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• #3952
No matter what your age, if you are on this forum chances are that you are left wing it seems. All we all have in common is cycles, as a transport mode. Is it that in general people who cycle are left, or people who ride fixed. or people who join forums? Or is it London?
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• #3953
I guess track cycling certainly results in a lot of left-leaning cyclists.
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• #3954
makes sense now... ;)
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• #3955
I get the tribalism thing. I've always considered my political party the same as my football team, you don't change who you support, you might bitch and moan about them (I really wasn't happy with Corbyns position on brexit) but when it comes to the big match against your hated rivals your right be behind the team.
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• #3956
what could be more libertarian than riding a bike?
ayn rand loving scumbags, the lot of you.
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• #3957
people who join forums
Is there a graph for mumsnet voting?
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• #3958
Seems so
Liberal left leaning forum
1 Attachment
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• #3959
Most of the older labour voters are dead from being poor and working proper jobs.
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• #3960
True that,
not many of my Dad's mates from the Building & Construction trades
lasted more than a few years into retirement,
after years of exposure to lead-based paint, solvents and dusts. -
• #3961
I'm starting to think my grandparents politics are probably quite unusual. They're in their 90s and Labour (more into the Liz Kendal type than J Corbz).
They're house-proud, still reading widely, and follow several forms of news (Guardian, Times, BBC).
Tolerance and alturism, being society-minded hasn't diminished even slightly with age.
They're awesome.
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• #3962
Farron quits: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-40281300
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• #3963
Very Lib Dem, surprisingly perhaps?
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• #3964
Vote Vince!
Will there be a £3 option? -
• #3965
farron pretty much saying he wants to devote more time to his magic friend who tells him to hate gay people. so long, funny man.
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• #3966
Years ago, the Labour candidate in our constituency (rural Hampshire - dyed in the wool Tory central) came to the door canvassing for votes. My 90-something Gran got to the door before me, told the candidate that she'd always voted Labour as it was the party for the working class, that he'd get her vote but when was he going to do something about all these foreigners moving here. Poor bastard didn't know what to say.
At my secondary school we had one black pupil in a school of 750 pupils, so it was a real concern obviously.
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• #3967
I think if I was a Tory, I wouldn't shout about it on here. There are probably quite a few shy Tories who want to keep it to themselves, and probably also some who would quite like to get into an argument but know it wouldn't end well...
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• #3968
Because shy right-wingers is such a thing on the Interwebs
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• #3969
Stay active; stay left
Gentlemen dress to the left.
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• #3970
political compass divides the world up on two dimensions: an economic scale from left to right, and a social scale from authoritarian to libertarian. Its a way of understanding that while Stalin and Ghandi were both economically left wing, they did have differences in approach
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• #3971
Where's the Weak and Wobbly axis?
For Mother Theresa -
• #3973
Step aside Paxman!
They must be the toughest demographic to affect on the doorstep.
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• #3974
Brian Paddick resigned first citing Farron's opinions and Farron was gone hours later.
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• #3975
Resigned from what?
Home affairs spokesman for a party about as likely to get voted in as UKIP atm. That's got about as much gravitas as cutting up a pay and go sim card and calling the local shop owner you bought top ups from a paedo.
Respect to your dad