Dally wrote:
Lobbying is part of the democratic process - I occassionally lobby my MP on matters of personal importance to me, these days often via campaigning websites. Bribery and corruption though must be stamped out.
You don't seem to know the difference between you asking your MP to look into a matter of personal importance and what lobbying by vested interests has become.
Dally wrote:
The issue in the Scargill era was unions believing they could bring down a government they did not like, even if democratically elected. There was a real threat to democracy.
Nonsense.
Please explain where you get the notion that Unions believed they could bring down governments. You are implying the Unions would strike or whatever for political ends rather than to protect their members interests.
Scargill might have been very happy had the miners strike resulted in an election being called but the only way that would have happened was if something like the information in those papers had come out i.e. that they really did want to close 75 pits not 20 as Scargill said was the agenda. Now
that would have sunk the government, not the union telling everyone what they believed to be the true agenda or going on strike.
Had that happened and had the government been exposed and an election resulted, how would that be anti-democratic? Being forced to the country having been exposed as bare faced liars would have been democracy in action would it not?
Instead they lied. Very democratic!
Dally wrote:
Who were these global businesses that brought down governments? Was there deliberate acts?
He said "When governments
can be brought to their collective knees by unelected, unaccountable people in global businesses then democracy has been shown up"
Not "brought down". You are misquoting the poster here.
As you well know the global banking industry has brought many governments to their collective knees.