General statistics
List of Youtube channels
Youtube commenter search
Distinguished comments
About
Steve Parker
Professor Tim Wilson
comments
Comments by "Steve Parker" (@steveparker8065) on "I am as shocked by the alleged censorship of comments as I am by sone of the trolls" video.
I'm heavily filtered by the YT algorithm, I think not only is there a general filter for certain words but also a score given to users against which this is used. I've had straight-up stats filtered. Thank you for allowing my jokes and not removing my dark humour and sarcasm. I get far more comments visible here than in most places and so can confirm that I think Tim is genuine in his desire and actions not to censor us. I've also got to know Tim better in the last week of two and appreciate his mild-mannered Professor demeanour with that wellspring of innuendo bursting to get out.
6
@mrharry448 I'm happy to admit that I generalise about the wealthy but only those with a right agenda and ideology. One that reduces my and my loved ones' life expectancy and opportunities. Kicking the poor while they're down and out simply because they were born in poverty is wholly different to defending the impoverished by challenging those who perpetuate logical fallacies for their own fiscal gain... My bias towards the wealthy is based on ideology and not aimed at all, as you can clearly see from my defence of Corbyn. The other is based in prejudice and targets the whole demographic...
3
@mrharry448 PS Cameron and Boris for that matter whose families profited from the lack of transparency on the crown dependencies and overseas territories and were named in the Panama scandal. The result of this was the EU anti-tax avoidance directive and hence led to Cameron going to beg the EU to exclude Britain. When they refused he came home with his tail between his legs and started the decline of British democracy and our economy with the word referendum... The fact that Corbyn had a manifesto pledge to enforce transparency should also be noted...
3
@mrharry448 He chose to go against his own beliefs for the good of the party he was leading. We all know that Labour would have been sunk if they'd gone against the referendum as the tabloids were frothing at mouth with bile against anyone who didn't support 'the public mandate' so let's not pretend we live in a theoretical Britain. Thanks to Corbyn the party enjoyed the biggest swing to Labour since 1945 and he increased membership from around 200k to around 580k which made Labour the biggest party in Europe. Corbyn also turned party finances around to create a surplus within 2 years. They were chanting his name at concerts and nightclubs up and down the country. The media assassination of Corbyn and misrepresentation of him was the only flaw in his leadership. No one is perfect, I don't always agree with Corbyn but Britain would be far better place if we'd had him instead of Boris. Imagine the difference to the challenges the UK has recently faced if Corbyn had won with his Free Broadband, Green Industrial Revolution, Rebuilding Public Services, Tackling Poverty and Inequality ensuring the NHS was funded and that no school child goes hungry. Not to mention the Re-Nationalisation of the energy market and the fact that all that was offered for around £60 billion, a fraction of what the Tories have wasted.
3
@MrWhothefoxthat If people glorify genocide or laugh at migrant children washed up on a beach, they'll get both barrels from me. To hell with polite discourse, these people need to be humiliated for their vindictive bigotry... Objects without an opposing force gather momentum.
2
@mrharry448 Corbyn is a Eurosceptic who respected the referendum out of integrity and to honour the wishes of his constituents. Something a Tory MP wouldn't understand...
2
@mrharry448 So he should have ignored his constituents' wishes to forward his own agenda at a time when he was vilified in the press and subject to unjustified character assassination? That's not what a leader with integrity does...
2
@californiadreamin8423 I did suspect that mate especially as you put in quotes but couldn't see a comment it came from. No offence intended buddy and my sincere apologies.
2
@Panini_Edirisinhe He's one of the few good men we have in politics. You are absolutely correct. He has humanity, decency and integrity which is a rare thing in a politician these days. Sri Lanka is a lovely country. I'm sure there are many Democratic Socialists who would love to come and visit, myself included. If not emigrate permanently.
2
@Panini_Edirisinhe My apologies, I wasn't up-to-date with recent political events of the past 3 years. Hopefully, both our countries will learn wisdom and remove those who seek to dominate through oppressive control.
2
@Panini_Edirisinhe Steven is a common name in Wales ( named after St. Steven) and Parker means a Groundskeeper so was a common job, so many people have that surname. There were around 30 people in my hometown with the name Steven Parker.
2
@californiadreamin8423 “lower orders”? glad to see the final bastion of prejudice - bashing the poor - is still flourishing... I was brought up on a council estate in South Wales and can eruditely and concisely defeat most Tories in a battle of wits, especially since most of them come unarmed... Privilege and prejudice make fine bedfellows...
1
@californiadreamin8423 PS I agree wholeheartedly with your initial comment and the retort to mr harry.
1
@californiadreamin8423 Please have a laugh this Sunday morning on me! Just remember that you're standing in a country that's devolving and dissolving at 900 miles an hour. The Tories making millions every second, so it's reckoned, The media, the source of all their power. Now the sun, the daily mail, the daily express, the telegraph, Are misinforming millions of Brits every day, In the awful Tory Britain full of poverty and decay, On a planet in the embarrassed Milky Way...
1