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kowenicki said:
CrazyHorse said:
kowenicki said:

YOUGOV poll

Cameron wins... with 41%
Clegg 32%
Brown 25%

I'd agree with the winner.... and that is VERY significant.

 

bit of confusion.. could be Comres ITV

Think that is YouGov, ITV gives 35% to Cameron, 33% to Clegg and 26% to Brown.

Channel 4 poll is a little different!

Cameron 13%

Clegg 42%

Brown 44%

Channel 4 poll has always been wierdly different...  load of liberal left wing luvvies!  lol 

Nah, we all love the BBC

I think the Channel 4 poll is unweighted and so doesn't relect voting intent unlike YouGov and is also an internet poll so tends to be more bias when compared to YouGov and ComRes.



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Lol at Channel 4 poll.

This is definitely the best that Cameron's done so far. Brown has improved a little, but half of what he did was screaming at Cameron about the same thing OVER AND OVER AGAIN. He questions a Tory policy. Cameron replies. Brown questions it for the next half hour.

But I could safely say, after that debate, that I'd rather have a Labour government than Lib Dem. They'd both be terrible, of course.



(Former) Lead Moderator and (Eternal) VGC Detective

it's the only debate i saw outr of the three,i missed the first and don't have sky,

but i thought they all did alright for their core voters,

but the TV debates can only help Clegg the most because alot of people want change from the norm but whether they vote for it we'll have to wait and see,

i'd expect a tory win or a hung parliament,whatever that is,and then another election a month later

cameron did alright tonight though i thought,cameron and cleggs final statement were alot better than gordons though i thought



                                                                                                                                        Above & Beyond

   

I thought they were all pretty poor tonight, good to watch, but only reminded me of some of the policies all three have that I think are daft.

Cameron just sounds like a spin doctor who only cares about winning votes

Clegg sounded unsure about things

Brown was just attacking and talking up his so called achievements

honestly, after that, im almost certainly voting for the Green Party, at least they know what Left Wing economics are.



kowenicki said:
CrazyHorse said:
kowenicki said:

YOUGOV poll

Cameron wins... with 41%
Clegg 32%
Brown 25%

I'd agree with the winner.... and that is VERY significant.

 

bit of confusion.. could be Comres ITV

Think that is YouGov, ITV gives 35% to Cameron, 33% to Clegg and 26% to Brown.

Channel 4 poll is a little different!

Cameron 13%

Clegg 42%

Brown 44%

Channel 4 poll has always been wierdly different...  load of liberal left wing luvvies!  lol 

as opposed to the homogenised right wing bullshit that dominates most of the british (or should I say Murdochish, he owns half of them) media?



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mrstickball said:
bazmeistergen said:

Hi there.

Thanks for the reply. I think one thing I have been trying to say is that combat in debate is a bit daft. From my words I can see why you would think I don't know what I'm talking about, however, you are a bit presumptious to decide that what I said 'proves' that I don't understand the difference between state capitalism and more free market capitalism. You haven't tried to find out why I think the Soviet Union is very similar to the current economic system at all but this is because you have no idea about my perspective. The thing I have been trying to illustrate is that debate and commentary today is all about winning rather than searching for the truth and while I am not accusing you have trying to beat me I am suggesting that the way you responded conforms to the norms of the debate style I have been outlining.

Then please do tell why you think that the USSR, Mao-era China, Pol Pot and others still had mostly capitalistic systems. By and large, they had the most non-capitalistic systems the modern world has seen.

The Soviet Union was integrated into the current world economic system up to a point (though somewhat based on the older nationalistic, internalised, autarkic economies, I admit) However, there was clear social stratification, there was competition, there were business targets - which as always ended in corruption and attempts to defeat the target through foul means (broken goods, half-finished products and so on ie a big decline in quality) and there was conflict and a drive to be the strongest nation on the planet. There are a lot of similiarities between the actual systems (from a wider perspective), though you are totally right that within the nitty gritty there are vast differences in the running of the systems. I still haven't fully explained this, but I'm off to work in a moment so am keeping this fairy short.

To go on to your point about failed command/state economies, I have to partially agree with you only (I am against the systems in the country though the ideal of cooperation and human progress appeals to me). Yes, many of them have 'failed' However, I think there are a few circumstances that need illuminating: Cuba has been subject to an economic blockade, Venezuela has been assaulted a number of times by American intervention and coup attempts - including the classic one in 2004 (I think) when the elites staged a planned kidnapping by making fraudulent claims about the Chavez government. We could similarly list the amount of failures of this version of capitalism couldn't we: 1929, 2009 global meltdowns, the massive difference in wealth between nations, the forcing of single crop economies on many nations, the ability of capital to influence governments and so on.

Then could you provide examples of where command economies have been astounding successes? My point was that they have had very limited if any successes, worldwide.

You can cite the issues of 1929 and 2009 as being failures of capitalism, but far less people have been negatively effected by such problems as opposed to the failures of countries which have embraced heavy doses of command-driven economic models. For example, few people died of starvation, poverty or war during the depression, or the 2009 crisis as a direct result of policies. Comparatively, millions have died from economic policies developed by Stalin, Mao and Pol Pot's command-driven regimes. Holodomor would be a great example.

Furthermore, you could look at the wealth discrepency between capitalistic societies in Europe, Asia and America in comparison to that of socialistic countries as I have stated, and see that more economic freedom results in larger net benefits for society. For example, Hong Kong and China are comprised of the same kinds of people, but the average citizen in Hong Kong makes many multiples more income, which  translates to a better quality of life.

Anyway, I don't support either style of this system. It is based on scarcity and inequality and competition and I don't agree that competition between us HAS to be the thing that motivates humanity. There are other motivations.  I'm sure you've seen Maslow's hierarchy, for example.

It doesn't HAVE to be the thing that motivates us, yes. However, the fact is that the variation of humanity can really change with people's needs. Maslow's hierarchy doesn't work for every single person. That is what causes the fundemental issue with a society which treats everyone the same - a more command-driven perspective of socioeconomic needs.

 

Far less people have been negatively effected if you focus on some or individual countries. If you look at the entire planet you can argue that the global world system (which is what I am talking about - and includes state capitalist nations) you will see that the system as it is has unbelievable inequalities, encourages war and violence, empire building (economic based these days). It's not the depression or recession that is the real problem it is the systematic inequalities that is a result of how it all hangs together. For example, American Foreign Policy in Vietnam. In an attempt to 'protect' the Vietnamese they bombed it to smithereens. What they were trying to do was keep it within the global economic system (thinking of the strategic need to support Japan and its limited resources) and thus, as a result of global organisation, the Vietnamese (and the American soldiers and their families) suffered. This is what I am getting at. The Soviet Union likewise tried to maintain its own rather more autarkic system (seeing as it couldn't compete with the American economy) and people in Poland, Afghanistan, Hungary and elsewhere suffered.

Please don't think I am defending state capitalism or command economies because I am not. I was really trying to point out that the Soviet System (of autarkic empire) and nationalistic, independent development (Vietnam, Cuba) are still based on very similar hierarchical structures, competition, scarcity and so on to the globalised system (once dominated by the US, but now by G20 types nations). I don't think command economies will ever 'work' but I also don't think the system we currently have 'works' either. Clearly in some ways globalised economic linkage has helped us (western nations used to be at each other's throats but are no longer shooting each other), but in other ways (ways mentioned above) they have not.

Freedom is a good thing, but I don't think that humanity is truly free within a corporate capitalist organisation where scarcity and competition rules the roost.

Finally, what I meant in the last line was that all humans can move beyond needing to compete to be motivated.

Done for now.



Yes.

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kowenicki said:
CrazyHorse said:
kowenicki said:
Education...

Cameron won that one. The teacher that asked tghe question was nodding like crazy when he was speaking.

Brown said bugger all and Clegg was confused and all over the place with some weird numbers

Not so sure on that. What Cameron said about giving head teachers more power and cutting red-tape was all fine but I'm not so sure about this independent school set up (nor their policy on parents taking over a school if they feel it is failing). Clegg is right that the link between poor performance (and behaviour) in school is linked to poverty and is the only one trying to address that.


I and many of my class mates came from real poverty... and I mean real poverty not the modern definition of poverty.

I achieved.

Its about discipline and parental responsibility much more than it is about poverty.


That is your experience, but other people do work hard and get nowhere.

It is a very complex subject as I'm sure you are aware. So can you prove your assertion?



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Cameron started well, but was evasive when pressed.

He also claimed to have answered Clegg on the 80% point, but had evaded it.

It is interesting how people basically think the person that 'won' is who they favour in the first place. Of course a few of you on hear think Cameron won, despite the clear weaknesses he had.

Personally, I thought it was pretty poor from Cameron, though he had some strong moments. Clegg, was occasionally by-passed, but had some strong moments (possibly the best speech at the end) and Brown, too, had good moments, but was very negative at the end in terms of the fear message.

They are all hypocrites, however. And that annoys me.



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www.spacemag.org - contribute your stuff... satire, comics, ideas, debate, stupidy stupid etc.

Guardian poll points to another failing by the conservatives.....should i be suprised?



Huh? The poll for the Guardian had Cameron top.