Aifric O'Connell

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Aifric O'Connell

Aifric O'Connell

@aifricoconnell

Ireland เข้าร่วม Şubat 2012
589 กำลังติดตาม2.6K ผู้ติดตาม
Chłoddy
Chłoddy@OfSymbols·
Im enjoying this, long essays from people who’re more or less personally indistinguishable from Starmer, thrashing around desperate to rationalise the fact that he are so broadly despised and by extension they too are. It’s the sound of the PMC ego shattering.
Damian Low@DamianLow3

The level of personal hostility directed at Keir Starmer over the last week deserves scrutiny in its own right. Not because he should be immune from criticism, but because the tone and intensity of the attacks tell us something unhealthy about the state of democratic politics. 1. Starmer is a conventional political figure. Cautious, legalistic, incremental. He frustrates people precisely because he is managerial rather than messianic. Yet the reaction to him often goes far beyond disagreement, tipping into visceral hatred more commonly reserved for authoritarians or demagogues. 2. Much of this hostility is disconnected from concrete policy. It is not about specific votes, proposals or outcomes, but about projection. A belief that Starmer embodies betrayal, bad faith or hidden malice. That kind of politics runs on suspicion rather than evidence. 3. This matters because democracy depends on the assumption of good faith among opponents. You can think a leader is wrong, timid, or misguided without believing they are fundamentally illegitimate. Once politics becomes moralised to the point of demonisation, compromise is reframed as treachery and pluralism as weakness. 4. The pattern is familiar. In fragmented, polarised systems, anger concentrates not on extremists, whose intentions are clear, but on moderates, who disappoint maximalists on all sides. The centre becomes the lightning rod precisely because it resists totalising narratives. 5. There is also a media and online dynamic at work. Incentives reward outrage, not proportionality. Algorithms favour contempt over analysis. Over time, this creates a political culture in which relentless personal attack feels normal, even virtuous, rather than disgusting. 6. None of this is a defence of Starmer’s decisions, instincts or record. Those should be argued over robustly as you do in a democracy. The problem is the substitution of critique with hostility and the quiet erosion of democratic norms that follows when political opponents are treated as enemies rather than rivals. 7. A democracy cannot function if every election is framed as an existential struggle against internal evil. At some point, the target may change, but the damage to trust, restraint and culture remains.

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Stats for Lefties 🍉🏳️‍⚧️
@DamianLow3 Too long, did not read. Starmer is a mass murdering piece of shit who deserves to spend rest of his life in prison for participating in the genocide of the Palestinian people. Resigning in disgrace + shame is the bare minimum. He is a disgusting sadist who enjoys human suffering
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Damian Low
Damian Low@DamianLow3·
The level of personal hostility directed at Keir Starmer over the last week deserves scrutiny in its own right. Not because he should be immune from criticism, but because the tone and intensity of the attacks tell us something unhealthy about the state of democratic politics. 1. Starmer is a conventional political figure. Cautious, legalistic, incremental. He frustrates people precisely because he is managerial rather than messianic. Yet the reaction to him often goes far beyond disagreement, tipping into visceral hatred more commonly reserved for authoritarians or demagogues. 2. Much of this hostility is disconnected from concrete policy. It is not about specific votes, proposals or outcomes, but about projection. A belief that Starmer embodies betrayal, bad faith or hidden malice. That kind of politics runs on suspicion rather than evidence. 3. This matters because democracy depends on the assumption of good faith among opponents. You can think a leader is wrong, timid, or misguided without believing they are fundamentally illegitimate. Once politics becomes moralised to the point of demonisation, compromise is reframed as treachery and pluralism as weakness. 4. The pattern is familiar. In fragmented, polarised systems, anger concentrates not on extremists, whose intentions are clear, but on moderates, who disappoint maximalists on all sides. The centre becomes the lightning rod precisely because it resists totalising narratives. 5. There is also a media and online dynamic at work. Incentives reward outrage, not proportionality. Algorithms favour contempt over analysis. Over time, this creates a political culture in which relentless personal attack feels normal, even virtuous, rather than disgusting. 6. None of this is a defence of Starmer’s decisions, instincts or record. Those should be argued over robustly as you do in a democracy. The problem is the substitution of critique with hostility and the quiet erosion of democratic norms that follows when political opponents are treated as enemies rather than rivals. 7. A democracy cannot function if every election is framed as an existential struggle against internal evil. At some point, the target may change, but the damage to trust, restraint and culture remains.
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Aifric O'Connell รีทวีตแล้ว
Aifric O'Connell
Aifric O'Connell@aifricoconnell·
Dreoilín, dreoilín, dreoilín, dreoilín. I'm beggin' of you please don't take my wran.
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Aifric O'Connell
Aifric O'Connell@aifricoconnell·
@LordWalney Hi John, I was interested to hear you on Nick Ferrari this morning, substituting the word “genocide” for “Gaza”. I suppose the two have become interchangeable in your mind. No surprise, really. And nice for once to hear some accuracy, however accidental.
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Lord Walney
Lord Walney@LordWalney·
MPs will be asked to approve the proscription of Palestine Action today. It may be the first time the house divides on banning an organisation under terrorism law since 2001, when John McDonnell, Jeremy Corbyn and Diane Abbott voted against proscribing al-Qaida.
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Fick Nerrari
Fick Nerrari@FickNerrariLBC·
Nick Ferrari once worked for Iranian 🇮🇷 state television and quit due to “increasing bias in its coverage” I shit you not. Good morning @LBC
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Fick Nerrari
Fick Nerrari@FickNerrariLBC·
Shelagh Fogarty would happily wait on a table of misogynists who had all tweeted disgusting things about her. Of course she would. @LBC
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Marty Whelan
Marty Whelan@martylyricfm·
To all our new listeners and those who have been with us a long time - thank you for joining us each day
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Aifric O'Connell
Aifric O'Connell@aifricoconnell·
@CurtisDaly_ Yes, now that there’s absolutely no prospect of it actually happening.
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Jonathan Ashworth
Jonathan Ashworth@JonAshworth·
Labour has a plan to help people back to work to get Britain working again. My take on @leicesterliz’s coming welfare reforms earlier:
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Chłoddy
Chłoddy@OfSymbols·
@LBC @BenKentish The caller is only partly correct. It’s rare that the relationship is explicit like this, no one tells Ben what to say because no one needs to, it’s in his character to be incurious, and deferential to power, and if it wasn’t, he wouldn’t have a job and someone else would.
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LBC
LBC@LBC·
'The media needs to take a long look in the mirror.' 'Nobody has ever told me what to say.' Caller Dan blames @BenKentish and the rest of the 'mainstream media' for 'brainwashing people to feel a certain way about Trump.' Ben's not having it.
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Nick Tyrone
Nick Tyrone@NicholasTyrone·
@JBeckingham93 Yep. And don’t get me started on the Uyghurs. It sort of feels like “Some Muslim Lives Matter, but it really depends on who they’re up against.”
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Nick Tyrone
Nick Tyrone@NicholasTyrone·
I find it weird that a decade ago, whenever I tried to talk about the horrors going on in Syria, I would often be told, “This has nothing to do with us in the west - we should keep our opinions to ourselves,” yet on the Gaza situation, you can’t shut the western left up about it.
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Jason Reid
Jason Reid@JasonReidx·
Imagine the worst possible scenario and let’s run with it… again. 🤪
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Aifric O'Connell
Aifric O'Connell@aifricoconnell·
@AkaPaulHoward I loved this, Paul. Our lad has been gone for 9 years and I still miss him every day.
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