Well, that didn't help much...pvr said:Not sure if others have taken that quiz, but I ended up 90% UKIP and 75% Conservative.
83% Tory
83% UKIP
80% LibDem
78% Labour
Well, that didn't help much...pvr said:Not sure if others have taken that quiz, but I ended up 90% UKIP and 75% Conservative.
mmm-five said:Well, that didn't help much...pvr said:Not sure if others have taken that quiz, but I ended up 90% UKIP and 75% Conservative.
83% Tory
83% UKIP
80% LibDem
78% Labour
Jonny essex said:Vote UKIP if you want your country back![]()
mmm-five said:Well, that didn't help much...pvr said:Not sure if others have taken that quiz, but I ended up 90% UKIP and 75% Conservative.
83% Tory
83% UKIP
80% LibDem
78% Labour
ronk said:We trained hard . . . but it seemed that every time we were beginning to form up into teams we would be reorganised. I was to learn later in life that we tend to meet any new situation by reorganizing; and a wonderful method it can be for creating the illusion of progress while producing confusion, inefficiency, and demoralisation.
Bing said:ronk said:We trained hard . . . but it seemed that every time we were beginning to form up into teams we would be reorganised. I was to learn later in life that we tend to meet any new situation by reorganizing; and a wonderful method it can be for creating the illusion of progress while producing confusion, inefficiency, and demoralisation.
:wink:
ronk said:We trained hard . . . but it seemed that every time we were beginning to form up into teams we would be reorganised. I was to learn later in life that we tend to meet any new situation by reorganizing; and a wonderful method it can be for creating the illusion of progress while producing confusion, inefficiency, and demoralisation.
Angie4m said:Watching the One Show last night and they advised that Ex Pats can also register to vote and that last time something like 35k people (IIRC) did so out of around 5 million. Sorry but if you've decided you wish to live in another sunny part of the world, WHY should you be able to vote on the daily running of a country you no longer contribute to?
Or are the Ex Pats that are voting the ones that still return from abroad to use our services like the NHS
StevenH72 said:Angie4m said:Watching the One Show last night and they advised that Ex Pats can also register to vote and that last time something like 35k people (IIRC) did so out of around 5 million. Sorry but if you've decided you wish to live in another sunny part of the world, WHY should you be able to vote on the daily running of a country you no longer contribute to?
Or are the Ex Pats that are voting the ones that still return from abroad to use our services like the NHS
Well, I was due to be an ex-pat, but unfortunately it fell through. However, it was due to be 2-3 year stint abroad. If I was not allowed to vote I'd be mightily upset.
1) I'd still have property in the UK
2) I'd be returning to the UK within the period of the next elected government
Both of the above are reasons as to why I would still want to vote. Not all ex-pats have abandoned the UK totally, but have to move for job opportunities etc.
CornishRob said:StevenH72 said:Angie4m said:Watching the One Show last night and they advised that Ex Pats can also register to vote and that last time something like 35k people (IIRC) did so out of around 5 million. Sorry but if you've decided you wish to live in another sunny part of the world, WHY should you be able to vote on the daily running of a country you no longer contribute to?
Or are the Ex Pats that are voting the ones that still return from abroad to use our services like the NHS
Well, I was due to be an ex-pat, but unfortunately it fell through. However, it was due to be 2-3 year stint abroad. If I was not allowed to vote I'd be mightily upset.
1) I'd still have property in the UK
2) I'd be returning to the UK within the period of the next elected government
Both of the above are reasons as to why I would still want to vote. Not all ex-pats have abandoned the UK totally, but have to move for job opportunities etc.
Was your plan not more of a secondment rather than becoming an expat? I can't imagine any logical person coming up with a reason why you shouldn't get a vote in that instance.
Someone in the comments section for that video said:So the viable ideological models currently up for grabs are what?
'Green' - Fifty shades of pseudo-Marxism, which as we all know does not work in practice, unless you live in a Yurt in someone else's field, in Utopia and believe it's still the Bronze age. Still, it's nice to daydream while planning to do something you have no idea about and not getting around to committing it to paper.
LibDem - Pseudo-socialism, which as we all know cannot exist outside of another structure because it requires an opposition to work against. Can barely sustain itself even ideologically.
UKIP - The equivalent of the population of The Isle of Wight blaming their chalk cliffs for everything.
Labour - Desperately needs to be renamed 'Tory v2.0', as all the current version does is validate itself by idiotically attacking the Conservatives. Will never live down Blair or Iraq.
Conservatives - Far too engaged in pursuits of the 'Landed Gentry' to have any real clue about us plebs. For those voters who aspire to wealth without any hope of getting it. Winners of the next General Election because everything else on offer amounts to asking the panel of judges from Strictly Come Dancing to build the ISS.
Angie4m said:Watching the One Show last night and they advised that Ex Pats can also register to vote and that last time something like 35k people (IIRC) did so out of around 5 million. Sorry but if you've decided you wish to live in another sunny part of the world, WHY should you be able to vote on the daily running of a country you no longer contribute to?
Or are the Ex Pats that are voting the ones that still return from abroad to use our services like the NHS