Then leave those ones off, and at least turn the lights on so you can see what you're doing when trying to treat people at night time? Even just having lighting has surely got to be quite handy for a hospital? And it's not going to use up that much energy.. No, you're right, let's just sit in the dark and let people die, because the Israeli's offered us fuel we need, but didn't do it how we wanted.C69 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 9:32 amIt's a gesture. Read what I have posted earlier and what Glaston has posted. Turning systems on for short periods tha have been off for long periods can cause many more problems than imagined.Raggs wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 9:28 amFuck me, even if it runs just for a couple of hours emergency use, is that not better than nothing? If it sets up a potential for more fuel to be offered? Israel is never going to give them thousands of litres in one go, for fear of Hamas grabbing it for their own generators.
"Yeah, Israel offered some fuel, that they desperately need, what arseholes..."
This is the reason.
Kicking off in Israel
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
What "kind" of posting? Laughably fake propaganda videos?
Am I allowed to quote them if they are posted by another poster?
Raggs wrote: ↑Sat Nov 11, 2023 4:07 pm https://x.com/astraiatwt/status/1722899 ... 47409?s=20
They repeated the video with a new actor after they apparently realise that Mr fafo is now too famous...
This is the second video that calculon posted. Same scene, same actors, just a new lead.
Last edited by Calculon on Mon Nov 13, 2023 10:42 am, edited 1 time in total.
I'm not going to get into an argument about this.Raggs wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 9:58 amThen leave those ones off, and at least turn the lights on so you can see what you're doing when trying to treat people at night time? Even just having lighting has surely got to be quite handy for a hospital? And it's not going to use up that much energy.. No, you're right, let's just sit in the dark and let people die, because the Israeli's offered us fuel we need, but didn't do it how we wanted.C69 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 9:32 amIt's a gesture. Read what I have posted earlier and what Glaston has posted. Turning systems on for short periods tha have been off for long periods can cause many more problems than imagined.Raggs wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 9:28 am
Fuck me, even if it runs just for a couple of hours emergency use, is that not better than nothing? If it sets up a potential for more fuel to be offered? Israel is never going to give them thousands of litres in one go, for fear of Hamas grabbing it for their own generators.
"Yeah, Israel offered some fuel, that they desperately need, what arseholes..."
This is the reason.
Having worked in ITU for over 30 years I think I know a little bit about the workings of a hospital
Part of my job at present involves me recommending home generators for ventilators btw.
We can agree to differ over what an impact such a small amount of fuel will have.
I'm sure you do.C69 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 10:38 am I'm not going to get into an argument about this.
Having worked in ITU for over 30 years I think I know a little bit about the workings of a hospital
Part of my job at present involves me recommending home generators for ventilators btw.
We can agree to differ over what an impact such a small amount of fuel will have.
Is working in the dark, better than working in light? That's it. Leave everything else turned off, turn the lights on. What is preferable? Forget the ventilators, forget any other machinery, even if everything else stays off, just lights. Better or worse? Even if it's a single one off thing (and there's no suggestion it would be). It's a hospital, there will not be natural light in every section even during the day.
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
Israel claimed Hamas told the hospital not to claim it. The head of the hospital said that they want the Red Cross to deliver it instead.
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
Personally I suspect that the head of the hospital had to come up with some excuse as to why they couldn't take it, without pissing off Hamas. But that's me tending to believe the Israeli version of events in this case.
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
https://www.timesofisrael.com/israel-sa ... ordinator/
"With pressure on Jerusalem growing to do more for Strip’s civilians, Netanyahu reportedly hopes former British PM will take on task, providing war effort with greater legitimacy"
F'me what a day
Blair has been very active on the middle east peace process for a fair while now. Reading up on it (I thought he had been, didn't realise how much). He was the middle east envoy for the UN, EU, US and Russia for 8 years, and there's a thing called the Tony Blair institute too.
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
Just a thought, but maybe say you think it’s fake.Calculon wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 10:23 amWhat "kind" of posting? Laughably fake propaganda videos?
Am I allowed to quote them if they are posted by another poster?
Raggs wrote: ↑Sat Nov 11, 2023 4:07 pm https://x.com/astraiatwt/status/1722899 ... 47409?s=20
They repeated the video with a new actor after they apparently realise that Mr fafo is now too famous...
This is the second video that calculon posted. Same scene, same actors, just a new lead.
I think we can all agree that there’s not much going on in this space that should make us ‘laugh out loud’.
Err many in the UK think he may be a war criminalRaggs wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 10:03 pmBlair has been very active on the middle east peace process for a fair while now. Reading up on it (I thought he had been, didn't realise how much). He was the middle east envoy for the UN, EU, US and Russia for 8 years, and there's a thing called the Tony Blair institute too.
I believe it is a sentiment that may be felt by all but Israel.
Yet the EU, UN etc still felt that he was the right choice for middle East envoy.C69 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 10:26 pmErr many in the UK think he may be a war criminalRaggs wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 10:03 pmBlair has been very active on the middle east peace process for a fair while now. Reading up on it (I thought he had been, didn't realise how much). He was the middle east envoy for the UN, EU, US and Russia for 8 years, and there's a thing called the Tony Blair institute too.
I believe it is a sentiment that may be felt by all but Israel.
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
What do the ME think about this?Raggs wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 10:46 pmYet the EU, UN etc still felt that he was the right choice for middle East envoy.C69 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 10:26 pmErr many in the UK think he may be a war criminalRaggs wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 10:03 pm
Blair has been very active on the middle east peace process for a fair while now. Reading up on it (I thought he had been, didn't realise how much). He was the middle east envoy for the UN, EU, US and Russia for 8 years, and there's a thing called the Tony Blair institute too.
I believe it is a sentiment that may be felt by all but Israel.
The press ànd the populace?
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I'm not a huge Blair fan, albeit I was never as vexed with going to war in Iraq as many, but if he's a voice Israel will listen to and it helps get some much needed aid in then concerns about what it looks like can piss right off.
As the decades roll on it continues to be the case nobody has a good idea what to do, but it is at least something if you've got someone who can start to have a conversation
As the decades roll on it continues to be the case nobody has a good idea what to do, but it is at least something if you've got someone who can start to have a conversation
Why? I'm serious, you ask questions and seem to expect someone else to keep handing you answers. If it had been something to do with Israel, fair enough, this though? Your search bar works as well as mine. A quick search would suggest Saudi Arabia give his foundation cash. Jordan seems to endorse the institute at a governmental level as well, sending representatives to the graduations. Blair and his institute seem to interact with the Egyptian government too.
Why couldn't you have looked that up?
If you mean is there reaction to a rumour that doesn't get seem to have been announced officially, no, I can't be bothered to try andfind that. Maybe you can?
Edit - oh, and if we're being picky, better working in a hospital with the lights on or off?
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
- Guy Smiley
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Perhaps he was looking for an opinion from someone with local knowledge, as opposed to 'looking it up'... media being the treacherous beast we all know it to be.Raggs wrote: ↑Tue Nov 14, 2023 8:25 amWhy? I'm serious, you ask questions and seem to expect someone else to keep handing you answers. If it had been something to do with Israel, fair enough, this though? Your search bar works as well as mine. A quick search would suggest Saudi Arabia give his foundation cash. Jordan seems to endorse the institute at a governmental level as well, sending representatives to the graduations. Blair and his institute seem to interact with the Egyptian government too.
Why couldn't you have looked that up?
If you mean is there reaction to a rumour that doesn't get seem to have been announced officially, no, I can't be bothered to try andfind that. Maybe you can?
Edit - oh, and if we're being picky, better working in a hospital with the lights on or off?
He’s also a hero in Kosovo with babies named after him, and he played an important role in securing peace in Northern Ireland. To think he is seen as a war criminal everywhere outside of Israel is profoundly ignorant.Rhubarb & Custard wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 11:43 pm I'm not a huge Blair fan, albeit I was never as vexed with going to war in Iraq as many, but if he's a voice Israel will listen to and it helps get some much needed aid in then concerns about what it looks like can piss right off.
As the decades roll on it continues to be the case nobody has a good idea what to do, but it is at least something if you've got someone who can start to have a conversation
He literally asks about what the press thinks about it (and also the populace). Given the nature of this forum, if he genuinely wanted to know, and isn't willing to look it up, this might not be the best place to ask the question hoping for people of local knowledge of the various different ME countries?Guy Smiley wrote: ↑Tue Nov 14, 2023 8:53 amPerhaps he was looking for an opinion from someone with local knowledge, as opposed to 'looking it up'... media being the treacherous beast we all know it to be.Raggs wrote: ↑Tue Nov 14, 2023 8:25 amWhy? I'm serious, you ask questions and seem to expect someone else to keep handing you answers. If it had been something to do with Israel, fair enough, this though? Your search bar works as well as mine. A quick search would suggest Saudi Arabia give his foundation cash. Jordan seems to endorse the institute at a governmental level as well, sending representatives to the graduations. Blair and his institute seem to interact with the Egyptian government too.
Why couldn't you have looked that up?
If you mean is there reaction to a rumour that doesn't get seem to have been announced officially, no, I can't be bothered to try andfind that. Maybe you can?
Edit - oh, and if we're being picky, better working in a hospital with the lights on or off?
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
- Uncle fester
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Interesting series.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Austr ... prov=sfla1
Some eerie parallels with modern times.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Austr ... prov=sfla1
Some eerie parallels with modern times.
Uncle fester wrote: ↑Tue Nov 14, 2023 10:19 pm Interesting series.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Austr ... prov=sfla1
Some eerie parallels with modern times.
I haven't heard of it, though I see it's available on BBC iplayer.
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Brutal colonisation coupled with dehumanising the opponent. It's a well tried and proven formula. Goes hand in hand with mass denial.Tichtheid wrote: ↑Tue Nov 14, 2023 10:40 pmUncle fester wrote: ↑Tue Nov 14, 2023 10:19 pm Interesting series.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Austr ... prov=sfla1
Some eerie parallels with modern times.
I haven't heard of it, though I see it's available on BBC iplayer.
(a mate of mine from WA has published on the subject of colonisation and suppression in Western Australia, he continues to work in the field and constantly has to deal with the usual online abuse that goes with the territory
https://uwap.uwa.edu.au/products/every- ... -1882-1905)
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Nothing graphic. Just footage of what seems to be someone rigging a device and then soldiers walking past it without incident.
I wouldn't post anything graphic normally, and if I did, it would be spoilered with warning. Saw an image of one of the female captives being taken into Gaza, blood at the back of her trousers making it rather apparent what she'd been through, as well as an obvious slash across her achilles to make sure she couldn't run off. It's really not that graphic in many senses, but extremely disturbing.
The video shows the booby trap being placed, and then the Israeli's coming in after it's been set off (a large portion of the lower level of the 2nd part has been heavily blurred, maybe the camera just isn't working well, or maybe there's something there). Multiple Israeli solders have been reported killed due to booby traps.
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
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So Arab countries won't be playing kapo for Israel.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/ ... -israel-us
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/ ... -israel-us
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Uncle fester wrote: ↑Sat Nov 18, 2023 9:03 pm So Arab countries won't be playing kapo for Israel.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/ ... -israel-us
The US needs to find a way out of this mess. China and Russia are sitting back watching yet another theatre descend into chaos.Safadi, in a no-holds-barred attack on Israel and the cover being provided by the US, said faith in peaceful negotiation and international law was being destroyed by the west’s refusal to rein in Israel.
The credibility of international law had fallen victim to its selective application, he said. “If any other country in the world did a fragment of what Israel did, it would have sanctions imposed on it from every corner of the world.”
He said even those who accepted Israel was acting in self-defence “keep telling Israel to act within international law. It is not, so where do we go from here? Keep telling them to do it? They keep refusing to do it. People are being killed day in and day out.”
He said: “International law has to apply to all. The message seems to be that Israel can do whatever it wants. That is what the world is seeing, [that] Israel is above the law.”
As far as I understand it, this is the oder of events of something that happened this week, Piers Morgan, someone who has portrayed himself as a beacon in the battle for free speech, he interviewed Jeremy Corbyn for a pod cast in which he repeatedly asked Corbyn to describe Hamas as a terrorist organisation. Corbyn apparently avoided the question several times.
I saw in the Guardian earlier that Starmer was saying Corbyn's days as a Labour MP were over, he'd never be allowed to stand as a Labour candidate again.
No matter what you think of Corbyn, he has not donned a bandanna and picked up an AK47, he has not planted any bombs nor, as far as I'm aware, has he condoned the atrocities on 7th of October or incited armed aggression of any sort.
From his wiki page, the people of his constituency have elected him at every opportunity since 1983.
These bastions of free speech have denied the people of the constituency of Islington North the opportunity to vote for the same candidate they have shown faith in for 40 years. I'm not asking anyone to like Corbyn and I'm certainly not asking anyone to agree with him, but shouldn't his constituents decide if he should represent them or not? - that is the argument I've heard the likes of Rees-Mogg trot out when asked if he should step down after being found out for one thing and another.
My recollection of Corbyn's association with Hamas and other groups is that he has always advocated dialogue, you know, just like Thatcher did in private with groups in Northern Ireland whilst proscribing them in public.
I saw in the Guardian earlier that Starmer was saying Corbyn's days as a Labour MP were over, he'd never be allowed to stand as a Labour candidate again.
No matter what you think of Corbyn, he has not donned a bandanna and picked up an AK47, he has not planted any bombs nor, as far as I'm aware, has he condoned the atrocities on 7th of October or incited armed aggression of any sort.
From his wiki page, the people of his constituency have elected him at every opportunity since 1983.
These bastions of free speech have denied the people of the constituency of Islington North the opportunity to vote for the same candidate they have shown faith in for 40 years. I'm not asking anyone to like Corbyn and I'm certainly not asking anyone to agree with him, but shouldn't his constituents decide if he should represent them or not? - that is the argument I've heard the likes of Rees-Mogg trot out when asked if he should step down after being found out for one thing and another.
My recollection of Corbyn's association with Hamas and other groups is that he has always advocated dialogue, you know, just like Thatcher did in private with groups in Northern Ireland whilst proscribing them in public.
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Corbyn can run in Islington, which doesn't mean Labour is obliged to have the disgusting creep as their candidate.
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Starmer has tried very, very hard to clamp down on even the appearance of anti-semitism given how the allegations of it threatened the party under Corbyn. Refusing to brand Hamas a terrorist organisation was always going to create a shitstorm and to have it centred on the man who, rightly or wrongly, was deemed to be at the heart of Labour's apparent anti-semitism problem at the current moment in time is deeply unhelpful to Labour.Tichtheid wrote: ↑Sun Nov 19, 2023 12:40 am As far as I understand it, this is the oder of events of something that happened this week, Piers Morgan, someone who has portrayed himself as a beacon in the battle for free speech, he interviewed Jeremy Corbyn for a pod cast in which he repeatedly asked Corbyn to describe Hamas as a terrorist organisation. Corbyn apparently avoided the question several times.
I saw in the Guardian earlier that Starmer was saying Corbyn's days as a Labour MP were over, he'd never be allowed to stand as a Labour candidate again.
No matter what you think of Corbyn, he has not donned a bandanna and picked up an AK47, he has not planted any bombs nor, as far as I'm aware, has he condoned the atrocities on 7th of October or incited armed aggression of any sort.
From his wiki page, the people of his constituency have elected him at every opportunity since 1983.
These bastions of free speech have denied the people of the constituency of Islington North the opportunity to vote for the same candidate they have shown faith in for 40 years. I'm not asking anyone to like Corbyn and I'm certainly not asking anyone to agree with him, but shouldn't his constituents decide if he should represent them or not? - that is the argument I've heard the likes of Rees-Mogg trot out when asked if he should step down after being found out for one thing and another.
My recollection of Corbyn's association with Hamas and other groups is that he has always advocated dialogue, you know, just like Thatcher did in private with groups in Northern Ireland whilst proscribing them in public.
It could also be reaching the end of one's tether over Corbyn's needless and rather naive interjections into foreign policy from the back benches. He came out with some incredibly tone deaf, unrealistic peacenik rhetoric around the war in Ukraine not so long ago. And of course the right wing press lapped it up as they will this. There is not enough prominent left wing media to counterract what the right will do with this and the sorts of people Labour need to maintain their healthy poll lead are Corbyn sceptics at the best of times.
The people of Islington North would be denied the chance to vote for Corbyn as a Labour candidate, it's up to him whether he might choose to stand as an independent and see whether they were voting for man or rosette.