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Harman, the most loathed Slut Feminist, in the center..


Following Guido's site on Britain's political scene is always a great source or mirth and sniggers. Guido's site is apparently the first thing they visit, do when they get up in the morning, even before they have had a chance to make their first, early morning cup-a-char(tea). Many a time, after an action or comment has been exposed on his site, by one or more of their pollies, do they act or raise the topic of exposure in their PMQ's question time in Parliament. Thoroughly entertaining event and a major point scoring exercise..

So if you follow politics just for the entertainment value like I do, well worth taking the RSS feed..

We have the UK Independent site as well, for a different perspective, and here is Harman, one the most obnoxious slut-feminists on the planet. Hated and loathed equally by all, there's equality for you...

One of the more laughable incidents is ofcourse when "Slut Feminist" Harriet Harman raises her sexist, biased, obnoxious and "used by date" head, to demonstrate again what a loser it really is by asking questions or making some irrelevant feminist agitprop comment, the usual "women are victims of everything" banality..

Anyone following this blog would already be well aware of the "carry on" and drivel this feminist has already undertaken when Labor was in office in the UK a few years back. A nasty piece of work and unrivaled in her obvious sexist comments, actions, while promoting and encouraging, anti-male discrimination..

Nick rises to Harriet's limp challenge

Lloyd Evans 4:06pm



 Basketball in America. Netball at PMQs. Harriet Harman, Labour’s venerable form-prefect, took her leader’s place today and lobbed a few rubbery missiles at the PM’s under-study, Nick Clegg. It came down to arithmetic. Even if Hattie had stormed it at PMQs she had no hope of reviving her extinct career. But Clegg has it all to play for. He was ready for it too. Assured, combative and well-briefed, he filled his replies with fresh, punchy rhetoric. (Mind you, his match-fit performance should be credited to his party activists.
Clegg must have spent the last 22 months fielding nasty questions from chippy wonks at Lib Dem constituency meetings.) Hattie tried to upset him by accusing the coalition of ‘throwing women out of work.’ But under Labour, Clegg replied, women’s unemployment rose by 24 per cent. Then she mocked him for failing to get healthcare professionals to support the NHS reforms. But Labour, said Clegg, had promised in its manifesto that ‘sustained reform was needed to safeguard the health system.’ Hattie then decided to show everyone that she’d found time to do a spot of homework before today’s session. She quoted Vince Cable’s leaked opinion that ‘this government has no compelling vision.’ Though barely two weeks old this soundbite already feels as ancient as a fob-watch. ‘No one agrees with Nick,’ said Harman daintily, ‘but does Nick agree with Vince?’

This soft-boiled approach made the session feel more like a massage than a mauling. Clegg fired back and attacked Labour on a range of issues. It had ‘sucked up to the City’; it had ‘relied too heavily’ on public sector jobs; it had ‘spent £250m’ allowing NHS managers to make ‘sweetheart deals with the private sector’.
Harman was aghast. She rattled off a bullet-point list of her government’s achievements on health — ‘more doctors, more nurses, lower waiting times and greater patient satisfaction’ — which Labour members know better than their home telephone numbers. Offering oodles of fake sympathy, she regretted that Clegg hadn’t managed to persuade his grassroots supporters to accept the health reforms. And, she asked pointedly, what difference are the Lib Dems making in government?‘Well, Labour must think we’re making a difference,’ said Clegg, ‘because they were handing out leaflets at our conference.’

Hattie had had enough. Realising she couldn’t land a blow on this battle-hardened bruiser, she staged a diplomatic retreat and offered this affectionate joke which she’s probably been working on since Pancake Day. ‘In undermining the NHS,’ she said, ‘and making Shirley Williams vote for the bill, he has trashed not one but two national treasures.’ Clegg seized the opportunity to lay into Labour all over again. They’d left the banking system in a mess. (Cheers from behind him). They’d left the economy in a mess. (More cheers from behind him, slightly louder.) They’d abandoned the NHS to ‘arbitrary privatisation’. (Even louder cheers, possibly even from some Tories.)