i know Im randomly asking but does any of you know a method to log back into an instagram account?? I stupidly forgot the login password. I would appreciate any tricks you can offer me.
Say what ya want about the US. But atleast the US House of Representatives don’t act like children and laugh at another party constantly for childish actions.
@@realzachfluke1 No your Congress full of fatties who eat sweets and chocolate during impeachments. And the only reason they laughed at Gordon Brown is because the Conservatives hate Labour and always have so they will do whatever they can to get a dig at them.
"I've worked with teenagers for over 14 years and you lot are all still more well behaved than any of the MPs in the house of commons" - an actual quote from my teacher
David Arbelaez I'm not even from the UK. I'm just watching because this is goddamn hysterical/tragic. Can't believe the Brits managed to colonize half the world with this kind of attitude.
***** Well, Britain is still the 5th largest economy in the world. No small potatoes, that. Personally, I think it'd have been better if the British Empire was still what it was in the early 20th C. India, if it'd have been a colony even for another 2 or 3 generations, would have been far less corrupt and more prosperous. In fact, no less a figure than SirWSC said as much. India was making real progress, and it's why I think Ghandi was a destructive figure in history. Look at the bloodshed after the British left. Incidentally, I had a friend in high school whose family had a really poor opinion of Ghandi for that reason. It was interesting to talk to people directly who'd lived there. As to us Yanks, you have to admit that we had a point about being taxed but with no seats in Parliament. We were British, after all.
***** I'm a bit grating to some of my fellow Americans because I realize that we did have support in the Revolution. I'm a conservative, and so often get accused of being a revisionist and anti-American for saying that. I'm hardly either. As to British strength, when we wanted to expand north after the Revolution, we were stopped cold by the British and it's why the Canadian border is where it is today. We did many resourceful and courageous things, but we did have support. I just wish that Britain and the USA could have set aside the differences far sooner than we did, for I think it would have served us both better. We almost came to war as late as the 1890s, for our interests conflicted in South America. I think Britain has been a great friend to America, and if it hadn't been for you who knows if we'd have been able to win WW2. Britain also paid back all those lend lease debts, even though Britain could have gotten a pass on that. To boot, Britain paid them back ahead of schedule. Also, Britain is the only other country aside from the USA who has met NATO funding agreements. I have this theory that Ghandi is viewed by so many in America as a positive figure for the same reason that one can't get anything like accurate news on the major networks. Anything that serves the leftist cause, and anti-Westernism does just that, is what you'll find in the news and in Hollywood movies. What do you think of your election just last week?
Dall of Cutie, The chancellor of the exchequer is the only MP aloud to drink inside the actual chamber itself. You can’t blame them for having a tipple with nearly 30 bars inside Westminster I’d be tempted to
Stuart Saunders, your right, but my point was he/she is the the only person permitted to drink in the house. Everyone else is forbidden including the PM, leader of the House of Commons and the speaker
To any foreigners stopping by...These aren't really funny moments, this is just a normal day in British Parliament. We are blessed to have the best circus in the world here in England.
I was very surprised. British people seem so polite. This looks like a pub. It's quite amazing that the population finds this normal. It's very funny indeed
@@beesfoot Gordon Brown may be PM, but he sending up Blair to undermine Brown. Roasting both at the same time I would say was the genius nature of this speech.
I wasn't aware there was a "high point" of Hague's career? I think you'll find he was a tedious little shitehawk with the intelligence of a four-year-old and the sophistication of a donkey.
4:22 John Bercow demands a MP withdraw the word “pipsqueak,” and the MP says “out of deference to you, Mr. Speaker, I withdraw it.” Thats kinda loaded, considering how vertically challenged Bercow is.
@ Ramses die Short. I am short myself (5’2” female), so I can call someone “vertically challenged” without giving offense. Us pipsqueaks must hang together, else we will surely hang separately. (Thank You, Ben Franklin).
@LennonH_05 You mean the man that says everything in hindsight and waits to hear what the most common view is before dutifully adopting that one as a policy? Ive eaten grains of rice with more flavour than that wet wipe.
nah mate the us IS bad. this is fine. other places around the world have worse politics like this. They don’t even get to sit around and talk like this.
I would love to examine and observe a true test of intellectual ability between you and most of these guys....I know who my bet would be on and my money is not on you chummy x 2..:)
>Guy tries to make a point >Room erupts so you can't hear him finish > "Ordah, o-ordah, o-o-ordah, ordah, ordah" Sounds like a great way to get things done
It's funny because the assemblies of Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland are quite literally the opposite. And rightfully boring as sin. Let's be real. It's more of a sport than actual leadership.
@SecondFavoriteColors I wouldn't go that far, I think. Real people in a group can be chaotic, but even crowds in places like movies theaters, concerts, and sports stadiums can at least quiet down and listen when absolutely necessary. Here, this is just nonsense; and what makes it worse is these are the effective leaders of the United Kingdom, and _this_ is how they act.
Cameron to Brown (5:35): "This is the prime minister who went on American Idol with more makeup on than Barbara Cartland!" Very funny. Thank you for the upload.
All the Brits laughing at the irony of the claim that they saved the world as the world remains strife with the fallout of their colonial conquests lol
@Harvey Smith Multicultural? After being gentrified and/or having their resources exploited at the expense of what little they already had in life? lol don’t kid yourself.
@@npche9865everything comes at a cost. You wouldn't have been able to do none of that if your government didn't cause exploitation and suffering to your colonies and their wealth. It were the talented British like Newton for example who changed the world, not the stupid monarchy itself.
@@Pearg0ld pfft hardly Congress with its stupid filibuster rule is a waste of time parliament despite its many shortcomings is vastly more efficient than congress in the USA could ever hope to achieve. American Congress is far too structured
The real answer is that ten minutes of highlights from twenty five years of Parliament isn't really representative of most of the stuff that they do do. Most of it is surprisingly reasonable and, y'know, boring. Lots of "I propose this amendment, it would be good to make this change because x, y". "I disagree because z". "Okay, let's vote on that"
@Hussain hey it's better than Kosovo, where they detonated tear gas to disrupt a vote (though I wouldn't put that past our esteemed current leadership)
American House of Representatives: One Person has speech for 2 hours, nobody talks during it, speaker listens the entire time. British House of Commons: Guy tries to speak *Shouting so loud you can’t hear him* “Ordah! Ordah! This is so time-consuming!”
+KingDT2007 There are loads of bars there , some for MP's ,some for auxiliaries , etc ,etc , I had a drink in most of them when I worked there in the early 70's building the underground car park , and most days we'd see , George Brown deputy Labour leader, [ remember him ] ,rolling about pissed out of his head ,
+Chris Owens And we, the taxpayers, employ them to have these sessions, at a fine rate of ~£75,000 a year. Multiply that by the number of MPs, of course, since one MP will have difficulty wasting time alone, and we pay them a modest £48,750,000 for the comedy show. Imagine what we'd have to pay them to get them to run the country.
In the houses of parliament you can ridicule politicians as much as you want, and you can even laugh and heckle them for ages, but say Pipsqueak, you're out!
It's a technicality of the rules. You can infer that an MP is mistaken on a point, or even hiding details, but you can't call their honesty or honour into question. That's why MPs always have to address each other as "the honourable member", and why we have terms like "economical with the truth". You can't say another MP is lying in parliament, so they have to use more roundabout ways of saying it. You also can't directly insult another MP. You can insult their opinion, but not the MP.
Jibba Ellie please the house of common please tell the truth for them to practice dear citizenship test books so that they can understand the importance of the law of the land
If parliament got stormed I garuntee the MPs wouldn’t cower behind the security agents in fear, they’d be out there throwing punches in a mass drunken brawl.
It's almost like they all have a few pints before they hit the chamber and they hardly speak about the actual issues it just turns into a ROASTING of somebody!!!!! Brutal but hilarious HAHAHAHAHA
I wish America was like this. No matter how much shade is thrown, they all come together in the end. People take everything so personal in the US it’s absolutely ridiculous.
You have to be American to say that. Please don't come to England with that " holier than thou " otherwise you will be roasted to pieces.....all in good hunoUr , naturally :)