• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

Mr Ed. makes a speech...

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Mr Ed. makes a speech...

    quite a big speech too - New Generation speech

    First part (rest in similar vein)

    Conference, I stand here today ready to lead: a new generation now leading Labour.

    Be in no doubt.

    The new generation of Labour is different. Different attitudes, different ideas, different ways of doing politics.

    Today I want to tell you who I am, what I believe and how we are going to do the most important thing we have to do - win back the trust of the country.

    Personal

    We all of us share a deep conviction which brought us into this party and into this hall.

    But each of us has our own individual story.

    And I want to tell you about mine.

    In 1940, my grandfather, with my Dad, climbed onto one of the last boats out of Belgium.

    They had to make a heart breaking decision – to leave behind my grandmother and my father’s sister. They spent the war in hiding, in a village sheltered by a brave local farmer. Month after month, year upon year, they lived in fear of the knock at the door.

    At the same time, on the other side of Europe, my mother, aged five, had seen Hitler’s army march into Poland.

    She spent the war on the run sheltering in a convent and then with a Catholic family that took her in. Her sister, her mother and her.

    My love for this country comes from this story. Two young people fled the darkness that had engulfed the Jews across Europe and in Britain they found the light of liberty.

    They arrived with nothing. This country gave them everything.

    It gave them life and the things that make life worth living: hope, friendship, opportunity and family.

    And they took hope and opportunity. They worked hard; they got on.

    My Dad learnt English, paid his way moving furniture during the day, and studying at night at technical college. He joined the Navy to fight for our country and afterwards he wanted to go to university. He did.

    My Mum built a life here after the war, for all of us. I know nobody more generous, nobody more kind, nobody more loving and nobody more relieved that this is contest is over, than my Mum.

    The gift my parents gave to me and David are the things I want for every child in this country. A secure and loving home. Encouragement and the aspiration to succeed.

    In those ways my family was just like every other. But in some ways it was different.

    I suppose not everyone has a dad who wrote a book saying he didn’t believe in the Parliamentary road to socialism.

    But you know, it wasn’t a cold house.

    It was warm, full of the spirit of argument and conviction, the conviction that leads me to stand before you today, the conviction that people of courage and principle can make a huge difference to their world.

    What my parents learnt in fear, they passed on to us in an environment of comfort and security.

    And there was one more lesson that I learnt.

    We do not have to accept the world as we find it. And we have a responsibility to leave our world a better place and never walk by on the other side of injustice.
    Speaking gibberish on internet talkboards since last Michaelmas. Plus here on Twitter

    #2
    A horse is a horse, of course, of course,
    And no one can talk to a horse of course,
    That is, of course, unless the horse
    Is the famous Mister Ed.

    "I am Mister Ed!"

    Comment


      #3
      I won't be beholden to the unions. Even though they are the only people in the country who wanted me in this job.

      Comment


        #4
        So his Grandad and his Dad ditched his Nan at the outset of the war, and hightailed it to Blighty on a boat.
        Quality.
        How long before we hear him trumpeting on about "Family Values"?? And will that happen before or after he ditches his big Brother?

        “The period of the disintegration of the European Union has begun. And the first vessel to have departed is Britain”

        Comment


          #5
          I watched it and thought he was pretty good.

          Can't wait for him to replace that smarmy little Cameron
          Guy Fawkes - "The last man to enter Parliament with honourable intentions."

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Alf W View Post
            I watched it and thought he was pretty good.

            Can't wait for him to replace that smarmy little Cameron
            Only another 4 and half years to go

            Comment


              #7
              1. No mention of the Iraq war that Labour dragged us into.
              2. No mention of the poor economic policies of el Gordo that means we have one of the worst economic positions of the major economies, financial crisis notwithstanding
              3. No mention of the fact that Britain has one of worst pensions situations when in 1997 it had one of the best.
              4. No mention of the fact that public services are still nowhere near continental standards in spite of the billions poured into them over more than a decade.
              5. No mention of any coherent industrial and economic policy going forward.

              Yet more BS from yet another career politico without any training in logic, no integrity and his head up his arse.
              Hard Brexit now!
              #prayfornodeal

              Comment


                #8
                They arrived with nothing. This country gave them everything.
                Bloody immigrants!
                Last edited by Troll; 28 September 2010, 15:33.
                How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by sasguru View Post
                  1. No mention of the Iraq war that Labour dragged us into.
                  2. No mention of the poor economic policies of el Gordo that means we have one of the worst economic positions of the major economies, financial crisis notwithstanding
                  3. No mention of the fact that Britain has one of worst pensions situations when in 1997 it had one of the best.
                  4. No mention of the fact that public services are still nowhere near continental standards in spite of the billions poured into them over more than a decade.
                  5. No mention of any coherent industrial and economic policy going forward.

                  Yet more BS from yet another career politico without any training in logic, no integrity and his head up his arse.
                  God... I hate agreeing with you
                  How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by sasguru View Post
                    1. No mention of the Iraq war that Labour dragged us into.
                    2. No mention of the poor economic policies of el Gordo that means we have one of the worst economic positions of the major economies, financial crisis notwithstanding
                    3. No mention of the fact that Britain has one of worst pensions situations when in 1997 it had one of the best.
                    4. No mention of the fact that public services are still nowhere near continental standards in spite of the billions poured into them over more than a decade.
                    5. No mention of any coherent industrial and economic policy going forward.

                    Yet more BS from yet another career politico without any training in logic, no integrity and his head up his arse.
                    Did you read the speech before belming those accusations? I wouldn't trust him as far as I could tulip, but I wouldn't come out with what you just put, when he did address several of those points. Just one quick example:

                    Iraq was an issue that divided our party and our country. Many sincerely believed that the world faced a real threat. I criticise nobody faced with making the toughest of decisions and I honour our troops who fought and died there.

                    But I do believe that we were wrong. Wrong to take Britain to war and we need to be honest about that.
                    Speaking gibberish on internet talkboards since last Michaelmas. Plus here on Twitter

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X