Tuesday, 6 November 2007

Instead

Oliver Kamm, Harry's Place, et al, instead of playing your mind-boggling "Look how much better than you I am at IT" games (which is all that they amount to, and which is now closed on this blog - I'll be blogging again about the Queen's Speech, which matters), why don't you set up a Eustonite-Jacksonite party and take your chances at the ballot box, as we intend to do? What are you afraid of? Go on, I dare you. Any further mention of other things (not just about me, but also about Neil Clark) would just be avoiding the question, and will be met with exactly that derisive response. Again I say, I dare you.

7 comments:

  1. Maybe they don't think there's a need for such a party. There's no obligation to form political parties, you know. You can oppose the British People's Alliance without starting your own party. The existing parties (all of them) seem to be doing a pretty good job of beating you as it is.

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  2. Frit.

    Or, as I believe they say nowadays, bottlers.

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  3. David, failing to put up comments disagreeing with your position, while putting up comments suggesting that your opponents are "Frit" is pretty low, isn't it?

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  4. There's every need. The existing parties aren't going to last much longer, what with their declining, ageing membership profiles. And that decline has happened during the period of neocon hijacking of two (soon to be all three) of them. Where is their honest electoral vehicle?

    Frit. Bottlers. Yellow. And proving it every time they talk about some arcane computer thing in relation to David or Neil. Which they do. A lot.

    Talk about a real thing. Talk about your party. You don't even dare set one up. Frit. Bottlers. Yellow.

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  5. It would be if I did it, Anonymous 2:06 PM.

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  6. David, you and your political movement have now officially jumped the shark.

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  7. Why?

    We stand for something distinctive, which we know is able to bring together the best in Britain's three political traditions.

    They also stand for something distinctive, of which they believe that the same can be said. Indeed, the believe that it cannot be said of our position, as we believe that it cannot be said of theirs.

    But we are prepared to put ourselves to the test honestly at the ballot box, i.e., in the form of a party.

    Are they? If so, then where is their party (especially now that Kamm says he wants to stand for Parliament again, at Wantage against Neil Clark). And if not, why not?

    Frit, Clive? I think so. So go on, then: prove me wrong. As they say in America, grow a pair.

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