http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ZaRokYhf0s&NR=1
- Symmetry caught on film rioting in Manchester
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Km8FTZEuRbY&NR=1
Moderator: Community Team
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
Fruitcake wrote:A letter to David Cameron's parents
(Courtesy of Nathaniel Tapley)

oh noz, hypocrite government?radiojake wrote:Just so you know, this kind of attitude by other governments recently in other parts of the world ended with NATO launching air strikes on them -Martin Ronne wrote:Better make it two. Just to be sure.jbrettlip wrote:I think one machine gun could probably convince the looters to just go home.
If the English government were to carry out your suggestion, it would be mighty hypocritical of them
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
Typical knee jerk reaction from a bunch of second rate twats. They still don't get it do they. As soon as they block one channel another 5 will spring up in their place.saxitoxin wrote:Windsor regime borrows page from Hosni Mubarak, investigating way to shut-down internet during periods when regime is questioned.
http://www.cnn.com/2011/TECH/social.med ... ?hpt=hp_c2
- "Good Use of Twitter" = Organizing Riots Against Governments the Ruling Regime Dislikes
"Bad Use of Twitter" = Organizing Riots Against the Ruling Regime Itself

So you consider pushing your problems onto other, innocent and even unsuspecting people to be "justice?"jbrettlip wrote:Too bad it isn't like the good old days: Australia would be getting a bunch of new residents.
You do know basic history of Australia, right???PLAYER57832 wrote:So you consider pushing your problems onto other, innocent and even unsuspecting people to be "justice?"jbrettlip wrote:Too bad it isn't like the good old days: Australia would be getting a bunch of new residents.
Seems to me that is exactly the mentality that lead to this mess.

I believe my response shows that I do.jbrettlip wrote:You do know basic history of Australia, right???PLAYER57832 wrote:So you consider pushing your problems onto other, innocent and even unsuspecting people to be "justice?"jbrettlip wrote:Too bad it isn't like the good old days: Australia would be getting a bunch of new residents.
Seems to me that is exactly the mentality that lead to this mess.

The new American Viceroy has indicated he will radically alter the UK police. He say the days of the the bumbling Bobby wandering about in scuffed tennis shoes and a mindless grin on his face are gone. Into New Britain will march a crack, jackbooted paramilitary force that will have Englishmen trembling in fear.Mr Cameron has reportedly "asked" former New York police commissioner Bill Bratton to act as a "consultant" to British police on how to curb street violence.
Mr Bratton told NBC and ABC News America he had received a call from Mr Cameron asking him to consider ...
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-08-13/l ... tion=world
OLD UK POLICELast night, in an intervention likely to anger senior officers further, Bill Bratton, the former New York police chief who Mr Cameron said would advise the Government on how to deal with the aftermath of the riots, said young people had been "emboldened" by over-cautious police tactics and lenient sentencing policies.
Mr Bratton said a police force should have "a lot of arrows in the quiver", advocating a doctrine of "escalating force" available to commanders. "You want the criminal element to fear them," Mr Bratton said.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/cr ... 36852.html






Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/c8970a8c-c688 ... z1V3ZuHpNZMinisters are drawing up controversial plans to remove benefits from those convicted of taking part in the riots that engulfed England last week, in a move Liberal Democrats and independent experts have condemned as counter-productive and overly expensive.
Officials in Number 10 and the department for work and pensions are putting together plans for the harsh punishment of those found guilty of even the most minor infringements during the riots after a public petition calling for such a move gathered nearly 200,000 signatures.
David Cameron will lay the ground for such a move on Monday.
I don't really understand this move, and here's why...if they can prove that an individual was one of the looters (which I would hope they would have to do in order to remove their benefits), then why not just prosecute them under the law? I don't understand the need for this. Or do they not actually have that level of proof and just want to make a general sweep?Phatscotty wrote:Ministers plan removal of rioters’ benefits
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/c8970a8c-c688 ... z1V3ZuHpNZMinisters are drawing up controversial plans to remove benefits from those convicted of taking part in the riots that engulfed England last week, in a move Liberal Democrats and independent experts have condemned as counter-productive and overly expensive.
Officials in Number 10 and the department for work and pensions are putting together plans for the harsh punishment of those found guilty of even the most minor infringements during the riots after a public petition calling for such a move gathered nearly 200,000 signatures.
David Cameron will lay the ground for such a move on Monday.
And here Woodruff, we see why this is being done.Phatscotty wrote:I wonder if they even have the money on hand to pay the benefits? Now they are going to need even more money to repair the damage to the cities and injuries to people. They might be just looking for excuses to cut. The looter class rioting is a pretty good reason.
So much for my wondering turning into second party overseas perceived certainties!Iliad wrote:And here Woodruff, we see why this is being done.Phatscotty wrote:I wonder if they even have the money on hand to pay the benefits? Now they are going to need even more money to repair the damage to the cities and injuries to people. They might be just looking for excuses to cut. The looter class rioting is a pretty good reason.
Two main reasons
1) Illusion of action. The government can't just sit by and do absolutely nothing, by doing this it's striking chords within people like Scotty, who have all the excuses they need to hate the poor. Besides playing to their fears, this makes it look like the government has fixed the problem, where it's only creating more poverty, creating greater economic disparity and only exacerbating the problem
2) Excuse for a spending cut. Austerity measures are unpopular, but opportunities like this, when people are responding very emotionally is a prime time to cut benefits without anyone realising. Considering the Prime Minister also wanted the power to ban social media in times of unrest, it's clear there is more than a bit of politics going on here.
In any case, the plan is completely doomed. It does not address the issues at all, only creating more poverty and more incentive for crime. Likewise it's needlessly punitive, as the judicial system should take care of appropriating necessary punishment. I didn't exactly see countries racing to cut tax cuts for the wealthy after the bankers tanked the economy.
In any case, politics as usual, Cameron will try and go the Thatcher route and crack down. All the key issues will be there, the people will remain disenfranchised, unable to find jobs and another act of police brutality will ignite the powder keg once again.
But I'm sure it's a lot of fun to simply call other people the looter class, feel better about yourself, despite your crippling mediocrity, employ some "obvious" crackdown and think the problem is gone. I'll wonder who took that stance.
I think you're probably right, to be honest. That plus the need to appear to be "doing something about it" when they really can't do so from a criminal court perspective without the hard proof.Phatscotty wrote:I wonder if they even have the money on hand to pay the benefits? Now they are going to need even more money to repair the damage to the cities and injuries to people. They might be just looking for excuses to cut. The looter class rioting is a pretty good reason.
I think that's pretty fair. Looking to riots between the underclass and police, with middleclass shopkeepers in the middle, I think a lot of people are looking at the LA riots and saying thank f*ck that gun ownership wasn't legalised. The damage was pretty bad, but I think we can count ourselves lucky that people weren't shooting each other on the kind of scale that similar riots in the US produced.radiojake wrote:I've been thinking about this a little - The main difference I can see from these recent riots compared to other riots in history (from what I've been able to gather, obviously I wasn't present at any) is the distinct lack of reasoning behind the riots, short of acquiring and looting consumer goods. We've had race riots with particular communities fighting for more access to economic oppurtunity, but this riot didn't seem to have any of that - Infact, it's almost as if our consumer culture has something to do with it. We are bombarded with messages through advertising that tell us success if measure through consumer goods - Plasma TVs, Laptops, igadgets, designer clothing, etc, etc (all useless shit) - If there wasn't such emphasis on this consumer lifestyle, would people have looted the things that they are otherwise unable to attain?
All I know is if I happened to be involved in these riots, I would not have been stealing any Plasmas, but I sure as hell would have been smashing them to pieces - Over-consumption is the death-knell for our culture.
Just something I've been thinking about -
You mean the availability of guns didn't stop gun shootings during the LA riots?Symmetry wrote:I think that's pretty fair. Looking to riots between the underclass and police, with middleclass shopkeepers in the middle, I think a lot of people are looking at the LA riots and saying thank f*ck that gun ownership wasn't legalised. The damage was pretty bad, but I think we can count ourselves lucky that people weren't shooting each other on the kind of scale that similar riots in the US produced.radiojake wrote:I've been thinking about this a little - The main difference I can see from these recent riots compared to other riots in history (from what I've been able to gather, obviously I wasn't present at any) is the distinct lack of reasoning behind the riots, short of acquiring and looting consumer goods. We've had race riots with particular communities fighting for more access to economic oppurtunity, but this riot didn't seem to have any of that - Infact, it's almost as if our consumer culture has something to do with it. We are bombarded with messages through advertising that tell us success if measure through consumer goods - Plasma TVs, Laptops, igadgets, designer clothing, etc, etc (all useless shit) - If there wasn't such emphasis on this consumer lifestyle, would people have looted the things that they are otherwise unable to attain?
All I know is if I happened to be involved in these riots, I would not have been stealing any Plasmas, but I sure as hell would have been smashing them to pieces - Over-consumption is the death-knell for our culture.
Just something I've been thinking about -