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Re: Don't fall for the marketing...

Posted: Sat Nov 02 2019 9:52am
by Boro Boy
parchedpeas wrote:
Sat Nov 02 2019 8:10am
Boro Boy wrote:
Sat Nov 02 2019 1:33am
blythburgh wrote:
Fri Nov 01 2019 11:19am


The rich hard right wing who can make even more money if we leave the EU. They want to weaken the rights of the workers, gamble of the value of the pound on the foreign exchanges, get more privatisation in the NHS.
How do you substantiate these claims? Or is it you just doing a bit of disruption marketing? :wtf:
I find using your eyes helps.
Can you see any facts to substantiate these claims or are you just falling for the marketing...?

Re: Don't fall for the marketing...

Posted: Sat Nov 02 2019 10:32am
by blythburgh
Read/listen to/watch something other than the right wing stuff gives you a more rounded and far better informed idea of what is happening in the world.

I am so grateful that i was brought up to read the Telegraph and the Mirror at a time when people like Cassandra and Vicky worked for them. I got a right wing view and a left wing view and then had to make up my own mind

Re: Don't fall for the marketing...

Posted: Sat Nov 02 2019 10:42am
by Boro Boy
blythburgh wrote:
Sat Nov 02 2019 10:32am
Read/listen to/watch something other than the right wing stuff gives you a more rounded and far better informed idea of what is happening in the world.

I am so grateful that i was brought up to read the Telegraph and the Mirror at a time when people like Cassandra and Vicky worked for them. I got a right wing view and a left wing view and then had to make up my own mind
That is just hearsay and marketing, what facts do you base your views on? :think:

Re: Don't fall for the marketing...

Posted: Sat Nov 02 2019 10:43am
by blythburgh
I thought "VIcky" how much do I know about him (I assumed it was a him). Went to wiki so know far more now and also found on the net amongst images for him a picture of Churchill striding over the Houses of Parliament.

He could not have drawn that one about May or Johnson

Re: Don't fall for the marketing...

Posted: Sat Nov 02 2019 11:36am
by Boro Boy
blythburgh wrote:
Sat Nov 02 2019 10:43am
I thought "VIcky" how much do I know about him (I assumed it was a him). Went to wiki so know far more now and also found on the net amongst images for him a picture of Churchill striding over the Houses of Parliament.

He could not have drawn that one about May or Johnson
Forgive me I don't know if you are even English or it is your second language but what you are saying is not linked to the above, doesn't answer the question and is totally incomprehensible! Is it some sort of Norfolk dialect or did you just have a hard night last night? :wtf:

Re: Don't fall for the marketing...

Posted: Sat Nov 02 2019 3:33pm
by pakefield
repeat

Re: Don't fall for the marketing...

Posted: Sat Nov 02 2019 3:34pm
by pakefield
Boro Boy wrote:
Sat Nov 02 2019 11:36am
blythburgh wrote:
Sat Nov 02 2019 10:43am
I thought "VIcky" how much do I know about him (I assumed it was a him). Went to wiki so know far more now and also found on the net amongst images for him a picture of Churchill striding over the Houses of Parliament.

He could not have drawn that one about May or Johnson
Forgive me I don't know if you are even English or it is your second language but what you are saying is not linked to the above, doesn't answer the question and is totally incomprehensible! Is it some sort of Norfolk dialect or did you just have a hard night last night? :wtf:
:shock: You are a braver man than me

Re: Don't fall for the marketing...

Posted: Mon Dec 09 2019 8:20pm
by kevinchess1
Sarah wrote:
Fri Nov 01 2019 5:19am
I can think of a recent example where 17.4 million people were persuaded ...
And there you have it, in a single sentence, the thinking of your average 'Rabid Remoaner' EVERYONE who voted to Leave is an idiot. Such arrogance and condescension.
I mean, there wasn't a single Leave voted who looked at both sides of the argument and after careful thought and reflection, decide we might be better off out. Nope not a single one. None of them thought 'Well we been a big player in the world for 200 years maybe we should step back and let them ghet on with it No one thought 'Our fathers and grandfathers fought and died to prevent an European super state, are we now saying they died in vain?'
Nope not a single one of them they all believe the 'lies-on-a-bus'
It was a good job we had George Osbourne Doom and gloom forecast to guide us,,, except he got everything wrong. 'Stock market collapse; Nope share price are higher noew than then 'Mortgagaes to go up' Nope mortgages went down 'Massive unemployment' nope unemployment at record lows and so on Our George sold us more Whoppers than a well know burger company and no one no one ever mentions it
If you can bear to get in an argument with a Rabid Remoaner, they have 2 conflicting answers that they trot out to every statement 'Thomas Cook collapse? 'Brexit ' Pensioners paying for TV licences 'Brexit' England get beaten by Croatia in the world cup 'Definitely Brexit'
But when you point out how well the economy is doing or record employment levels or winning the Cricket world cup they say ;Yeah but Brexit ain't happen yet you just wait n see how awful it's gonna be' So which is it?

Re: Don't fall for the marketing...

Posted: Mon Dec 09 2019 9:54pm
by Sarah
You're projecting, I haven't said all those things. Who would defend George Osborne? No, thanks.

What's your point - are you claiming that Boris Johnson habitually lying and repeating slogans isn't working? It clearly is!

Re: Don't fall for the marketing...

Posted: Mon Dec 09 2019 10:49pm
by macliam
Interesting that an opener about marketing ends up in a slanging match about Brexit. :roll:

Ralph Waldo Emerson is often misquoted as saying "Build a better mousetrap, and the world will beat a path to your door" (he didn't...) however, the marketeer will tell you that the real truth is "Build a better path and you'll sell more mousetraps".......

As someone who was involved in the "black art", I can tell you that, like most things, there is a good side and a bad side to it. On the plus side, the idea of creating products that people want to buy is useful - on the dark side, persuading them they need something that they don't is not so great, apart from driving up sales.

As a marketing manager for technical services, my job was to create "packages" that addressed a customer need and sell them at a price that was good for us - or, in some cases, sell them at a reduced cost but enable us to utilise our fixed resource better. The difference between me and a salesman was that the latter often "sold" services we didn't offer.... a bit like the promises others are commenting on here.

Simple questions rarely exist and simple answers less so....