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#1 | |||
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Senior Member
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Hitler Left-wing or Right-wing?
Early Hitler sure But then when older Right Wing then Nazi. Then Evil Mass Murder using Zyklon B powder gas ![]() 1942 Hitler taking over Europe Last edited by arista; 28-01-2018 at 02:43 PM. |
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#2 | ||
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Banned
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Hitler was anything he needed to be to get into power.
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#3 | |||
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Sod orf
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Yes he was a leftie, it's plain to see when you compare him with todays lefties.
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#4 | ||
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Senior Member
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Even when I was "left wing" I still believed in things like flat+low taxes, capped immigration, and maintaining the countryside. I guess it didn't occur to me that letting people keep the money they earn, not overcrowding ourselves, and environmental conservation fell on either side of the political scale
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#5 | ||
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Oh and capped immigration / maintaining the countryside really does have nothing to do with left/right politics. People seem to be increasingly using the terms as blanket or tribal descriptions of a whole range of things (e.g. Gay rights somehow falling under "the left"? It makes no sense whatsoever.) Last edited by user104658; 28-01-2018 at 07:18 PM. |
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#6 | ||
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oh fack off
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A working class white boy from a single-parent family and a failing school in Bradford will never have the same access to opportunities that a middle class white girl from a nuclear family and attending a private school in Chelsea will. Whether it's access to extra curricular tutoring, a better-performing school with fewer internal issues, a better locality that isn't a hotbed of crime and/or anti-social behaviour, exposure to a wider and richer vocabulary, as well as high art, or being well-travelled. All of these things and more have a significant impact in later life.
Yes, there are ALWAYS exceptions to the rule, no doubt there will be people who respond to this with their own anecdotes. But that's all they are, exceptions to the rule. In general terms, one's background, social status, cultural and social capital, financial (in)stability, geographic location (both on a national and international scale), and often gender, ethnicity and (dis)ableism - or all or some of these at their intersections play a huge and undeniable role in one's life chances. To pretend otherwise is disingenuous. Quote:
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It always makes me laugh when I hear people who are passionate about conserving the environment also being proponents of capitalism. You cannot be a capitalist and care about the environment. It's a walking contradiction, and misses the fundamental link between environmental damage and the pursuit of capital at any cost. |
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#7 | ||
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Senior Member
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I will admit the apocryphal boy might have fewer advantages than a minority kid who would otherwise be in the same shoes, as there are BAME only schemes to help working class minorities, but not the same for working class white kids. Quote:
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![]() ![]() Last edited by Oliver_W; 28-01-2018 at 08:09 PM. |
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#8 | ||
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Right but this would be an example of socialist policy in action; people from lower income backgrounds getting extra financial help to access higher education. There are various other policies to help those who are disadvantaged in other ways to gain access to university, too... But these are left and center policies - harder right policies would offer no such help to the financially disadvantaged and people would be expected to somehow secure their own funding, or simply miss out. So what you're giving here, really, is an example of how we DO already address some of the inherent imbalances in the system.
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#9 | |||
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Sod orf
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Quote:
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#10 | |||
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All hail the Moyesiah
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Nazism did start as a radical movement popular with workers in the 1920s, same is true of Italian Fascism and Spanish Falangism in their infancy. That said Nazism was always obsessed with race in a way that the other two were not initially. If you look at the Nazi partys first statement of principals there is a fair bit of stuff that would appeal to 'the left'. Gradually all three movements had their radical side diluted into standard ultraconservative stuff though when they became the parties of the middle classes and the wealthy as well and when they wanted to position themselves against communism
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#11 | |||
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Likes cars that go boom
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Can't be bothered to add anymore.
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#12 | |||
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Sod orf
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No never voted Labour Jack, usually voted fringe parties. I've voted liberal (may have been SDP in those day) I've voted UKIP. I even once voted National front (I just felt we were going so extreme one way, that we needed to balance things out, I was young and dumb). Yet I've lived in a labour constituency all my life.
Last edited by Alf; 28-01-2018 at 08:10 PM. |
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