GAZA What have they done?
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Discussion

nikaiyo2

Original Poster:

5,479 posts

212 months

Yesterday (08:27)
quotequote all
On the radio this morning they are saying Bliar might be the leader of Gaza after a cease fire, have the poor Palestinians not suffered enough without having that 2 faced, smarmy liar foisted on them? Look at the mess he left the UK in after his attempt at leadership.

TwigtheWonderkid

46,929 posts

167 months

Yesterday (15:24)
quotequote all
nikaiyo2 said:
Look at the mess he left the UK in after his attempt at leadership.
Was that his first attempt, after winning his first election in 1997, or his 2nd go at it, after winning the 2001 election, or his final attempt, after winning for a 3rd time in 2005?

119

14,045 posts

53 months

Yesterday (15:28)
quotequote all
TwigtheWonderkid said:
nikaiyo2 said:
Look at the mess he left the UK in after his attempt at leadership.
Was that his first attempt, after winning his first election in 1997, or his 2nd go at it, after winning the 2001 election, or his final attempt, after winning for a 3rd time in 2005?
Three go's and he still fked it up.

rofl

BikeBikeBIke

12,271 posts

132 months

Yesterday (15:36)
quotequote all
I still don't get how that is going to work. Blair turns up in a helicopter and says "Hi, I'm replacing Hamas" and they say "Fine".

Isn't it more likely the Palestinians will shoot him in the face, set fire to the Helicopter and put the helicopter crew in a tunnel with the other hostages?

Timothy Bucktu

16,224 posts

217 months

Yesterday (15:42)
quotequote all
TwigtheWonderkid said:
nikaiyo2 said:
Look at the mess he left the UK in after his attempt at leadership.
Was that his first attempt, after winning his first election in 1997, or his 2nd go at it, after winning the 2001 election, or his final attempt, after winning for a 3rd time in 2005?
The sad fact is...he's never really gone away frown
He's a bit like a bad smell that you just can't seem to get rid of!

trails

5,619 posts

166 months

Yesterday (15:43)
quotequote all
BikeBikeBIke said:
I still don't get how that is going to work. Blair turns up in a helicopter and says "Hi, I'm replacing Hamas" and they say "Fine".

Isn't it more likely the Palestinians will shoot him in the face, set fire to the Helicopter and put the helicopter crew in a tunnel with the other hostages?
Whilst I don't normally condone violence, I believe everyone in the UK has earned a get out of jail card for the Blairs.

StevieBee

14,362 posts

272 months

Yesterday (15:46)
quotequote all
If you remove our perceptions of him from the equation, it makes sense.

The appointment of former Prime Ministers and Presidents to administer government in transition nations is something I've long thought sensible. And for the record, I've worked a lot in such countries.

These countries lack cohesive government and the capacity to apply proper and meaningful management to the processes required. In plain English, they don't know what to do.

Regardless of what opinions we may have of past Prime Ministers, they have hands-on experience of running a democratic country and understand the nuts and bolts of the systems needed.

This is nothing to do with politics and everything to do with the implementation of proper governance and accessing the experience of those who have done this to improve things.

fizz47

3,015 posts

227 months

Yesterday (15:52)
quotequote all
The irony that the wanted war criminal of Israel (Nethanyahu) and its government is supporting a another war criminal responsible for millions of deaths to lead this..

OutInTheShed

12,154 posts

43 months

Yesterday (16:11)
quotequote all
Wouldn't they rather have Boris?

Triumph Man

9,157 posts

185 months

Yesterday (16:15)
quotequote all
He'll finally get to be President Blair!

trails

5,619 posts

166 months

Yesterday (16:17)
quotequote all
OutInTheShed said:
Wouldn't they rather have Boris?
Impaled on the horns of dilemma.

boyse7en

7,730 posts

182 months

Yesterday (16:19)
quotequote all
StevieBee said:
If you remove our perceptions of him from the equation, it makes sense.

The appointment of former Prime Ministers and Presidents to administer government in transition nations is something I've long thought sensible. And for the record, I've worked a lot in such countries.

These countries lack cohesive government and the capacity to apply proper and meaningful management to the processes required. In plain English, they don't know what to do.

Regardless of what opinions we may have of past Prime Ministers, they have hands-on experience of running a democratic country and understand the nuts and bolts of the systems needed.

This is nothing to do with politics and everything to do with the implementation of proper governance and accessing the experience of those who have done this to improve things.
All good points. I think we tend to colour our judgement of Blair's abilities (or lack thereof) based on our political position.
The point is that he is, in terms of Israel and Palestine, a relatively neutral figure with experience of governance and politics that goes back decades.

trails

5,619 posts

166 months

Yesterday (16:27)
quotequote all
boyse7en said:
All good points. I think we tend to colour our judgement of Blair's abilities (or lack thereof) based on our political position.
The point is that he is, in terms of Israel and Palestine, a relatively neutral figure with experience of governance and politics that goes back decades.
They are all good points, but there must be hundreds of better candidates than him.

For the record I am entirely politically agnosistc and still recognise him as an utter .

cuprabob

17,103 posts

231 months

Yesterday (16:27)
quotequote all
Tony didn't do too well when he was the Middle East Peace Envoy back in the noughties.

isaldiri

22,315 posts

185 months

Yesterday (16:35)
quotequote all
StevieBee said:
If you remove our perceptions of him from the equation, it makes sense.

The appointment of former Prime Ministers and Presidents to administer government in transition nations is something I've long thought sensible. And for the record, I've worked a lot in such countries.

These countries lack cohesive government and the capacity to apply proper and meaningful management to the processes required. In plain English, they don't know what to do.

Regardless of what opinions we may have of past Prime Ministers, they have hands-on experience of running a democratic country and understand the nuts and bolts of the systems needed.

This is nothing to do with politics and everything to do with the implementation of proper governance and accessing the experience of those who have done this to improve things.
I'd like to have some of what you're smoking tbh as that post is frankly delusional.

Blair wouldn't understand 'proper governance' if it smacked him in the a**e first of all and certainly not after 2 decades of having his foundation greased up by various donors. Of all the people uniquely poorly suited to 'administering a ruined terrtory to improve things', Blair has probably got to be one of the top few who would have the hubris to want to be doing such a thing to be fair so i guess that clearly makes him a good choice.

GadgeS3C

4,562 posts

181 months

Yesterday (16:37)
quotequote all
BikeBikeBIke said:
I still don't get how that is going to work. Blair turns up in a helicopter and says "Hi, I'm replacing Hamas" and they say "Fine".

Isn't it more likely the Palestinians will shoot him in the face, set fire to the Helicopter and put the helicopter crew in a tunnel with the other hostages?
Oi, let's show some consideration for the helicopter crew wink

Sheepshanks

37,950 posts

136 months

Yesterday (16:54)
quotequote all
Presumeably this is his Institute that'll be involved, rather that just Blair on his tod?

I didn't realise the scale of the Blair Institute - apparently it has hundreds of employees and mainly spends its time advising Governments how to conduct themselves. Seems it's pretty lucrative.

asfault

13,282 posts

196 months

Yesterday (17:08)
quotequote all
nikaiyo2 said:
On the radio this morning they are saying Bliar might be the leader of Gaza after a cease fire, have the poor Palestinians not suffered enough without having that 2 faced, smarmy liar foisted on them? Look at the mess he left the UK in after his attempt at leadership.
"things...... can only get better!!!!!"

grumbledoak

32,218 posts

250 months

Yesterday (17:21)
quotequote all
I don't think they are planning on there being any Palestinians left in Gaza when he gets there.



Edited by grumbledoak on Friday 26th September 17:23

Cold

16,203 posts

107 months

Yesterday (17:26)
quotequote all
GadgeS3C said:
BikeBikeBIke said:
I still don't get how that is going to work. Blair turns up in a helicopter and says "Hi, I'm replacing Hamas" and they say "Fine".

Isn't it more likely the Palestinians will shoot him in the face, set fire to the Helicopter and put the helicopter crew in a tunnel with the other hostages?
Oi, let's show some consideration for the helicopter crew wink
It does seem to be a waste of a perfectly good helicopter.