Manifesto Aplicado do Neo-Surrealismo Céu Cinzento O Abominável Livro das Neves

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quinta-feira, setembro 07, 2006

  • OS DOIS GRANDES LÍDERES DA BARBÁRIE «DEMOCRÁTICA»

    OS DOIS GRANDES LÍDERES DA BARBÁRIE NACIONALIZADA CONTRA A BARBÁRIE PRIVADA

    O Ocidente precisava de GRANDES LÍDERES PARA A BARBÁRIE EM NOME DA DEMOCRACIA.
    O Terror de Estado procura ser mais aterrorizante que o Terror Privado.
    George W Bush acha que os Direitos Humanos são INCOMPATÍVEIS com a sua ideia de Democracia.
    E Mr. Blair é um «Frankenstein» produzido pela esquerda britânica. É membro da Internacional Socialista!...
    Nada melhor para um líder da Internacional Socialista do que andar às ordens dos neoconservadores norte-americanos… Nada melhor que defender o Primado Absoluto da Força… Nada melhor que andar a VANDALIZAR o Iraque atrás de Armas de Destruição Maciça, mais conhecidas por ARMAS DE ALDRABICE MACIÇA…
    Blair está de saída do poder…

    «Blair: I'll be gone within a year Matthew Tempest and James SturckeThursday September 7, 2006Guardian Unlimited Tony Blair today confirmed that he will retire as prime minister within the next 12 months, but refused to name a precise date.
    After 48 hours of frenzied speculation and plotting at the heart of government, the prime minister bowed to pressure, making a filmed statement at a north London school.
    Mr Blair apologised to the public on behalf of the Labour party this week's events, calling them "not our finest hour, to be frank".
    His statement came an hour after the chancellor, Gordon Brown, told reporters in Glasgow that he would "support" Mr Blair's decision but warned there could be no more "private arrangements".
    However, with elections in Scotland and Wales - as well as Mr Blair's own tenth anniversary as PM - coming up in May, the statements from the premier and chancellor appear to leave the exact sequence of a departure, and a leadership contest, still opaque.
    Mr Blair made it clear he would announce his departure "at a future date", saying: "I'm not going to set a precise date now. I don't think that's right. I will do that at a future date, and I will do that in the interests of the country."
    Mr Brown is meeting Scottish Labour MSPs in Edinburgh tonight, while both he and Mr Blair will address the TUC conference next week.
    "I would have preferred to do this in my own way - but the next party conference in the next couple of weeks will be my last party conference as party leader," the prime minister said. He joked: "The next TUC will be my last TUC - probably to the relief of both of us."
    Shunning a public press conference with reporters outside the school, Mr Blair, looking relaxed, recorded a filmed statement with the Press Association.
    "I think it's important for the Labour party to understand that it's the public that comes first and it's the country that matters, and we can't treat the country as an irrelevant bystander in a matter as important as who their prime minister should be," he said.
    "The first thing I'd like to do is to apologise actually on behalf of the Labour party for the last week which, with everything that's going on and in the world, has not been our finest hour, to be frank."
    Mr Blair's statement came at just after 3pm. At 2pm, Mr Brown told reporters: "I want to make it absolutely clear today that when I met the prime minister yesterday, I said to him, as I have said on many occasions to him and I repeat today, that it is for him to make the decision.
    "I said also to him, and I make clear again today, that I will support him in the decisions he makes, that this cannot and should not be about private arrangements but what is in the best interests of our party and, most of all, the best interests of our country."
    However, Doug Henderson, a Scottish MP close to Mr Brown, appeared to suggest that the prime minister's statement had done little to change the situation.
    "It does not seem to me that the public know any more about the prime minister's retirement plans," he said. "People keep saying to me that the Labour party must have a clear direction forward with clear priorities and a new leader before the elections in 2007."
    There was no indication that he was speaking with Mr Brown's approval.
    The leader of the Commons, Jack Straw, today became the most senior cabinet minister to suggest that Mr Blair would leave in May, two years after his historic third election victory, but warned that Labour was on the edge of an "abyss".
    Today's Evening Standard claims the prime minister will go by May 4, while yesterday's Sun plumped for May 31.
    Mr Straw said it was "reasonable" to expect Mr Blair to serve for at least two years after his third election victory.
    He said the prime minister would stand down in time to allow his successor to be in place before the start of next summer, but delivered a warning over the conflict within Labour.
    "This is damaging to the Labour party, but it is damaging above and beyond that to the interests of the country, and that is why everybody has to settle down and ... accept what the prime minister has said or [what] has been said on his behalf," Mr Straw told the BBC's Today programme.
    In Mr Blair's Sedgefield constituency, his agent, John Burton, accused Mr Brown of "stabbing the prime minister in the back".
    The leftwing Labour MP John McDonnell, who launches his official leadership campaign in Manchester tonight, welcomed the "clarification" of Mr Blair's timetable.
    However, he warned that "members of the Labour party will not accept a backroom deal to install Gordon Brown as a proto-leader of the party in advance of them having any chance to cast their votes in a democratic election".
    The Liberal Democrat leader, Sir Menzies Campbell, said Mr Blair's announcement had failed to resolve the splits in the government.
    He said: "The prime minister has only partially resolved the ambiguity. He has set a time limit, but not named a date. Speculation will continue, while the authority of government drains away."
    But Wales's first minister, Rhodri Morgan, said the prime minister's authority would have been "eroded" if he had set a date for his departure.
    Mr Morgan, who has previously called for Mr Blair to resign before the Welsh assembly elections next May, said today he did not want the election to be "diverted by noises off".
    He said: "We have heard that the prime minister has said that he will be gone within 12 months. People will obviously have individual views on what that means, but giving a date now would have eroded his ability to make decisions."
    Former cabinet minister and architect of New Labour Peter Mandelson said he was glad that the Labour party seemed to have got over its "moment of madness" this week.
    Mr Mandelson, now EU Trade Commissioner, told the BBC: "I hope that it will now move on and that the plotting and the shenanigans will be put behind them once and for all."
    "I think people will look back and say [Mr Blair] had a good innings and now it is somebody else's turn. That's how politics works. Let's allow that to happen rather than spend our time trying to anticipate it."
    There was no immediate reaction from the Conservatives.»

    Já esquecia a grande obra Teórica de Blair para enriquecer a TEORIA POLÍTICA...
    Aqui está ela: