




| A missed opportunity |
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| Written by Tom Bowman | |
| Thursday, 02 October 2008 | |
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Comments (4)
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written by Derek Buxton, October 02, 2008
I have read the round up of the speech but intend to read the transcript over lunch. There were no doubt some good things said, execution could be another story entirely. Little attention was paid to the EU, strange since they are the real power in the land. I do not believe the looming energy problem was even mentioned. I am sceptical of him in view iof the roll call of his advisors, K. Clarke on democracy - "I look forward to Westminster being a local council" - , Zac Goldsmith on the envirenment - " lots of lovely windmills, oops sorry, wind turbines and the rest. Loony tunes rather than planning.
You young are not made out of the same stuff as old conservatives!
written by Per Kurowski, October 02, 2008
I cannot say I am a conservative, I am too radical of the middle or extremist of the centre for that, but I sure have admired many conservatives in my life.
My problem with conservatives now is that the new generation of them do not seem as sturdy. The financial regulators foolishly empowered the credit rating agencies to dictate to the markets where the risks were and the young conservatives said nothing, fooled by the fact that the credit rating agencies were private companies, something so utterly irrelevant in a world with outsourcings.
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written by Curly, October 02, 2008
I fear that Mr. Cameron totally misunderstands what a libertarian is. They are not to be confused with anarchists.
... written by Derek Buxton, October 03, 2008
A libertarian is not the only thing he does not understand. He said "green will make us richer", well some people are, without doubt, getting richer from the scam, Al Gore, Hanson, E-on, wind turbine makers and so on, and on, and on! Most involves costs, but then Cameron wouldn't know that.
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