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How will Bliar go?
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How will Bliar go?
11On a wave of eurphoria36.36%4To crowds booing and jeering45.45%5He won't leave, he'll stay to the next election9.09%1Quietly and disappear9.09%1By faking his own death on a beach in Dorset0.00%0Other - Please supply witty answer0.00%0The poll is expired.
First Law of Contracting: Only the strong survive -
with a cheesey grin on his face knowing he has fukked the whole country up and then off to a life on the EU gravy train. !!! -
The day he resigns he will , in his own mind, be the greatest leader ever. In the cold grey of the following morning when all his sychophantic advisors have moved on he will begin to realise what a total disaster he has been for this once proud and great nation. EO 2006.
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(>'.'<)
("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to WorkComment
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In today's Telegraph Jeff Randall compares B'Liar's exit to the fall of Enron.
On US TV they showed live pictures of the chief-exec's been lead away in handcuffs. That is what I want to see for B'Liar and his cronies.Blair, you cannot reach me now,
No matter how you try,
Goodbye cruel Labour,
Your end is nigh.
International Talk Like a Pirate DayComment
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That's the most accurate reflection of this country I've read in a while.
Spot on.
Question is, what can we do about it to survive (and even prosper) in the mess that's about to unravel?Comment
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Originally posted by CaribbeanPirateIn today's Telegraph Jeff Randall compares B'Liar's exit to the fall of Enron.
"It's not just that summer is over – the long haul to Christmas starts here, and we've all got back-to-work blues.
The principal causes of people's gloom are very real. Worries about jobs, rising mortgage payments, fears over mounting violence in the Middle East and domestic terror plots are undermining our sense of well-being.
A BBC poll found that nearly half of us think this country is a worse place to live than it was 20 years ago. Issues such as crime, immigration, overcrowding and the high cost of living are a burden on our collective spirit.
With its dodgy accounting and false promises, the entire New Labour Project looks increasingly like a political version of Enron: temporary prosperity, built on an illusion.
Enron fell apart when its true numbers emerged from a miasma of mystery. As the roof caved in, its directors, desperate to avoid blame, turned on each other viciously. Labour is already suffering the same fate.
Gordon Brown's appetite for self-approbation – talking up his own talents – worked for a while. But the bubble has popped; he's been well and truly rumbled"Comment
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