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- And they are off...! General Election 2019
The ultimate problem is not that many politicians lie.
The ultimate problem is far more worrying and far more difficult to resolve.
The ultimate problem is that many voters want to be lied to.
Sadly, I have to say that this echoes my own conclusion after listening to numerous vox-pops on the radio. I can find no other explanation as to why seemingly rational voters could consider vesting their support to a man with no personal integrity whatsoever and who has previously been sacked for telling lies.Sarah wrote: ↑Mon Dec 09 2019 5:34pm"The L word, the F word, and contemporary UK politics"
https://davidallengreen.com/2019/12/the ... -politics/
The ultimate problem is not that many politicians lie.
The ultimate problem is far more worrying and far more difficult to resolve.
The ultimate problem is that many voters want to be lied to.
https://voteforpolicies.org.uk/Get informed for the 2019 general election!
Compare what each party is promising to do - for the issues you care about.
Hardly surprising, when you are desperate you will agree to shoot yourself in the foot.Sarah wrote: ↑Mon Dec 09 2019 2:47pmVoting for the party currently led by Boris Johnson won't 'Get Brexit Done' anytime soon and he surely knows it. It's obvious his plan is simply to Get Britain Stuck where going forward would impose the inevitable negative consequences of leaving the EU but we can't go back anymore. That's what they really have on offer in this election. The spending promises are a sideshow.
Katya Adler expects more UK red lines to be sacrificed if Boris Johnson tries to rush an EU trade agreement next year:
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1203 ... 10272.html
For beneficial results, you negotiate with the upper hand.
Not always, there is such a thing as a negotiated surrender. The secret is to understand your own position and find something your "opponent" also wants, but might lose if everything hits the fan.AAAlphaThunder wrote: ↑Tue Dec 10 2019 10:59am....Rule #1 of Negotiating:
For beneficial results, you negotiate with the upper hand.
We are not at war.macliam wrote: ↑Tue Dec 10 2019 12:31pmNot always, there is such a thing as a negotiated surrender. The secret is to understand your own position and find something your "opponent" also wants, but might lose if everything hits the fan.AAAlphaThunder wrote: ↑Tue Dec 10 2019 10:59am....Rule #1 of Negotiating:
For beneficial results, you negotiate with the upper hand.
Militarily, that can be that they don't lose further resource, or can concentrate what they have on another front - and you try to achieve the least-worst outcome for you on that basis. The UK has some strong cards - security and the financial sector - but has been deluded by the "they need us more than we need them" claims early on. The other factor has been that this is NOT the treaty, where such things would come into play, this is only the cease-fire agreement..... and you do not "win" in a cease-fire agreement.
You could have fooled me!AAAlphaThunder wrote: ↑Tue Dec 10 2019 2:04pmWe are not at war.macliam wrote: ↑Tue Dec 10 2019 12:31pmNot always, there is such a thing as a negotiated surrender. The secret is to understand your own position and find something your "opponent" also wants, but might lose if everything hits the fan.
Militarily, that can be that they don't lose further resource, or can concentrate what they have on another front - and you try to achieve the least-worst outcome for you on that basis. The UK has some strong cards - security and the financial sector - but has been deluded by the "they need us more than we need them" claims early on. The other factor has been that this is NOT the treaty, where such things would come into play, this is only the cease-fire agreement..... and you do not "win" in a cease-fire agreement.
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