Shouldn't this thread be moved to Off Topic?
Quote from: Dante Lavelli on September 03, 2015, 07:14:28 PMQuote from: TopDeck113 on September 03, 2015, 06:58:18 PMWill the banners be written on the back of Je suis Charlie ones left over from earlier in the year?The humanitarian crisis of Syrian refugees (and the exploitation of economic migrants from across the Middle East and Africa) needs to be dealt with immediately, but banners at football grounds simply smacks of bandwagon-jumping, not least because the grounds themselves unfortunately remain repositories for significant numbers of our fellow citizens who would make those in desperate need of refuge anything but welcome. I disagree. Seeing the banners in Germany the other week was possibly the first time I'd see mass approval for a more pro-active approach to the crisis. The politicians have successfully ignored the problem because there has been little pressure put on them to sort it out. These public, possibly bandwagon jumping (don't care if it is) measures are a positive step to forcing change. Our current crop of politicians will change their tune to whatever they perceive is the public mood of the day. UKIP shout far too loud in this debate for my liking.
Quote from: TopDeck113 on September 03, 2015, 06:58:18 PMWill the banners be written on the back of Je suis Charlie ones left over from earlier in the year?The humanitarian crisis of Syrian refugees (and the exploitation of economic migrants from across the Middle East and Africa) needs to be dealt with immediately, but banners at football grounds simply smacks of bandwagon-jumping, not least because the grounds themselves unfortunately remain repositories for significant numbers of our fellow citizens who would make those in desperate need of refuge anything but welcome. I disagree. Seeing the banners in Germany the other week was possibly the first time I'd see mass approval for a more pro-active approach to the crisis. The politicians have successfully ignored the problem because there has been little pressure put on them to sort it out. These public, possibly bandwagon jumping (don't care if it is) measures are a positive step to forcing change.
Will the banners be written on the back of Je suis Charlie ones left over from earlier in the year?The humanitarian crisis of Syrian refugees (and the exploitation of economic migrants from across the Middle East and Africa) needs to be dealt with immediately, but banners at football grounds simply smacks of bandwagon-jumping, not least because the grounds themselves unfortunately remain repositories for significant numbers of our fellow citizens who would make those in desperate need of refuge anything but welcome.
I do not feel the slightest sympathy for Cameron. He has a wonderful opportunity to show us what he really is made of as a person. Is all the churchgoing and public compassion and wading in the Somerset floodwater sincere or political opportunism? The refugee crisis gives him the chance to show us.
Nothing I would like better than a few Syrians doing paid work on my farm and some Syrian kids kicking a football round my farmyard. I think we should realise how this humanitarian catastrophe came about. Many of us, my family included, marched against the Iraq war. We could see what came next and this is it. War begets war and war begets mass human suffering. It is time for the developed world to take stock of itself. It is time to turn away from pouring the talents and energies of educated people into building Mercedes cars and Rolex watches and pour it into the building of homes and schools and roads and bridges and drains and reservoirs and all the fabric of communities so that when humanitarian disasters like this happen there is the capacity to deal with it. It is no more than nations providing a spare bedroom for guests. Countries scramble to pour billions into hosting the Olympic Games or the World Cup. The same resources should be given to saving innocent people's lives.
The ordinary British people have always done the right thing. The government and ruling classes of this country have always done the wrong thing!
Shouldn't these people be moved to Off Topic?
I think it's incredibly heartwarming that so many people in this country are willing to offer their homes to refugees. Who knows, perhaps this will usher in a new era of benevolence and humanity in Britain, where we welcome all those Britons who are already without shelter on our city streets into our homes, solving the homelessness problem once and for all? Perhaps the refugee crisis will force the government to build the homes, schools, hospitals and transport infrastructure that we desperately need? Maybe it will make us a better country? Mr Cameron? Mr Cameron...
Quote from: Brazilian Villain on September 03, 2015, 11:22:36 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on September 03, 2015, 10:57:19 PMQuote from: Brazilian Villain on September 03, 2015, 10:41:39 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on September 03, 2015, 09:59:20 PMThis country had a reputation for centuries for doing the right thing.I'd like it to come back, but the response of the political class - not just the government, NB - so far has been embarrassing. Paralysed with fear.Yes, in Ireland we have marvelled for centuries at the UK's ability to do the right thing. Its actions in the period leading up to and during the Great Famine were particulalrly well guided. If only we had an enlightened political class like that nowadays I'm sure everything would be just dandy. That'd be a fair point if i had claimed that the UK had a faultless history.Unfortunately, I didn't, so it's not hugely relevant. The fact of the matter is we used to be relied upon to put ourselves on the right side of things. Currently, we're not, we're being insular and pretending things aren't happening.When there was a massive humanitarian crisis on its doorstep in the 1840s (far greater than today's with millions of deaths) the UK not only didn't do the right thing but its actions helped exacerbate the suituatuon. So to claim the UK had a reputation for centuries for doing the right thing is palpable nonsense rather than the "fact of the matter". Palpable nonsense because you've flagged up something from 170 years ago?And once again, I am not suggesting we are without fault - no country is - but we have more often than not done the right thing for a long, long time, which makes the current inaction all the more disappointing.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on September 03, 2015, 10:57:19 PMQuote from: Brazilian Villain on September 03, 2015, 10:41:39 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on September 03, 2015, 09:59:20 PMThis country had a reputation for centuries for doing the right thing.I'd like it to come back, but the response of the political class - not just the government, NB - so far has been embarrassing. Paralysed with fear.Yes, in Ireland we have marvelled for centuries at the UK's ability to do the right thing. Its actions in the period leading up to and during the Great Famine were particulalrly well guided. If only we had an enlightened political class like that nowadays I'm sure everything would be just dandy. That'd be a fair point if i had claimed that the UK had a faultless history.Unfortunately, I didn't, so it's not hugely relevant. The fact of the matter is we used to be relied upon to put ourselves on the right side of things. Currently, we're not, we're being insular and pretending things aren't happening.When there was a massive humanitarian crisis on its doorstep in the 1840s (far greater than today's with millions of deaths) the UK not only didn't do the right thing but its actions helped exacerbate the suituatuon. So to claim the UK had a reputation for centuries for doing the right thing is palpable nonsense rather than the "fact of the matter".
Quote from: Brazilian Villain on September 03, 2015, 10:41:39 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on September 03, 2015, 09:59:20 PMThis country had a reputation for centuries for doing the right thing.I'd like it to come back, but the response of the political class - not just the government, NB - so far has been embarrassing. Paralysed with fear.Yes, in Ireland we have marvelled for centuries at the UK's ability to do the right thing. Its actions in the period leading up to and during the Great Famine were particulalrly well guided. If only we had an enlightened political class like that nowadays I'm sure everything would be just dandy. That'd be a fair point if i had claimed that the UK had a faultless history.Unfortunately, I didn't, so it's not hugely relevant. The fact of the matter is we used to be relied upon to put ourselves on the right side of things. Currently, we're not, we're being insular and pretending things aren't happening.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on September 03, 2015, 09:59:20 PMThis country had a reputation for centuries for doing the right thing.I'd like it to come back, but the response of the political class - not just the government, NB - so far has been embarrassing. Paralysed with fear.Yes, in Ireland we have marvelled for centuries at the UK's ability to do the right thing. Its actions in the period leading up to and during the Great Famine were particulalrly well guided. If only we had an enlightened political class like that nowadays I'm sure everything would be just dandy.
This country had a reputation for centuries for doing the right thing.I'd like it to come back, but the response of the political class - not just the government, NB - so far has been embarrassing. Paralysed with fear.