-
Content Count
10,219 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
39
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Gallery
Articles
Gun Dealer's and Fieldsports Shop's
Reloading Room
Blogs
Calendar
Store
Classifieds
Everything posted by ChrisJones
-
I can't dispute that, mate, I just think he's deluded enough to honestly believe that his way is the right way. He wants to fix public transport and uses public transport unlike those that want to fix public education yet use private schools. Or fix the NHS whilst utilizing taxpayer provided private healthcare. He does have a warped sense of integrity and I reckon he honestly believe the guff he comes out with. He thinks he's part of the solution but any student of history can see that his solution throws back to the causation of many, many, problems. Something his large fan base won't researc
-
I wouldn't say I have faith in him I just believe that he believes he's in for the right reason. I certainly don't trust him but I think he's one of the few that will at least attempt to deliver his policies even though I believe those policies will be catastrophic as you know my thoughts on socialism. If he says he wants to help I believe he does whereas if the rest of them anything remotely similar I'd quietly laugh before switching the station. I reckon Tony Benn was the same. As honest as we'll get in politics at least on an individual basis. If we're going into the method behind the
-
Thanks, mate! My laptop had a stroke and I've been really busy at work. Just haven't had the time.
-
Honestly, mate, I reckon Corbyn is pretty genuine in that respect. I think he does genuinely care about the small man I just don't think his methods will work in the slightest. He wants to double down with policies that have repeatedly failed and will take Britain backwards not forwards. I think he's one of the few that believes he's in it for the greater good but he's all about making the government the sole guardian of everything. We know how great they are at solving problems! Boris on the other hand wouldn't even understand the concept of walking in another man's shoes. He's got staff
-
Pretty limited coverage on this side of the Atlantic regarding besides the focus on how and when Brexit will be achieved, if at all. Is anyone attempting to control government spending or are they promising anything they can to secure the vote?
-
Yep. Same message with a "Please Contact Us For Assistance" thrown in...
-
That one's made the headlines over here. Even the lads at work have been following it. The whole string of events is a f*ck*ng sh*t show. Genuinely feel for the victims but does anyone think that justice has been served?!
-
As you posted above... Isn't this what we're both saying?! EU make laws. Member states enforce them based on their own legal systems?! We both understand that the EU make the rules. We both understand that EU offer guidance for compliance We both understand the EU will intervene if it thinks that these laws aren't being applied correctly. Those that disagree with a verdict have the right to an EU appeal to clarify whether that law is being applied correctly. Where we seem to disagree is on the legal cases over several years that have changed that interpr
-
Trumpers. You might learn something from this one. Republican Senator Rand Paul calls out one of the plethora of issues surrounding the current spending problem facing the US government.
-
Agreed. Agreed. Agreed. Which is what I've been saying from the start when I said that these issues are pushed back to the respective member states. The uniformity of the EU ends with natural justice in member countries. In the religious sensitivity cases the EU contradicts it's own human rights legislation by pushing the cases back to the autonomy of the respective member states. They explicitly gave the individual member states the right to choose how to enforce these laws through their own contradictory prescident. These landmark decisions have ensured that the
-
Except when they don't. It's been well documented with their handling of the cases surrounding "religious sentiment." One of the reasons people in Britain are now seeing fines and suspended prison sentences for "hate speech" involving religious groups. I accept that there are policies that the EU instruct member states to follow and how to do so, but there are also issues that are pushed back to the respective states and dealt with under their own autonomy. I wasn't infering that they did enforce punishment over member states I was infering that given enough time and reasoning their br
-
Bang on, mate! We know that politics is dirty. Most of agree with that even if we disagree with which dirty b*st*rd should have the job but the alarming thing that has come out of the last 4 years is that some of these charlatans have been able to convince the commoners that it's possible to pick up sh*t with your fingers if you go for the clean end.
-
The EU make policy and the individual member states choose how to enforce that policy and even though the beginnings of the EU (the old EEC) were all about making trade easier the formation of the EU from 93 to present has moved towards authoritarianism. It started as simple trade agreements in the 50's and is now threatening Britain with sanctions for leaving. If you think the EU is guilty of a great deal of oppression then you're infact agreeing that they're authoritarian in nature! I agree that we're not seeing Stalinist methods but the increasing restrictions from the bureaucracy is
-
What's the actual status on this? Do you know of, or anyone else know of? A few of the THL lads met up in London a few years ago for bit of a protest in London. I personally watched police officers removing their insignia and masking up just before a few of the beatings started, as did a few of this forums members. I even told the BBC camera crew that were there where to find the bloke that had been beaten unconscious. That didn't make the news either. Who knows why?
-
Las Vegas are getting grasshoppers in swarms that are showing up on weather radar! We're getting grasshoppers and other insects showing up in swarms also. They're reckoning it's do with rainfall and mild spring couple with a sudden heatwave accelerating the breeding cycle.
-
While I tend to agree with you on most of that it only covers half of the story. Don't forget that just under half of those that voted in the referendum want to stay in the EU. We've all seen the sh*tposting and propaganda that's come from that and I sincerely doubt that with that machine in place other countries will just suddenly want to take their balls home. Like with every other socialist utopia they'll just jack up the taxes and redistribute the money to those they see fit. Like they always have done and if roughly half can't see that the emperor isn't wearing any clothes then nothi
-
Neither, mate but you'd know that if you'd read much of what I've posted over the years. We can do all of this all over again when we end up with a democrat in the white house, but it'll be a much smaller thread because the only place where you and I differ is that you take sides. I know they're all equally worthless! I kinda figured that but thanks for confirming that you won't read anything that doesn't agree with your pre-conceived biases. Please remain woke!
-
No worries Gnash. I had a brief hiatus from the forum while the EU elections took place and I noticed that UKIP and TR suffered heavily at the elections as they've run on more of a single issue than most. The causes of both revolutions are huge topics in themselves but being taxed without fair representation and overthowing monarchial rule would be a fair starting point in both cases. I think nationalism would've been a tough one to call for the Americas as it wasn't even it's own country at that point. With India I honestly don't know. It's something I've never really followed up. N
-
I loved the placement of The Sun logo on the shop in the background. It could of been a paid advert.
-
A new prime minister wouldn't change the EU's stance no matter who took it on. Sanctions would be far more severe. I agree their states would be impacted but not to the degree Britain's would. They'd do what they've always done and enforce rules that subsidize members countries trading with each other to offset Britain no longer being in the market. This is how socialism has worked from the beginning. It will eventually bankrupt the EU but without a serious change of direction Britain will suffer with it to a degree. I hope Don and Boris sort out a trade deal quickly but with Britains
-
Part 2. Mueller's six hour grilling infront of the House. Before going into his interview he said that he would not divulge any information that wasn't already in the report. He said he would only answer questions based on the report. He did exactly what he said he repeatedly asking for quotations and page references to the report so that every single member would run their 5 minutes down and the hearing would conclude. He said nothing that we didn't already know, satisfied the requirements of both parties, and kept the non-partisan status of his investigation intact in a way th
-
Genuine questions, mate. Open to you and the rest of THL's resident Trumpers... How much of the Mueller Report have you read? How much of the six hours of testimony did you actually watch? Mueller wrote a 448 page report on Russian interference in the 2016 election detailing the hacking and social media operations. It established multiple links between Trump campaign officials and individuals tied to the Russian government. They indicted or got guilty pleas from 34 individuals and 3 companies during this investigation. Part one of that report is so detailed they even discus
-
Secretly obtained footage from the White House that the Trump administration doesn't want you to see...