Urgh, Maxine Peake. I shouldn't be surprised, I suppose, but I perhaps naively thought she hadn't quite descended to the lowest stratum of crankery. And Lowkey! So 9/11 truthers are good comrades now?
John McDonnell was *shadow chancellor*. Had recent history gone a bit differently, he might now be in charge of the national economy, and here he is rolling around in the much with these lowlifes.
This is, no hyperbole, the equivalent of a senior Tory minister sharing a platform with a Holocaust denier. But there'll be no visible disquiet from the left, because in their hearts they don't believe anyone who calls themselves a socialist can be a bad person.
This country really did dodge quite the bullet when it rejected Corbyn at the ballot box. Of course, it dodged that bullet by leaping into the path of another bullet from the opposite direction, but still.
Wait, I didn't even notice that Corbyn himself is top of the bill at this thing! So, in a nearby parallel universe, the PRIME MINISTER is palling around with Jew-baiters and 9/11 truthers. God's truth.
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The September 11th attacks were nothing more or less than an attempt to murder as many people as possible, as quickly as possible and in the most gruesome and spectacular manner possible. No amount of quisling talk about "blowback" can obscure these facts. #911Anniversary
Thanks to Al Qaeda, billions of people all over the world had to contemplate what it must be to be forced to choose between burning or falling to death. Hitherto unimagined new vistas of horror were opened up, for good. #911Anniversary
Some might say the fact we haven't seen an attack on remotely that scale since proves that Islamic terrorism was always a paper tiger. But to my mind, this gives far too little credit to the security services who work to keep us safe. #911Anniversary
Important to remember that Quisling's pre-war following in Norway was tiny, verging on nonexistent. He misled the Nazis into believing his native fascist party was a mass movement, when in fact it had barely any public support.
Fascist parties becoming big enough to seize power semi-legitimately, as in Germany, is the exception rather than the rule. More often, fascist regimes are installed as clients by foreign conquerors or established by a violent coup.
Even Mussolini wasn't swept to power on a tide of public fervour. The "March on Rome" was largely a PR exercise, it involved a relatively small number of men but was nonetheless enough to intimidate the king into making him PM.
TIL Family Guy did a black dick joke. This still from the show is supposed to represent the Obama monument next to the Washington monument. Pretty ugly stuff.
I hated Family Guy from the very start, even in its supposedly "classic" early period. It's not just that it was an obvious ersatz Simpsons, it's that it always felt so highly processed, designed to wring cheap laughs out of the audience rather than forming an organic whole.
One of the many markers in The Simpsons' long, grim descent into sub-mediocrity was when they did a crossover with Family Guy. I've never been able to bring myself to watch it. The equivalent of Paul McCartney joining Oasis.
Tragic little squit can't quite summon up the courage to positively argue for memorials to treason in the service of human bondage, so he makes a chickenshit second-order complaint instead. Tens of millions of Americans find this guy deeply impressive.
Trying to imagine the British equivalent of the US being littered with Confederate monuments. Maybe if there were statues of Bonnie Prince Charlie all over the place? But even then, the Jacobite cause, while mistaken, wasn't nearly as morally abominable.
Cromwell is a very divisive figure, but the government he created became the template for our constitutional monarchy and the civil war first established parliament's primacy over the crown. He can be considered one of the modern UK's "founding fathers".
I find it conceivable that, had Trump won and was now presiding over the vaccination drive, we'd have seen some flourishing of anti-vaxx sentiment on the left out of sheer partisan polarisation. BUT I don't think it would have been nearly as widespread.
The fact is, the modern "conservative" movement (really just the Trump movement) is exceptionally fertile ground for conspiracy theories and anti-science, anti-expertise rhetoric. There's genuinely no symmetry to be found there.
Are there deluded leftists locked in their own tight information bubbles? Of course. But they're pretty marginal and not very numerous, and crucially they have barely any sway at all over the Democratic party.
I mean mad in a clinical sense, not just adhering to a mad belief system. I suppose Hitler could be in the running, towards the end, but Mao was off his rocker for decades.