Re: PM Boris
Originally Posted by mikelincs
(Post 12751821)
Spot on there, the deal is a lot worse that the May deal that was defeated, all Johnson wants is a deal that will help his paymasters, the hedge funds that have bet a lot of money on a no deal by 31st October.
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Re: PM Boris
Originally Posted by mikelincs
(Post 12751821)
all Johnson wants is a deal that will help his paymasters, the hedge funds that have bet a lot of money on a no deal by 31st October.
If we look at the recent history of brexit we see that May had a very slim majority following her catastrophic election mistake. For a few years this has meant that parliament hasn't had the will to make any decision and Boris now has a majority of minus forty something. What this means is that the Damocles like 31st October deadline rests not with Boris but the EU following his letter. I'd have thought that the safe money would have been placed on an extension or any deal rather than no-deal. If it's true that there's much betting on a no-deal then I'd rather look to Bercow today who's acted to prevent a vote that could have banished no-deal outright using a rule that he ignored when he allowed May three votes on a deal that he must have known would fail. Is Bercow the Trojan Horse? |
Re: PM Boris
all Johnson wants is a deal that will help his paymasters, the hedge funds that have bet a lot of money on a no deal by 31st October.
Originally Posted by dave_j
(Post 12751974)
I wonder, is there evidence of this?
Calls for inquiry into claims Johnson backers benefit from no-deal Brexit The UK’s most senior civil servant is under pressure to investigate Boris Johnson’s financial backers following cross-party claims that unnamed individuals stand to benefit from the prime minister’s willingness to pursue a no-deal Brexit. |
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