Before I go on,
can I ask for whatever the BT woman had in her cup. It seems as if whatever she had stimulated
her into a decision over a subject many people are agonising about. Many people are either undecided or not
certain of the decision. The woman
dubbed #patronisingBTwoman by social media apparently made a decision over the
course of 180 seconds of drinking her…
well we don’t know what the hell that stuff was.
Honestly, they'll love my Salmon joke... |
If you are a “Yes”
supporter, how do you feel about your leader?
Do you feel that Salmond has lead your campaign effectively & successfully. For my money, even though he has made some
policy mistakes, you know that at the end of the campaign Salmond will have –
in sporting parlance – left everything on the sporting paddock.
If you are a “No”
supporter, I would imagine your thoughts and emotions are rather
different. I would think that you’re
leader has been unimaginative and not really bothered to engage, preferring to
point at fish in Portugal than debate with voters or, heaven forbid, his
opposite number. What do you mean
Darling is the leader of your campaign?
Your campaign should have been lead by the leader of this country
looking to keep the country together.
It’s not just the
ramrod refusal to debate with Salmond that has made me think that Cameron
really should be the highest profile casualty if Scotland vote’s yes. Cameron’s contributions have been intermittent
and incoherent. There’s just nothing
there arguing that we are better together.
It’s all reminiscent of the song Rangers fans used to sing to Celtic in
the pre-McCann days. All you’ve got is
your history. As for campaigning for the
union in cycle velodrome’s in London, it’s not exactly the grass roots campaign
Yes have, is it?
It’s somewhat
ironic that it’s 100 years since the First World War, a conflict who’s overriding
image (to the annoyance of Michael Gove) is that of lion hearted British
soldiers being lead by a ruling class that don’t have a clue what to do and
show no signs of any sort of original thought.
Why David Cameron would have fitted right in given his utterly inept
leadership of the campaign to save the union.
As for the excuses,
sorry but that he is such an unlikable tosser is suddenly our fault? He has made absolutely zero effort in this
debate. If there is a yes vote a week on
Thursday, his place in ignominy as the worst prime minister of the UK will be
assured and very well deserved. And if
the polls and momentum are right, bye bye Cameron.
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