British Comedy Guide

Big Brother is watching you Page 6

DaButt careful! Mickey Mouse has been a stooge of ZOG for decades.

Quote: sootyj @ January 25 2009, 8:48 PM GMT

DaButt careful! Mickey Mouse has been a stooge of ZOG for decades.

I thought he was on Hamas' side?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fkvbln1ORk0

And as you can see Israel kicked his ass good and proper. He's not Mickey he's Farfour, his brother is a bee and another one who was a rabbit. Israel apparently killed the f**king lot ha!
Farfour's mum would appear to be an interspecies slapper.

I've read that the trademark on the Popeye character recently expired in much of the world, so perhaps Hamas should stop risking a lawsuit by Disney and just use the sailor character.

I'm Popeye the sailor man
I'm propped up by Iran
I'm strong to the finish
Cuz I kills the Yiddish
I'm Popeye the sailor man! (Toot toot)

Quote: sootyj @ January 25 2009, 5:53 PM GMT

=

If you break the law, including incorrectly packing your bin or not registering staff. Tough shit the laws the law, don't like it? Move to Somalia.

You sure you want that Sooty? What about when new laws start coming in that you don't agree with? Laws that seriously compromise your liberty? How about enforced curfews? Restrictions on travel? How about if they made it illegal to disagree with government policies? Will you still defend those laws? All this may sound ridiculous but believe me, all it would take would be another major terrorist attack - either real or fabricated by the government - to kick off this sort of thing.

We survived the Blitz, IRA bombings and more and our system of government buckled. Buckled but didn't break the Lords, the Parliament and the courts held steady. The idea that our freedoms will suddenly vanish in the face of terror, shows a depressing lack of faith in our selves and government.

I think we forget how terrible July 7 and the Brighton Bombings were.
We can't be scared of what might happen and if our laws need to adapt to changes in society and technology, so what? Laws are malleable and evoloutinary it's neccesary.

Unfashionable as it maybe I trust our government and believe it has our best wishes at it's heart. I also believe they don't have the power, will or organisation to foist some Cyberpunk/Terminator uber technological dictatorship upon us.

Quote: sootyj @ January 25 2009, 9:36 PM GMT

I trust our government and believe it has our best wishes at it's heart.

Oh come on, this HAS to be a wind up?

Quote: Aaron @ January 25 2009, 9:41 PM GMT

Oh come on, this HAS to be a wind up?

Yes it must be.

Quote: sootyj @ January 25 2009, 9:36 PM GMT

I think we forget how terrible July 7 and the Brighton Bombings were.
We can't be scared of what might happen and if our laws need to adapt to changes in society and technology, so what? Laws are malleable and evoloutinary it's neccesary.

Unfashionable as it maybe I trust our government and believe it has our best wishes at it's heart.

Sooty - you're saying that no matter what laws are put upon us, no matter how unjust or opressive, that you will agree and abide by them simply because they are the law. Are you Chinese?

Laughing out loud

Not at all, I really do when all is said and done we're all cheerfully chatting about sinister government plots on an open forum.
And none of us expect a knock at the door from Brown's storm troopers or to be mysteriously fired.

What ever you say about Brown he'd have made far more money in the private sector, been bullied less and slept more.

Quote: Lee Henman @ January 25 2009, 9:44 PM GMT

Sooty - you're saying that no matter what laws are put upon us, no matter how unjust or opressive, that you will agree and abide by them simply because they are the law. Are you Chinese?

No because unlike China our systems of laws and ogvernments reflect years of progress, that has built on progress. Like the US and French constitutional systems there are complex systems of checks and balances.

N.B. when I've disliked government policies as I have done many times, I have delighted in publicly protesting, voting, campaigning against it.
I've marched with CND (stupid), against Pole tax, against Gulf War, for Israel.
Joined a Union, a political party gone on strike.

And still found myself in fairly responsible posts in local authorities run by difering political parties.

Paranoid conspiracy believing is the ultimate act of political surrender. It's absolutely destructive to society.

Quote: sootyj @ January 25 2009, 9:36 PM GMT

We survived the Blitz, IRA bombings and more and our system of government buckled. Buckled but didn't break the Lords, the Parliament and the courts held steady. The idea that our freedoms will suddenly vanish in the face of terror, shows a depressing lack of faith in our selves and government.

I think we forget how terrible July 7 and the Brighton Bombings were.
We can't be scared of what might happen and if our laws need to adapt to changes in society and technology, so what? Laws are malleable and evoloutinary it's neccesary.

Unfashionable as it maybe I trust our government and believe it has our best wishes at it's heart. I also believe they don't have the power, will or organisation to foist some Cyberpunk/Terminator uber technological dictatorship upon us.

What *are* you blethering on about? What does all of the above mean? For the record, I don't lie awake at night worrying about the next terrorist attack. It's paranoid people like you who do. You know, for all of your talk I bet when (if) this all happens, you'd be the first to complain.

You're not "unfashionable" or naive, I think you've decided to take a controversial stance just for the hell of it. And quit installing straw-men, no one's said anything about Cyberpunk/Terminator Uber technologies.

Sake.

I'm going to bed.
Angry

Responding to Lee's post about one more terrorist attack being all it would take for freedom to be rolled back.

And every one's been talking about chips and hi tech monitoring systems through out the thread.

Day 88 Sooty's house.

Sooty is on the internet and writing puns.

Quote: sootyj @ January 25 2009, 9:47 PM GMT

against Pole tax

Fancy, a tax on nationality.

Share this page