Other countries
- Vrede too
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Re: Other countries
American cultural imperialism extends to Thai weddings:
https://wlos.com/news/nation-world/groo ... thlete-sad
"was quite intoxicated at the time,"
All of our traditions
https://wlos.com/news/nation-world/groo ... thlete-sad
"was quite intoxicated at the time,"
All of our traditions
- O Really
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Re: Other countries
"Princess Diana's brother Earl Spencer says he was sexually abused at boarding school"
Sorry mate, but I don't have much interest in your 40-years ago issue, but out of curiosity, what happened? Were you buggered by the local bully? Went through some "initiation" involving your asshole? Forced to gain bj experience from the giving side on some big bruiser?
Nope.
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-68522408?ut ... pic%2Fnews
Sorry mate, but I don't have much interest in your 40-years ago issue, but out of curiosity, what happened? Were you buggered by the local bully? Went through some "initiation" involving your asshole? Forced to gain bj experience from the giving side on some big bruiser?
Nope.
Oh. I see. Some would have called that an additional benefit of that elite school and included in the (current cost) £10,584 per semester....a female staff member, whom he described as a "voracious paedophile", groomed and abused him and other young boys in their dormitory beds at night.
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-68522408?ut ... pic%2Fnews
- Vrede too
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Re: Other countries
But but but (no pun intended), she was a commoner! You Yanks (no pun intended) just don't understand.O Really wrote: ↑Sat Mar 09, 2024 9:25 pm"Princess Diana's brother Earl Spencer says he was sexually abused at boarding school"
Sorry mate, but I don't have much interest in your 40-years ago issue, but out of curiosity, what happened? Were you buggered by the local bully? Went through some "initiation" involving your asshole? Forced to gain bj experience from the giving side on some big bruiser?
Nope.Oh. I see. Some would have called that an additional benefit of that elite school and included in the (current cost) £10,584 per semester....a female staff member, whom he described as a "voracious paedophile", groomed and abused him and other young boys in their dormitory beds at night.
https://paradise-education.com/images/c ... g_2_80.jpg
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-68522408
- Vrede too
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Re: Other countries
Vrede too wrote: ↑Sun Aug 20, 2023 10:15 amI'm not a close observer, but it feels like India is joining Italy and many other nations in becoming more authoritarian. Hindifascist?
Indian police stop a conference of activists and academics discussing G20 issues ahead of summit
... Critics also challenged the interests of the G-20 and whom it served to benefit.
“The G20 is being organized to secure the corporate interests of a few. We need to work to secure our interests, our rights, our forests, our water,” said Roma Malik of the All India Union of Forests’ Working People.
O Really wrote: ↑Sun Aug 20, 2023 11:50 amSeems you have others who agree with you.
https://www.journalofdemocracy.org/2023 ... democracy/
Not high on my travel list, either.
https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/ste ... ill/f_webp
Modi’s Muslim remarks spark ‘hate speech’ accusations as India’s mammoth election deepens divides
India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been accused of delivering Islamophobic remarks during an election rally Sunday, triggering widespread anger from prominent Muslims and members of the opposition.
The world’s most populous nation is in the midst of a mammoth weeks-long election in which Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is widely expected to secure a rare third consecutive term....
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Re: Other countries
Reader warning: This post contains comments and opinion that may be taken as discriminatory, culturist, possibly racist and may be offensive to those sensitive to such things.
I had no idea who the Prime Minister ("First Minister") of Scotland is. If forced to guess, I'd say it was Hamish McTavish or Fergus McFarland or somebody. He'd be somebody who had authentic clan kilts and whose family had lived in some castle since 1600-something. Maybe he'd play bagpipes as a musical interest, and worked as a barrister while living on his gentleman's sheep farm. Nope.
The First Minister of Scotland, whose job is currently in jeopardy is Humza Yousaf. Humza Yousaf? Seriously? Habib is running Scotland?
Yousaf is Glasgow-born of Pakistani immigrant parents, and seems well-qualified for the job. And he's got a proper Scottish accent. England has Rishi Sunak as PM and Canada has Jagmeet Singh as leader of the NDP, but this is Scotland we're talking about. Scotland - where men are men even in skirts and wee lassies are fair. Where if your family hasn't lived there more than two centuries, you're a newcomer. A country where people eat Haggis as a sign of pride. A country of long traditions and strong cultural identification. But still, here he is, the First Minister of Scotland:
I had no idea who the Prime Minister ("First Minister") of Scotland is. If forced to guess, I'd say it was Hamish McTavish or Fergus McFarland or somebody. He'd be somebody who had authentic clan kilts and whose family had lived in some castle since 1600-something. Maybe he'd play bagpipes as a musical interest, and worked as a barrister while living on his gentleman's sheep farm. Nope.
The First Minister of Scotland, whose job is currently in jeopardy is Humza Yousaf. Humza Yousaf? Seriously? Habib is running Scotland?
Yousaf is Glasgow-born of Pakistani immigrant parents, and seems well-qualified for the job. And he's got a proper Scottish accent. England has Rishi Sunak as PM and Canada has Jagmeet Singh as leader of the NDP, but this is Scotland we're talking about. Scotland - where men are men even in skirts and wee lassies are fair. Where if your family hasn't lived there more than two centuries, you're a newcomer. A country where people eat Haggis as a sign of pride. A country of long traditions and strong cultural identification. But still, here he is, the First Minister of Scotland:
- Vrede too
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Re: Other countries
No worries, mate. It is indeed stunning that a Muslim, a Hindu, and a Sikh, all of south Asian heritage, would lower themselves to involvement with Scottish, British and Canadian politics
EDIT: The Muslim has decided that there are better things he can do:
Humza Yousaf resigns - live: SNP Scottish first minister quits in emotional speech to avoid no confidence vote
- Vrede too
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Re: Other countries
Vrede too wrote: ↑Sun Aug 20, 2023 10:15 amI'm not a close observer, but it feels like India is joining Italy and many other nations in becoming more authoritarian. Hindifascist?
Indian police stop a conference of activists and academics discussing G20 issues ahead of summit
Seems that there is significant resistance to hindifascism, no thanks to India's MSM:O Really wrote: ↑Sun Aug 20, 2023 11:50 amSeems you have others who agree with you.
https://www.journalofdemocracy.org/2023 ... democracy/
Not high on my travel list, either.
https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/ste ... ill/f_webp
Will this lead to compromise, liberalization and more honest and accurate MSM, or will it lead to a fascist crackdown? For now, I'm heartened by the election results.India’s Cable News Predicted a Big Modi Win. How Did They Get It So Wrong?
Through the months of India’s sprawling national election season, the country’s hundreds of cable news outlets all seemed to be trying to outdo each other: They predicted that Prime Minister Narendra Modi would win, and win big.
The actual election results on June 4, however, saw his fortunes plummet so low that he secured another term only with the help of coalition partners.
It was a shocking result to many, and now India finds itself wondering why so few foresaw the popularity of an opposition movement. Some outlets had predicted that Mr. Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, or B.J.P., would win as many as 400 of the 543 available seats in Parliament, but in the end, it won only 240.
Many see the disparity as a sign of how thoroughly the prime minister had cowed the mainstream media, and how his control of the information system had grown so complete that the hype obscured voters’ true sentiments....
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- O Really
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Re: Other countries
Happier days.
Maybe a chance to un-Brexit?
Maybe a chance to un-Brexit?
- Vrede too
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Re: Other countries
I wondered the same thing. Is it a tar baby to be put off right out of the gate?
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Re: Other countries
I think I'd go for it.
"As of May 2024, 55 percent of people in Great Britain thought that it was wrong to leave the European Union, compared with 31 percent who thought it was the right decision. During this time period, the share of people who regret Brexit has been slightly higher than those who support it, except for some polls in Spring 2021, which showed higher levels of support for Brexit. The share of people who don’t know whether Brexit was the right or wrong decision has generally been stable and usually ranged between 11 and 14 percent."
"If there was another referendum on Britain’s membership of the EU, how would you vote?"
Fieldwork dates: 28 June 2016 - 14 July 2023
Data from: Great Britain, United Kingdom
Results from: 117 polls
https://www.whatukthinks.org/eu/questio ... -you-vote/
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Re: Other countries
Don't know the mechanics of joining/resigning from the EU, but would they be welcomed back if there's a possibility of a future resignation with changing political winds?
Eamus Catuli~AC 000000 000101 010202 020303 010304 020405....Ahhhh, forget it, it's gonna be a while.
- O Really
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Re: Other countries
Might require some groveling, but I think it could be done. Rest of the EU doesn't like Brexit, either.
- Vrede too
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Re: Other countries
Think they would do a new referendum in order to enhance the perception of legitimacy?
Watch Right-Wing Hearts Break In Real Time At France Election News
It was in stark contrast to the "explosion of joy" among the left.
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Re: Other countries
Cheeriest vid I've seen lately.
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Re: Other countries
Idle mind ramblings:
So the Russians bagged a WSJ reporter and convicted him of espionage so they can trade him for one or more of their guys. As usual the US claims the charges are bogus and has everybody who reports it include the term "sham" with the term "trial." Let's assume for discussion he's not a spy.
But - how do we know? If he was spying, would the US or WSJ people say anything different? Would they say "Our guy got caught and after a fair trial was sentenced..." Homey don't think so. They'd deny whether he was a spy or not. So what do the Russians say?
WSJ: "In June, Russian prosecutors approved an indictment of Gershkovich, falsely alleging that he was gathering information about a Russian defense contractor on behalf of the Central Intelligence Agency. In fact, Gershkovich, who was accredited as a foreign correspondent by Russian authorities, was in Yekaterinburg and elsewhere in the Sverdlovsk region for the sole purpose of reporting for the Journal."
Well, that certainly clears it right up. "...purpose of reporting for the Journal."
Was he in fact working on a story about the "Russian defense contractor"?
WSJ also claims "Gershkovich was afforded few of the protections normally accorded to defendants in the U.S. and other Western countries." Duh, he's in frickin' Russia. https://rsf.org/en/country/russia Toto's not in Kansas anymore.
https://www.wsj.com/world/russia/evan-g ... l-dbabd6e3
So the Russians bagged a WSJ reporter and convicted him of espionage so they can trade him for one or more of their guys. As usual the US claims the charges are bogus and has everybody who reports it include the term "sham" with the term "trial." Let's assume for discussion he's not a spy.
But - how do we know? If he was spying, would the US or WSJ people say anything different? Would they say "Our guy got caught and after a fair trial was sentenced..." Homey don't think so. They'd deny whether he was a spy or not. So what do the Russians say?
WSJ: "In June, Russian prosecutors approved an indictment of Gershkovich, falsely alleging that he was gathering information about a Russian defense contractor on behalf of the Central Intelligence Agency. In fact, Gershkovich, who was accredited as a foreign correspondent by Russian authorities, was in Yekaterinburg and elsewhere in the Sverdlovsk region for the sole purpose of reporting for the Journal."
Well, that certainly clears it right up. "...purpose of reporting for the Journal."
Was he in fact working on a story about the "Russian defense contractor"?
WSJ also claims "Gershkovich was afforded few of the protections normally accorded to defendants in the U.S. and other Western countries." Duh, he's in frickin' Russia. https://rsf.org/en/country/russia Toto's not in Kansas anymore.
https://www.wsj.com/world/russia/evan-g ... l-dbabd6e3