Hopper wrote:
If this is another 'English hissy fit', would you point out to me the earlier ones?
Would you also explain to me how petitioners protesting Trump's remarks on Muslims is 'jumping on someone else's bandwagon'?
Anyway. It helps if you know what you're talking about. Saves one from looking a ninny.
So.
There is a system in place in the UK where, if a petition started on the UK Government website gains more than 100,000 signatures, the matter of the petition is likely to be given time for discussion and debate in parliament. No vote is held.
The petition in question gained some 575,000 votes. In keeping with the arrangement, it was discussed and debated. To be clear, this was at the request of (some of) the people, rather than the government.
If the Home Secretary wants to ban someone from entering Britain, they can do so at their discretion. Such a thing is rare. More often, divisive or hateful figures who visit Britain do face public protest (such protests in turn are often met with force from the police). I imagine this would be the outcome for Trump.
So, there we are. Some people wanted the possibility of his being banned from the UK discussed in parliament, and used a procedure to get this done.
If this is another 'English hissy fit', would you point out to me the earlier ones?
From the Urban Dictionary: "hissy fit. A short-lived temper tantrum. Babies and mothers were known to have hissy-fits. The Trump "outrage" will have been forgotten along with many other "deeply troubling" issues in less than a week. Then they're on to other "do nothing" debates.Would you also explain to me how petitioners protesting Trump's remarks on Muslims is 'jumping on someone else's bandwagon'?
This comment was made on Dec. 8th, 2015 to Americans, not to you. I'm sure there are events relative to England et.al. that transcend this statement awfulness every day in England. Talk about a "Tempest in a Tea Pot."
Anyway. It helps if you know what you're talking about. Saves one from looking a ninny.
Thanks?So.
There is a system in place in the UK where, if a petition started on the UK Government website gains more than 100,000 signatures, the matter of the petition is likely to be given time for discussion and debate in parliament. No vote is held.
The petition in question gained some 575,000 votes. In keeping with the arrangement, it was discussed and debated. To be clear, this was at the request of (some of) the people, rather than the government.
Any Muslims I wonder? Considering there are about 2,660,116 Muslims in England alone this would appear the other 2,155,116 Muslims aren't interested in having you debate the issue (and might agree with Trump?)If the Home Secretary wants to ban someone from entering Britain, they can do so at their discretion. Such a thing is rare. More often, divisive or hateful figures who visit Britain do face public protest (such protests in turn are often met with force from the police). I imagine this would be the outcome for Trump.
Very civilized. Have the Parliament do your fighting for you instead of facing the English "Bobbies?"So, there we are. Some people wanted the possibility of his being banned from the UK discussed in parliament, and used a procedure to get this done.
I SEE! The problem here is the news feeds make this appear as a genuine effort by some parliamentarians to treat this as a SERIOUS subject to be treated seriously but it sounds more like the ranting of buffoons and a discussion based on 575,000 anonymous Muslims biased beliefs. Was there any discussion about Sharia law replacing English jurisprudence or is this an ongoing discussion in Parliament?