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Like Father Like Son?

(95 Posts)
trisher Thu 03-Dec-15 13:21:57

As Hilary Benn is acclaimed for his speech supporting the bombing in Syria I couldn't help wondering about his father and his constant stance on upholding peace. His speech is still the most moving and still has relevance today www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/12/02/syria-vote-airstrikes-tony-benn-iraq-speech_n_8700306.html
Is this just a case of a son trying to outdo his father by taking the opposite viewpoint?

nightowl Fri 04-Dec-15 07:31:44

Don't you think Jeremy Corbyn is a conviction politician POGS? I don't mean do you agree with him. If not, how would you describe him? I'm not having a go here, I'm interested in your opinion.

POGS Fri 04-Dec-15 01:33:20

Why can,'t a grown man make his own decisions.? He is not a child.!

Hilary Benn received a handclap from BOTH sides because he showed guts.

I watched the whole days debate and I honestly do not for one moment believe Benn was given the response he did for voting for the government benches, he received the response because all there knew exactly what had just happened, he voted with his conscience , he voted after much thought, he voted knowing exactly what the repercussion to him personally would be , he voted for what he thought was in the best interest of the United Kingdom not the Labour Party and not himself. In other words he put party politics to one side and did what he felt was for the best even if it meant being hung for. That is why they clapped.

I said on another thread. I actually found there was a 'conviction politician, on the Labour front benches and I was surprised it was mild mannered Benn.

rosequartz Thu 03-Dec-15 23:26:13

Well, his son is not him. He has a mind of his own.

It's like following a very clever sibling through school, the constant comparisons must be disheartening.

Anniebach Thu 03-Dec-15 23:23:29

I heard Tony Benn several times at anti war alleys he would not have said what his son said, he would have said what Corbyn asked , who is funding IS, who is selling arms etc

Anniebach Thu 03-Dec-15 23:20:16

No, there was no briefing on who is buying all the oil, who is selling the arms, what banks are involved , the questions were asked but no answer given because there is no intention by this government to find out. Use intelligence to find a man in a vehicle, the best intelligence in the world we are told, so why have they not been able to hunt out where the money comes from or where it is kept, I doubt under their mattresses , millions are passing into and out of Syria, certaintly not by cheque in the post.

Who is making billions out of this

rosequartz Thu 03-Dec-15 23:14:41

I didn't hear the speech but a friend who did said he sounded like Hitler!
And in fact that is a very strange thing to say, as Hitler was a fascist and that seems to be what we are fighting again.
confused or the friend is

Anniebach Thu 03-Dec-15 23:12:54

Didn't make eye contact ? All that was going on and there should have been eye contact?

rosequartz Thu 03-Dec-15 23:12:08

But they have all had whatever briefings they needed or wanted on how they get funding, etc etc etc.
We don't know everything they are privy to.

rosequartz Thu 03-Dec-15 23:10:52

I didn't hear the speech but a friend who did said he sounded like Hitler!
I would call that hearsay, not evidence smile

trisher Thu 03-Dec-15 22:45:12

Tony Benn always opposed war and violence and questioned the reasons and the propaganda used to take a country to war. He would certainly have wanted to know more about how IS was funded and where they were getting the arms and resources from.

petallus Thu 03-Dec-15 22:35:15

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

rosesarered Thu 03-Dec-15 22:11:10

I watched his speech live on tv, brilliant and from the heart, he wrote it that day on the benches as he listened to the debate.As a matter of fact, I saw that not only the Conservatives but the far section of Labour MP's presumably the moderates and the Lib Dems ALL applauded loudly.The SNP did not, just as you would expect of them, and Corbyn sat stony faced and did not say anything or make eye contact even when Benn sat down next to him( in fact, barely made room for him to sit down at all, that's how narked he was!)

TriciaF Thu 03-Dec-15 20:15:27

Eloethan - we're in a minority of two - I share your view on this.

thatbags Thu 03-Dec-15 19:59:26

I wonder if Tony Benn would have felt the same about this intervention as he did about Iraq? As Hilary said, it's raw fascism we're dealing with now. That wasn't the case when Tony opposed the Iraq war.

Whatever the case, I think the suggestion that Hilary was trying to 'outdo' his father is just plain silly. What does it even mean, this 'outdo'?

rosequartz Thu 03-Dec-15 19:56:16

Do you share political views with your parents? I don't.
If I did, I would have a split personality hmm

Eloethan Thu 03-Dec-15 19:53:33

I have never liked Hilary Benn and find him a characterless, uninspiring politician.

I'm obviously in a minority of 1 but I was not particularly moved by his speech. It's easy to rouse people by shouting about the undoubted barbarity of the enemy - the vast majority of people agree with that whatever their beliefs as to the bombing may be. It was the strategy that was in doubt, not the vicious behaviour of ISIS.

LullyDully Thu 03-Dec-15 19:53:07

Do you share political views with your parents? I don't. Tony Benn was a fascinating, articulate orator who I enjoyed listening to but didn't agree with his politics either.

It is up to each person to hold their own views otherwise what's the point? We should believe in debate and democracy unlike Daesh.

rosequartz Thu 03-Dec-15 19:29:57

Disgusting, really, to use someone else's dead father to make political capital.
shock

I may not have had a lot in common with Tony Benn, but in fact I did find that he and I did have something in common in later life and his story gave me great heart and hope.

soontobe Thu 03-Dec-15 18:43:38

Agreed. You have to know a family quite intimately, to know that.

rosequartz Thu 03-Dec-15 17:40:54

Alex Salmond has no right to say that

rosequartz Thu 03-Dec-15 17:40:07

I think his father would be turning in his grave.
I am not sure about that, he is not a clone of his father, he is an independent minded man and I am sure his father, whilst he would probably have disagreed with him, would have agreed to differ - after heated debate.

TriciaF Thu 03-Dec-15 17:37:56

I've just listened to his speech , the applause at the end was almost all from the conservative benches. I was cringing.
As Alex Salmond has said recently, I think his father would be turning in his grave.

rosequartz Thu 03-Dec-15 17:37:17

No, they're not Jayh, but perhaps they didn't want to stand for leader as it is so stressful and exhausting. Perhaps they thought they would leave it to the younger ones - then got a 66 year old!!
(is he pensionable age yet?)

Jayh Thu 03-Dec-15 17:19:25

I too wondered why HB did not stand for the leadership of the Labour Party. Also watching the debate there were MPs speaking who I had forgotten about, like Margaret Beckett. And here is me thinking that the Labour Party was short on experienced, talented people. Not so.

rosequartz Thu 03-Dec-15 17:04:46

I would think that Tony Benn would respect his son for his beliefs and his decision even if he did not agree with him.