George Galloway - Morning Star articles
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joepiano



Joined: 13 Dec 2008
Location: Death Valley, California

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2012 6:15 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Wow -Face, you sound like you are channeling George Carlin - GOOD FOR YOU!

I could not agree more. Here in the states we have the most phony patriotic dance. The rich (the Chicken-hawks) always call for the children of the poor to fight the wars (which are never fought unless they benefit the multinational banks and corporations); wars which are never actually paid for by anyone but the middle class...of course, the poor in both countries at war, pay with their lives. And all of the civilians in the 'enemy' country pay with the lives of their old folks, and their women and their children. And they become refugees for life too often.

To quote Ben Franklin, "patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel".

And these very scoundrels of the corporations pay pigs like Rush Limbaugh (I think he makes 20 million dollars a year), and his fellow liars, on Fox News and all the MSM, to flatter the dumb and the numb with words of patriotic jingoism. Yes I am calling them dumb or numb!

Pity the rest of us, who's only voice on this subject, is that of the comedians, like Carlin and Hicks - may they rest in peace. If we speak up about we are attacked.

Thanks for sticking up for the truth Face!
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faceless
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Joined: 25 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2012 3:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

no problem Joe - I just can't stand death and destruction being painted in any way that suggests the aggressor should be considered worthy.

If the Afghan military (laughs at the notion) had tried to invade the UK, then I could agree with war against it.
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luke



Joined: 11 Feb 2007
Location: by the sea

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2012 3:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

if it wasn't for our brave boys we'd all be speaking iraqi now! Laughing

actually, i see a tweet from galloway last week calling the invading and occupying forces 'our boys' - i thought maybe his twitter account had been taken over by the sun
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faceless
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Joined: 25 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2012 4:24 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

yeah, tweets like that are what made me decide that enough was enough.
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joepiano



Joined: 13 Dec 2008
Location: Death Valley, California

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2012 5:30 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I have been thinking about this issue all my life - my father was an Air Force doctor during the Korean conflict. I was born on an American Air Force base. I missed being drafted for the Terrorist war on Vietnam by a few numbers. So I am not unfamiliar with the insanity of this issue.

I do know that GG, being a politician, and apparently running for office once again, must feel that he has no choice but to talk in 'patriotic' terms, occasionally; especially during a time of eternal and illegal war. If he only spoke as we are speaking here, he would not have a chance in his election. I can only hope that he reads what we are saying, or that he truly does understand how offensive this kind of talk is to those who are usually supportive of his views. Of course, I do realize that he is not writing these columns only for the approval of his fellow travelers.

As I write this, I realize, once again, how schizophrenic our societies are. It is little wonder I now live in the wilderness, in a ghost town.

I also must remind myself how difficult a task GG has taken up for himself by standing up for the people of Gaza - as well as for all the folks of conscious all around the world. I guess what I am saying is - Let us not forget the bigger picture!

Oh my - now I sound like I am making apologies. But the truth is, that the view that Faceless put forward, and much more discussion of this issue, must take place, as uncomfortable as it is. Sad
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andrblac



Joined: 07 Nov 2011

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2012 8:33 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Think you are all missguided on this one. Dont blame "our boys" for the scandel. Joe is correct. The rich do expect others to die in ward, and this has always been so. Its not there fault tho.
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andrblac



Joined: 07 Nov 2011

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2012 8:36 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

faceless wrote:
What do you think you've done that helps the working class? You've been hired to protect corporate interests and you knew exactly what joining the military meant.

If you, or any other British soldier, in the last 60 years had fought a just cause, you might have some solid ground.


The forces dont choose the cause im afraid thats down to our "wonderfull" politicos, who the population are to apothetic to do anything about - so if you want to blame anyone, blame the electrate at large!
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andrblac



Joined: 07 Nov 2011

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2012 8:38 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

PS sorry about my spelling, so ill educated you see, was only good enough to join the forces on leaving school.
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faceless
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Joined: 25 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2012 11:10 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

You choose the government's cause when you sign up for X years and you don't get out of responsibility by saying it's not your fault what they make you do.

You could have left at any time if you had the moral desire. You had choices all the way along.

btw, I didn't get my English o Grade until I was 21 (something I should have got at 16 in school) - but I went to local further education college a few afternoons a week. That was a choice I made.
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andrblac



Joined: 07 Nov 2011

PostPosted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 5:50 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

arent you the hero, you sound like quite the tory with your atitude. not everybody has the choices. and, some people make the wrong choices - you gonna penalise everybody for that?
Sertving in the military was good in every respect, and I didnt have to go to any wars. If I did I would of have to go, but at the time (first gulf war) I actualy thought the cause was correct, like so may fed the propaganda of the press, even the left/liberal media.
Was nearly called up for second gulf war, and at the time I thought that was just as well. Its only the last couple of years of seeking out the truth I now would of oposed it.
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faceless
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Joined: 25 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 6:19 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

If I were a tory, you'd be welcomed as a fucking 'hero', wouldn't you? You had the choices, you just didn't take the time to find them. I'm not a hero and I don't pretend to be either.

If you think the first Gulf War was justified, explain why.
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SuBSynK



Joined: 19 Sep 2009

PostPosted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 7:02 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

andrblac wrote:
PS sorry about my spelling, so ill educated you see, was only good enough to join the forces on leaving school.


I am not sure what you are trying to say even though you are being sarcastic..?

I had a terrible time at school and ended up leaving at age 15...So my education was not great, i suppose that means all i was good for was the military eh?...

Personally i have always been into music so that is what i decided to concentrate on.
If you have always been into guns and other army related things then just admit it or stop trying to hide behind this "i had no option" excuse...

Even when you are serving in the army you still have options, such as.

Do i take part in this unjust war/ follow this unjust order.
Do i refuse to take part in this war/follow this order and go to the glass house for 6 months..
It really is that simple to me.

I cannot feel anything but disgust and anger on seeing the crimes our and the U.S forces are commiting in Afghanistan and Iraq before it.
What amazes me is that the soldiers taking part do not themselves feel the same horror. If they did not understand on signing up what they would be used for, surely on seeing the slaughter any person would question their reasons for wanting to take part?
Why stay and continue following orders? Weak, ignorant or murderous...

After watching quite a few of the BBC etc documentaries with soldiers talking about the thrill of combat and returning for several tours i know i see bloodlust and it makes me sick.

The current tide against freespeech regarding the wars and the returning soldiers etc is worrying..
This young man being arrested for speaking his mind on facebook is a sign of things to come as this war and the lack of support for it deepens.
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luke



Joined: 11 Feb 2007
Location: by the sea

PostPosted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 4:12 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

we know after nuremberg that 'only following orders' didn't work, i wonder how 'i was poorly educated' would fair?

i'd rather be on the dole that 'be used as pawns for foreign policy'
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faceless
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Joined: 25 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Sat Apr 07, 2012 9:52 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote


Bradford points the way
Friday 06 April 2012

As a fanatical Bob Dylan fan, one refrain has played over and over in my mind over the last week - "Because something is happening here, and you don't know what it is..." Ballad Of A Thin Man could have been written for the political elite and punditocracy, schmoozing with each other in a gilded echo chamber in London. The earthquake delivered by the people of Bradford West last week rattled them, but left so many unshaken in their complacency - at least at first. With weary predictability they lurched from one comforting fake explanation to another in a transparent attempt to avoid the truth. It helped, of course, that with a handful of exceptions they didn't even bother to talk to the people in Bradford who drove through this spectacular political uprising.

Let's for a moment recall its scale. The Liberal Democrats lost their deposit, even though they hold the seat next door (that must now be tenuous). The Tories came close to losing theirs and shed 10,000 votes compared with the general election. Labour also lost 10,000 votes. I and Respect got over 18,000 votes - 56 per cent on a relatively healthy 50 per cent turnout, more than twice Labour's vote. It is the same total vote that Labour got at the last general election. And all this with a Con-Dem coalition, which according to the normal rules of political motion ought to mean that all opposition to the government would have coalesced around Labour with little space for any electoral force to its left. But we are not in normal times.

Cue from the Establishment a babble of evasion and self-deception. First we were told that this unprecedented result was down to Muslims, who apparently unlike other citizens of our country vote en bloc. Problem - the Labour candidate was a Pakistani Muslim, whose main pitch was that he was a local Pakistani Muslim with the right family connections. Second problem - it is simply arithmetically impossible to explain a 56 per cent majority in a constituency that is 38 per cent Muslim by some mythical "Muslim vote." Third - as counting agents from every party will confirm, Respect won this election in every part of the constituency, from the inner city to the rural, with its overspill almost wholly non-Muslim council estates. So by the beginning of this week that excuse was being quietly abandoned. But not before we had been treated to a propaganda tirade that was frankly reckless and incendiary.

The mainstream media, especially the BBC, must now be taken to task. They both insulted Muslims in Bradford as if their votes were somehow second class and also sowed seeds of division between different communities by refusing to acknowledge the common concerns that led to this result and instead attempted to racialise the outcome. Now we are told that this was a one-off, freak result. They said that seven years ago when new Labour lost the "safe" seat of Bethnal Green and Bow to Respect. Each event is, of course, unique. But there are general features. And those few journalists who have bothered to listen to the people who made this happen are now beginning to discern some of those features.

There is a colossal chasm in this country between working people and the political elite. The national opinion polls fluctuate, but they don't ask the question that has been bluntly answered in Bradford - are you enthusiastic about any of the three old parties? The resounding answer is No. People are not enthusiastic about a grim consensus of austerity and rising inequality, of scapegoating of the poor, the disabled and immigrants, of wars and the threat of more.

One of my opponents tried to make my opposition to the Afghanistan war and my call for bringing the troops home a stick to beat me with. She seemed not to grasp that two-thirds of the British public want an end this bloody adventure. Some commentators have suggested that the result was simply because of the war. They don't get it. Most people are opposed to the war, but they did not cast their vote simply or mainly on that basis.
he wars in Iraq and Afghanistan for them are not only wrong in themselves, they are the most striking expression of a wider phenomenon - that the political class is out of touch, unable to answer the questions that people ask in every term, and is sailing forth to disaster, oblivious to the cries of the people on the lower decks.

And Bradford, like so many other cities and towns is crying out against the ideologically driven assault on the remnants of the welfare state, against the rubbishing of a whole generation facing mass youth unemployment, extortionate tuition fees, the end of meagre assistance for young people in further education, the stigmatisation of the young, the penalising of pensioners who have contributed a life's work to the wealth of this country. And they are sick of being treated as if they were some foreign dominion, overseen by an imperial raj that speaks a different language. "They are simply not listening to us" was the message I heard time and time again in Bradford. "We want a voice to force them to sit up and take notice."

Reacting against the smart media smear that Bradford is somehow not British, one white couple told me: "Of course Bradford's British. We don't need to put some Britain into Bradford. We need to make a change here and put some Bradford into Britain."

Like many other northern and inner cities, Labour has treated Bradford as a rotten borough. And the rottenness of the local political machines stinks. It is a combination of the old Labour right-wing methods of stitch-ups and corruption of the kind that T Dan Smith made infamous in the north-east of England with a cynical manipulation of clan and village bonds among many communities that hail from the Asian subcontinent. That was blown apart last week. It will be challenged further on May 3 when Respect stands in the council elections and also campaigns hard for a directly elected mayor who will be accountable to the people as a whole, not to wheeler-dealing in smoke-filled rooms.

We have many plans for Bradford. At their centre is building the movement for change that has been driven above all by young people and women, who bear the brunt of the government's assault on working people's living standards as well as facing marginalisation and continuing inequality in all areas of life. But despite the best efforts of the chatterati, Bradford is already having an impact on the national political scene, and Respect intends to do the same.

In Parliament, in council chambers, on the street, with the trade unions and with all the progressive movements, Respect will be opposing this anti-working-class government in every way that the official Labour opposition should be doing, but is not. We will make the case for investment, not cuts; for peace, not war and for the defence of multicultural Britain from the ravages of the monocultural public school rightwingers whose otherworldliness is summed up by the likes of Francis Maude.

Hundreds are joining Respect, including people with great track records in the labour and progressive movements. We're delighted by that. At the same time, we have always seen our job as not only advancing our party as a voice and instrument for working people and the poor but also strengthening the whole left and, crucially, the capacity of the mass of people to take some control of their lives and end the years of one-sided war of the rich against the poor. Within Parliament and without we will co-operate with any who are prepared to break with the austerity consensus.

There are some in Labour's ranks who rightly draw the conclusion that the age of Clinton-Blair triangulation is dead and that the politics of Labour must be based on the interests of working people. I'm with them, and against those who want to stick with the disastrous course set by Tony Blair and continued through to today. Bradford has given a glorious glimpse of what "is happening here" in this country and even more so in the austerity-bound eurozone.

French Left Front candidate JeanLuc Melenchon has transformed the presidential election campaign with a message of real labour values and rejection of the crazy austerity economics of "Merkozy." His campaign has had an impact on the rhetoric of Socialist Francois Hollande. Even a rhetorical shift by European social democracy is welcome, as it means that the left's case for a way out of the crisis is at least registered in the official political spectrum, raising the credibility of left-wing arguments. In Greece, the centre of the European crisis, forces on the left stand to do extremely well at the forthcoming general election and I wish them well.

By the middle of next month we are likely to see a new political reality in Europe - one that our politicians, particularly Labour politicians, will have to respond to. The era of copper-fastened consensus around sado-monetarism and vicious scapegoating of minorities is over. It was always an orthodoxy removed from the mass of the people. Now, in various ways, the mass of the people are puncturing the official bubble above them, just as in one country after another they have taken to the streets or occupied public space to resist the ravages of the Great Recession.

The forces of the right still have great reserves of strength, of course. But Bradford shows that the left and its ideas are back. We all have an obligation to work seriously, constructively and effectively to make the best of these shoots of spring, which have come after a barren and cruel winter.
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