27 March 2021  /  Updated 17 July 2021
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Boris Must Go

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MikeAustin
Posts: 1193
(@mikeaustin)
Joined: 1 year ago

Boris is a problem but if we get a replacement who is still following The Great Reset agenda nothing will change. What is required is somebody with the guts to call out this Scam for what it is and who is determined to change course and attempt to take us back to where we were. Sadly, I do not believe we have anybody in the country who is up to the job. The closest contender is Nigel Farage but I do not believe he appreciates the scale of the disaster we face.

Can we move away from "The Great Reset" and introduce "The Great Reboot"?
This is all about control to get us to adapt to an alternate lifestyle. Those who object get their objections deleted. It is simply Ctrl+Alt+Delete.

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strange-cultist
Posts: 23
(@strange-cultist)
Joined: 1 year ago

I've heard some things Ian Duncan Smith has had to say about this whole thing and he seems, to me at least, quite reasonable and sane. I was quite young when he was leader of the opposition (didn't he annoyingly agree with Blair and support the Iraq invasion?) but he seems a more likely candidate than some of the other sceptics. Desmond Swayne is too posh to be sold to the public after people like Johnson and Cameron. How could we trust him? Anyone in the cabinet now will be tainted by this whole thing unless they turn it around soon. I don't think they want to turn it around because it doesn't fit their agenda but they might have to depending on keeping public on side. Maybe Sunak if they can get rid of Boris after whatever happens with Brexit which I haven't really been keeping up with.

Labour supporters who might have been against lockdown on the obvious financial and human rights issues have been pretty slow to come around and there have been plenty of light "fluff" stories presented by the media to give the idea that the tories have "mishandled" things like operation moonshot and the Dominic Cummings fiasco and Boris Johnson's Dad not wearing a mask that time, and the early PPE shortage story. These stories I think are red herrings to deliberately avoid asking fundamental questions about why we're doing this as if everyone is naturally on side and instead give labour supporters their fix of things they like to think their party would handle better than the tories. Labour supporters will criticize the inefficient way the pandemic response has been handled and maybe the private finances of some aspects of it to make out they are critical thinking people and impress their friends on Facebook or Twitter but they fundamentally agree with the lockdowns and can be quite authoritarian in their opinions really. Besides, Boris wrong-footed people at the start by going against the lockdown consensus making sure labour were the lockdown party (and its more the sort of thing you would expect a labour government to do) before he caved in and announced the first lockdown. So labour are stuck in that role even if on a personal level they must surely be questioning it by now. All they can do is hope for more embarrassing stories about the cabinet mis-handling things and snipe from the sidelines as if what is going is going on is a stupid blunder that they would handle better and not an intentional wound to the economy and people freedoms. I can't stand Keir Starmer and out of their party I would prefer someone like Andy Burnam or Harriet Harman to be in charge. They at least seem a bit more reasonable.

Farage will probably never be in power. People will keep voting labour or tory, especially in difficult times but I think he will act like he always has, as the head of a pressure group to keep the conservatives in line to stop them losing voters. I don't know where people like Lawrence Fox fit in. With Farage now the big anti-lockdown politician I think Reclaim will probably become more of a protest organisation instead of a serious political party

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Marlin
Posts: 33
(@marlin)
Joined: 1 year ago

Boris is merely a guilded buffoon and puppet. He should be forced to stay and live through the experience like the rest of us.

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strange-cultist
Posts: 23
(@strange-cultist)
Joined: 1 year ago

I've heard some things Ian Duncan Smith has had to say about this whole thing and he seems, to me at least, quite reasonable and sane. I was quite young when he was leader of the opposition (didn't he annoyingly agree with Blair and support the Iraq invasion?) but he seems a more likely candidate than some of the other sceptics. Desmond Swayne is too posh to be sold to the public after people like Johnson and Cameron. How could we trust him? Anyone in the cabinet now will be tainted by this whole thing unless they turn it around soon. I don't think they want to turn it around because it doesn't fit their agenda but they might have to depending on keeping public on side. Maybe Sunak if they can get rid of Boris after whatever happens with Brexit which I haven't really been keeping up with.

Labour supporters who might have been against lockdown on the obvious financial and human rights issues have been pretty slow to come around and there have been plenty of light "fluff" stories presented by the media to give the idea that the tories have "mishandled" things like operation moonshot and the Dominic Cummings fiasco and Boris Johnson's Dad not wearing a mask that time, and the early PPE shortage story. These stories I think are red herrings to deliberately avoid asking fundamental questions about why we're doing this as if everyone is naturally on side and instead give labour supporters their fix of things they like to think their party would handle better than the tories. Labour supporters will criticize the inefficient way the pandemic response has been handled and maybe the private finances of some aspects of it to make out they are critical thinking people and impress their friends on Facebook or Twitter but they fundamentally agree with the lockdowns and can be quite authoritarian in their opinions really. Besides, Boris wrong-footed people at the start by going against the lockdown consensus making sure labour were the lockdown party (and its more the sort of thing you would expect a labour government to do) before he caved in and announced the first lockdown. So labour are stuck in that role even if on a personal level they must surely be questioning it by now. All they can do is hope for more embarrassing stories about the cabinet mis-handling things and snipe from the sidelines as if what is going is going on is a stupid blunder that they would handle better and not an intentional wound to the economy and people freedoms. I can't stand Keir Starmer and out of their party I would prefer someone like Andy Burnam or Harriet Harman to be in charge. They at least seem a bit more reasonable.

Farage will probably never be in power. People will keep voting labour or tory, especially in difficult times but I think he will act like he always has, as the head of a pressure group to keep the conservatives in line to stop them losing voters. I don't know where people like Lawrence Fox fit in. With Farage now the big anti-lockdown politician I think Reclaim will probably become more of a protest organisation instead of a serious political party

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Anonymous
Posts: 0
 Anonymous
(@Anonymous)
Joined: 1 second ago

BORIS must go? They ALL must go! Patriotic Alternative must be registered as a party by the Electoral Commission so we truly have a choice.

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