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UK general election 2005

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  • S Shog9 0
    1. Afix pictures of candidates to a soft wall 2) Grab a handful of darts 3) Close your eyes and throw 4) Vote for the candidate with the most holes

    Shog9

    I'm not the Jack of Diamonds... I'm not the six of spades. I don't know what you thought; I'm not your astronaut...

    D Offline
    D Offline
    David Wulff
    wrote on last edited by
    #3

    :~


    Ðavid Wulff The Royal Woofle Museum
    Audioscrobbler :: flikr

    Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen

    S 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • D David Wulff

      :~


      Ðavid Wulff The Royal Woofle Museum
      Audioscrobbler :: flikr

      Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen

      S Offline
      S Offline
      Shog9 0
      wrote on last edited by
      #4

      The way i figure it, if an icon of the candidate can't manage to avoid a slow-moving, randomly-thrown dart, the candidate himself should have a sufficiently hard time avoiding a fast, well-aimed bullet. So, you're voting for the most assassinateable candidate. Why? Why not? If he ends up doing something good prior to the onset of untimely death, he'll be put on a pedestal, revered for years... and you'll be able to say (with pride, and a wistful "what might have been" sigh) "I voted for him!" And if he turns out to be a corrupt yellow bastard like the rest, well, at least you won't have to wait around for the next election to get rid of him...

      Shog9

      I'm not the Jack of Diamonds... I'm not the six of spades. I don't know what you thought; I'm not your astronaut...

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • D David Wulff

        Brits will probably have the general election[^] to choose the next polticial party to mess up the country on 5th May. I've voted in local elections[^] before where it is fairly easy to find a party member or independant runner that has the best correlation to what you want represented in your community, and I voted in the European election[^] last year where it was somewhat harder to choose between the candidates, but I wasn't old enough to vote on the last general election. This time round I would like to do so but I am totally at a loss as to which way to cast my vote. How do you decide which party to choose? What effect does your choice in the general election have on local government? With the recent US elections there was a ton of information available comparing the policies of the main options but I can't find anything similar to that for the coming UK elections. Not even on the BBC News site. I don't want "vote for Labour" or "vote Conservative" replies, just advice to help someone who doesn't follow national politics decide which of the main parties to choose next month. Thanks.


        Ðavid Wulff The Royal Woofle Museum
        Audioscrobbler :: flikr

        Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen

        J Offline
        J Offline
        jerry0davis
        wrote on last edited by
        #5

        I've got a similar dilema. My current MP has done a lot of good work since elected. He stands for practially everything I beleive in. Great? Hmmmmm. I don't like the party he represents! :mad: So do I vote for him, or the party I like the most?


        I feel like I'm diagonally parked in a parallel universe Jerry Davis http://www.astad.org
        http://www.jvf.co.uk

        D 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • D David Wulff

          Brits will probably have the general election[^] to choose the next polticial party to mess up the country on 5th May. I've voted in local elections[^] before where it is fairly easy to find a party member or independant runner that has the best correlation to what you want represented in your community, and I voted in the European election[^] last year where it was somewhat harder to choose between the candidates, but I wasn't old enough to vote on the last general election. This time round I would like to do so but I am totally at a loss as to which way to cast my vote. How do you decide which party to choose? What effect does your choice in the general election have on local government? With the recent US elections there was a ton of information available comparing the policies of the main options but I can't find anything similar to that for the coming UK elections. Not even on the BBC News site. I don't want "vote for Labour" or "vote Conservative" replies, just advice to help someone who doesn't follow national politics decide which of the main parties to choose next month. Thanks.


          Ðavid Wulff The Royal Woofle Museum
          Audioscrobbler :: flikr

          Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen

          B Offline
          B Offline
          BadJerry
          wrote on last edited by
          #6

          IMHO, it is about time the UK moves away from a 2 party system. I live in the UK but I am French - and rightly so, I am not allowed to vote for general elections over here. So I am going to try to get you to vote for me :). There is no doubt whatsoever that Labour will be re-elected so make your vote count by voting for a party you actually believe in. It could be the Green Party, Lid Dem, the David Wulff National Society, the BadJerry Confederation (if you really have to). Hey and guess what it could also be the Tories or Labour... And if possible, if you could avoid Kilroy or the BNP... but I am pretty sure you would.

          K C 2 Replies Last reply
          0
          • D David Wulff

            Brits will probably have the general election[^] to choose the next polticial party to mess up the country on 5th May. I've voted in local elections[^] before where it is fairly easy to find a party member or independant runner that has the best correlation to what you want represented in your community, and I voted in the European election[^] last year where it was somewhat harder to choose between the candidates, but I wasn't old enough to vote on the last general election. This time round I would like to do so but I am totally at a loss as to which way to cast my vote. How do you decide which party to choose? What effect does your choice in the general election have on local government? With the recent US elections there was a ton of information available comparing the policies of the main options but I can't find anything similar to that for the coming UK elections. Not even on the BBC News site. I don't want "vote for Labour" or "vote Conservative" replies, just advice to help someone who doesn't follow national politics decide which of the main parties to choose next month. Thanks.


            Ðavid Wulff The Royal Woofle Museum
            Audioscrobbler :: flikr

            Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen

            L Offline
            L Offline
            legalAlien
            wrote on last edited by
            #7

            I have always voted Tory and always would have. The Liberal party ... who? The Labour 'party' quickly revert to type; i.e. screw everyone who doesn't wear a cloth cap and live in a run-down council house and then tax the real workers till they squeak. Well this boy'll squeak no more: this will be my last election in this country: me and my conservative views are bound for distant shores, never to return. It won’t matter who we elect this time: the damage has gone too far and is too deep. Even if the incoming professional liars made significant changes it would be too late for me: I'd be long dead by the time those changes had any real impact. And I'm not the only one: I have a lot of friends and colleagues who have already gone are contemplating going. This is, of course, terribly sad. I love this country and there is no more beautiful land on the planet. Only it is not ours anymore: our politicians have horse-traded it away and left the natives vulnerable and taxed to exhaustion. I'll miss good old blighty, I really will. But then I'll read about how the UK is now just a small part of a european super-state and I'll laugh. Loudly. And then I'll shed a wee tear for all of the poor saps left behind.

            M S 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • L legalAlien

              I have always voted Tory and always would have. The Liberal party ... who? The Labour 'party' quickly revert to type; i.e. screw everyone who doesn't wear a cloth cap and live in a run-down council house and then tax the real workers till they squeak. Well this boy'll squeak no more: this will be my last election in this country: me and my conservative views are bound for distant shores, never to return. It won’t matter who we elect this time: the damage has gone too far and is too deep. Even if the incoming professional liars made significant changes it would be too late for me: I'd be long dead by the time those changes had any real impact. And I'm not the only one: I have a lot of friends and colleagues who have already gone are contemplating going. This is, of course, terribly sad. I love this country and there is no more beautiful land on the planet. Only it is not ours anymore: our politicians have horse-traded it away and left the natives vulnerable and taxed to exhaustion. I'll miss good old blighty, I really will. But then I'll read about how the UK is now just a small part of a european super-state and I'll laugh. Loudly. And then I'll shed a wee tear for all of the poor saps left behind.

              M Offline
              M Offline
              Mike Gaskey
              wrote on last edited by
              #8

              legalAlien wrote: me and my conservative views are bound for distant shores, never to return. Out of curiosty, would you mind saying where? legalAlien wrote: the damage has gone too far and is too deep What sort of damage? Really curious because the daughter of one of my best friends is marrying and moving to the UK next month. legalAlien wrote: Only it is not ours anymore: our politicians have horse-traded it away and left the natives vulnerable To who, for what? legalAlien wrote: left the natives vulnerable and taxed to exhaustion This is universal, I certainly feel as though I am. Mike "liberals were driven crazy by Bush." Me To: Dixie Sluts, M. Moore, the Boss, Bon Jovi, Clooney, Penn, Babs, Soros, Redford, Gore, Daschle - "bye bye" Me "I voted for W." Me "There you go again." RR "Flushed the Johns" Me K(arl) wrote: Date:8:50 23 Feb '05 I love you.

              L 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • B BadJerry

                IMHO, it is about time the UK moves away from a 2 party system. I live in the UK but I am French - and rightly so, I am not allowed to vote for general elections over here. So I am going to try to get you to vote for me :). There is no doubt whatsoever that Labour will be re-elected so make your vote count by voting for a party you actually believe in. It could be the Green Party, Lid Dem, the David Wulff National Society, the BadJerry Confederation (if you really have to). Hey and guess what it could also be the Tories or Labour... And if possible, if you could avoid Kilroy or the BNP... but I am pretty sure you would.

                K Offline
                K Offline
                KaRl
                wrote on last edited by
                #9

                BadJerry wrote: I live in the UK You traitor![^] ;P;)


                Fold With Us! Chaos A.D. Disorder unleashed

                B 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • J jerry0davis

                  I've got a similar dilema. My current MP has done a lot of good work since elected. He stands for practially everything I beleive in. Great? Hmmmmm. I don't like the party he represents! :mad: So do I vote for him, or the party I like the most?


                  I feel like I'm diagonally parked in a parallel universe Jerry Davis http://www.astad.org
                  http://www.jvf.co.uk

                  D Offline
                  D Offline
                  David Wulff
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #10

                  How does the ballot for the general election work - do you vote for a party or a personality? Or can you choose both (i.e. you vote for a party and then a personality and they'd choose the MPs that way)? Assuming if his party won he'd stay your local MP, I'd either vote for his party or him directly. Start at the local level IMO, you are unlikely to make any difference on a national scale. :~


                  Ðavid Wulff The Royal Woofle Museum
                  Audioscrobbler :: flikr

                  Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen

                  C 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • K KaRl

                    BadJerry wrote: I live in the UK You traitor![^] ;P;)


                    Fold With Us! Chaos A.D. Disorder unleashed

                    B Offline
                    B Offline
                    BadJerry
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #11

                    A present? A giant rabbit? Know your enemies, they said... and I know them quite well... I sleep with the enemy!

                    K 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • B BadJerry

                      A present? A giant rabbit? Know your enemies, they said... and I know them quite well... I sleep with the enemy!

                      K Offline
                      K Offline
                      KaRl
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #12

                      Making the European Union your own way :)


                      Fold With Us! Chaos A.D. Disorder unleashed

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • L legalAlien

                        I have always voted Tory and always would have. The Liberal party ... who? The Labour 'party' quickly revert to type; i.e. screw everyone who doesn't wear a cloth cap and live in a run-down council house and then tax the real workers till they squeak. Well this boy'll squeak no more: this will be my last election in this country: me and my conservative views are bound for distant shores, never to return. It won’t matter who we elect this time: the damage has gone too far and is too deep. Even if the incoming professional liars made significant changes it would be too late for me: I'd be long dead by the time those changes had any real impact. And I'm not the only one: I have a lot of friends and colleagues who have already gone are contemplating going. This is, of course, terribly sad. I love this country and there is no more beautiful land on the planet. Only it is not ours anymore: our politicians have horse-traded it away and left the natives vulnerable and taxed to exhaustion. I'll miss good old blighty, I really will. But then I'll read about how the UK is now just a small part of a european super-state and I'll laugh. Loudly. And then I'll shed a wee tear for all of the poor saps left behind.

                        S Offline
                        S Offline
                        Stan Shannon
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #13

                        Come to the U.S., we could use your help. "The Yahoos refused to be tamed."

                        L 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • D David Wulff

                          How does the ballot for the general election work - do you vote for a party or a personality? Or can you choose both (i.e. you vote for a party and then a personality and they'd choose the MPs that way)? Assuming if his party won he'd stay your local MP, I'd either vote for his party or him directly. Start at the local level IMO, you are unlikely to make any difference on a national scale. :~


                          Ðavid Wulff The Royal Woofle Museum
                          Audioscrobbler :: flikr

                          Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen

                          C Offline
                          C Offline
                          Colin Angus Mackay
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #14

                          Officially you are voting for an individual person. It used to be that the only thing printed on the ballot paper was the candidate's name and address. However, now the candidates party and party logo are printed as well (which obviously muddies the water) In the UK General Election you cannot choose both, you must choose a person. In the elections for the Scottish Parliament you get to choose both because each person gets two ballot papers one using the same first-past-the-post system as in the UK General Election and the other is a proportional representation ballot where you choose a party.


                          My: Blog | Photos | Next SQL Presentation WDevs.com - Open Source Code Hosting, Blogs, FTP, Mail and More

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • D David Wulff

                            Brits will probably have the general election[^] to choose the next polticial party to mess up the country on 5th May. I've voted in local elections[^] before where it is fairly easy to find a party member or independant runner that has the best correlation to what you want represented in your community, and I voted in the European election[^] last year where it was somewhat harder to choose between the candidates, but I wasn't old enough to vote on the last general election. This time round I would like to do so but I am totally at a loss as to which way to cast my vote. How do you decide which party to choose? What effect does your choice in the general election have on local government? With the recent US elections there was a ton of information available comparing the policies of the main options but I can't find anything similar to that for the coming UK elections. Not even on the BBC News site. I don't want "vote for Labour" or "vote Conservative" replies, just advice to help someone who doesn't follow national politics decide which of the main parties to choose next month. Thanks.


                            Ðavid Wulff The Royal Woofle Museum
                            Audioscrobbler :: flikr

                            Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen

                            M Offline
                            M Offline
                            Michael P Butler
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #15

                            I'm a perfect political candidate. I've got high-minded principles that I forget as soon as somebody hands me a lucrative job on the board of a big company. I don't mind immigrants coming into the country, as long as they pay their taxes and don't sponge off the state but will blame them for everything that goes wrong in the blink of an eye rather than deal with the real issues. :-D Michael CP Blog [^] Development Blog [^]

                            L 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • M Mike Gaskey

                              legalAlien wrote: me and my conservative views are bound for distant shores, never to return. Out of curiosty, would you mind saying where? legalAlien wrote: the damage has gone too far and is too deep What sort of damage? Really curious because the daughter of one of my best friends is marrying and moving to the UK next month. legalAlien wrote: Only it is not ours anymore: our politicians have horse-traded it away and left the natives vulnerable To who, for what? legalAlien wrote: left the natives vulnerable and taxed to exhaustion This is universal, I certainly feel as though I am. Mike "liberals were driven crazy by Bush." Me To: Dixie Sluts, M. Moore, the Boss, Bon Jovi, Clooney, Penn, Babs, Soros, Redford, Gore, Daschle - "bye bye" Me "I voted for W." Me "There you go again." RR "Flushed the Johns" Me K(arl) wrote: Date:8:50 23 Feb '05 I love you.

                              L Offline
                              L Offline
                              legalAlien
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #16

                              Mike Gaskey wrote: Out of curiosity, would you mind saying where? At present I would but it is over the sea and not too far away and doesn't have Tony B. Liar as its leader. Mike Gaskey wrote: What sort of damage? Really curious because the daughter of one of my best friends is marrying and moving to the UK next month. Where can I begin? 1: A steady onslaught of immigrants that are invited in unhindered or checked and have radically changed the nature of the country. This is not meant in a racist way which I am not: I welcome multi-racism and it is certainly the way forward. No, the enemy here has been the foisting upon the indigenous population of multi-culturism. The belief that our own culture should be subsumed by those immigrating here. Now I don't mind people coming here: most people are descended from immigrants of one sort or another, myself included. However, my ancestors did not begin to overwhelm the locals with their culture. If I want to experience someone else's culture I'll go to their country and do it. BTW, I understand the irony of me railing against immigrants when I want to become one myself. The difference, for the most part, is that I shall not be turning up at the airport expecting a house, a car, medical benefits and welfare handouts and then suing anyone who has a go at me or threatening to blow up the country that just invited me in. 2: An almost total breakdown of the criminal justice system such that victims are criminalized and criminals become the victims. The police are more interested in car crime. Shall I continue or is that enough ranting for one session? Mike Gaskey wrote: To who, for what? Mostly to Europe and mostly for nothing. We, as a nation, get virtually nothing from Europe other than taxes and rules which all of the other nations ignore as they see fit. We are stoopid. And now they want us to contribute the largest single amount of money of any of the participating countries. It was only supposed to be a simple trade agreement. Mike Gaskey wrote: This is universal, I certainly feel as though I am. My tax burden has risen incessantly during labours tortured run at governing this country to its knees. My average tax rate is 52% as well as the burden of being an unpaid tax collector and book keeper for Customs and Excise. That deosn't include local taxes and indirect taxation on, for instance, petrol (gas). Enough: even my head

                              K B R 3 Replies Last reply
                              0
                              • S Stan Shannon

                                Come to the U.S., we could use your help. "The Yahoos refused to be tamed."

                                L Offline
                                L Offline
                                legalAlien
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #17

                                Hey, I'm as corrupt as the rest: make me an offer.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • B BadJerry

                                  IMHO, it is about time the UK moves away from a 2 party system. I live in the UK but I am French - and rightly so, I am not allowed to vote for general elections over here. So I am going to try to get you to vote for me :). There is no doubt whatsoever that Labour will be re-elected so make your vote count by voting for a party you actually believe in. It could be the Green Party, Lid Dem, the David Wulff National Society, the BadJerry Confederation (if you really have to). Hey and guess what it could also be the Tories or Labour... And if possible, if you could avoid Kilroy or the BNP... but I am pretty sure you would.

                                  C Offline
                                  C Offline
                                  Colin Angus Mackay
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #18

                                  BadJerry wrote: I live in the UK but I am French - and rightly so, I am not allowed to vote for general elections over here. You are permitted to vote as you are an EU Citizen. Although, for some strange reason you in EU elections you vote for a consituancy in your home country. My ex was Spanish and she voted in all but the EU elections - she got a postal vote for that to vote in Spain.


                                  My: Blog | Photos | Next SQL Presentation WDevs.com - Open Source Code Hosting, Blogs, FTP, Mail and More

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • M Michael P Butler

                                    I'm a perfect political candidate. I've got high-minded principles that I forget as soon as somebody hands me a lucrative job on the board of a big company. I don't mind immigrants coming into the country, as long as they pay their taxes and don't sponge off the state but will blame them for everything that goes wrong in the blink of an eye rather than deal with the real issues. :-D Michael CP Blog [^] Development Blog [^]

                                    L Offline
                                    L Offline
                                    legalAlien
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #19

                                    Michael P Butler wrote: the real issues And, in your opinion, they are...

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • L legalAlien

                                      Mike Gaskey wrote: Out of curiosity, would you mind saying where? At present I would but it is over the sea and not too far away and doesn't have Tony B. Liar as its leader. Mike Gaskey wrote: What sort of damage? Really curious because the daughter of one of my best friends is marrying and moving to the UK next month. Where can I begin? 1: A steady onslaught of immigrants that are invited in unhindered or checked and have radically changed the nature of the country. This is not meant in a racist way which I am not: I welcome multi-racism and it is certainly the way forward. No, the enemy here has been the foisting upon the indigenous population of multi-culturism. The belief that our own culture should be subsumed by those immigrating here. Now I don't mind people coming here: most people are descended from immigrants of one sort or another, myself included. However, my ancestors did not begin to overwhelm the locals with their culture. If I want to experience someone else's culture I'll go to their country and do it. BTW, I understand the irony of me railing against immigrants when I want to become one myself. The difference, for the most part, is that I shall not be turning up at the airport expecting a house, a car, medical benefits and welfare handouts and then suing anyone who has a go at me or threatening to blow up the country that just invited me in. 2: An almost total breakdown of the criminal justice system such that victims are criminalized and criminals become the victims. The police are more interested in car crime. Shall I continue or is that enough ranting for one session? Mike Gaskey wrote: To who, for what? Mostly to Europe and mostly for nothing. We, as a nation, get virtually nothing from Europe other than taxes and rules which all of the other nations ignore as they see fit. We are stoopid. And now they want us to contribute the largest single amount of money of any of the participating countries. It was only supposed to be a simple trade agreement. Mike Gaskey wrote: This is universal, I certainly feel as though I am. My tax burden has risen incessantly during labours tortured run at governing this country to its knees. My average tax rate is 52% as well as the burden of being an unpaid tax collector and book keeper for Customs and Excise. That deosn't include local taxes and indirect taxation on, for instance, petrol (gas). Enough: even my head

                                      K Offline
                                      K Offline
                                      KaRl
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #20

                                      legalAlien wrote: is not meant in a racist way which I am not Yeah, right, you're just xenophobic. legalAlien wrote: We, as a nation, get virtually nothing from Europe other than taxes Liar! The UK's allocation from the Structural Funds for the period 2000 - 2006 is over £10 billion.[^] campaigners have pressed the government to publish details of how the subsidies - worth £ 1.7bn last year - were distributed to farmers. [^] Note also that UK main exports are towards EU menbers (Exports partners: Germany 10.5%, France 9.5%, Netherlands 6.9%, Ireland 6.5%, Belgium 5.6%, Spain 4.4%, Italy 4.4%...[^]), thanks to the common market. legalAlien wrote: and rules which all of the other nations ignore as they see fit You liar, again! How many exemptions did the UK ask? From Schengen to Euro, UK often refused to play the same game than others. It's always the same with conservatives all over the world then, they love to distort the facts to fit their prejudice.


                                      Fold With Us! Chaos A.D. Disorder unleashed

                                      M S J 3 Replies Last reply
                                      0
                                      • K KaRl

                                        legalAlien wrote: is not meant in a racist way which I am not Yeah, right, you're just xenophobic. legalAlien wrote: We, as a nation, get virtually nothing from Europe other than taxes Liar! The UK's allocation from the Structural Funds for the period 2000 - 2006 is over £10 billion.[^] campaigners have pressed the government to publish details of how the subsidies - worth £ 1.7bn last year - were distributed to farmers. [^] Note also that UK main exports are towards EU menbers (Exports partners: Germany 10.5%, France 9.5%, Netherlands 6.9%, Ireland 6.5%, Belgium 5.6%, Spain 4.4%, Italy 4.4%...[^]), thanks to the common market. legalAlien wrote: and rules which all of the other nations ignore as they see fit You liar, again! How many exemptions did the UK ask? From Schengen to Euro, UK often refused to play the same game than others. It's always the same with conservatives all over the world then, they love to distort the facts to fit their prejudice.


                                        Fold With Us! Chaos A.D. Disorder unleashed

                                        M Offline
                                        M Offline
                                        Mike Gaskey
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #21

                                        K(arl) wrote: It's always the same with conservatives all over the world then, they love to distort the facts to fit their prejudice. Bullshit. Mike K(arl) wrote: Date:8:50 23 Feb '05 I love you.

                                        K 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • M Mike Gaskey

                                          K(arl) wrote: It's always the same with conservatives all over the world then, they love to distort the facts to fit their prejudice. Bullshit. Mike K(arl) wrote: Date:8:50 23 Feb '05 I love you.

                                          K Offline
                                          K Offline
                                          KaRl
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #22

                                          Come on, you are the living proof I'm right ;P


                                          Fold With Us! Chaos A.D. Disorder unleashed

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