Like all LibLabCons, these people insist on telling us what to do and how to do it, but when it comes to strong questions about dark issues then they are lost for words and have to run away. What are these people afraid of?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJC-vvx7 ... detailpageThe BBC doesn't win any honours either. A BBC reporter is presented with a live situation concerning questions that demand big answers from the politicians; and the BBC's response is to dismiss the occasion as a “few protesters came along and spoiled the occasion” for a political “photo-op”. Perhaps questions about paedophilia are too uncomfortable for the BBC?
Britiain's £1.8 Trillion debt to double in 2 years, and Danny Alexander would not discuss the sloution to this debt mountain - the Bradbury Pound. Like Clegg, her just flees for cover when hard questions are asked of him.
http://21stcenturywire.com/2014/03/20/b ... ury-pound/Quote:
The current debt of the British government is around £1.8 trillion and that number is expected to double every two years. It’s a recipe for disaster. For politicians propping up the losing fractional reserve debt-based private banking money regime, there seems to be only three bent tools in their economic tinker chest: cut more and borrow less, or cut less and borrow more – or the current US federal model… spend more and borrow more.