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Jacob Rees-Mogg speaks

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By (user no longer on site) OP   
over a year ago

Here is Jacob Rees-Mogg on the result of Theresa May's vote of no confidence. 117 Conservative MPs had no confidence.

https://youtu.be/LLObEJnDve4

Here is Jacob Rees-Mogg on the result of Boris Johnson's vote of no confidence. 148 Conservative MPs saying they have no confidence.

https://youtu.be/7KBaxF4v60k

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By *ackal1Couple
over a year ago

Manchester

Yes another minister full of bullshit and lies.

Yet people keep voting them in.

Mogg more than anyone doesn’t give a flying fuck about the people of this country.

He wants a lordship and that’s about it really, not for the money he just like Boris feels it’s his right.

He was pissed when hereditary peers were stopped. Bloody commoners!!

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By *eavenNhellCouple
over a year ago

carrbrook stalybridge

when will mogg learn that talking slowly in a posh voice does not make you intelligent

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By *ohnnyTwoNotesMan
over a year ago

golden fields


"when will mogg learn that talking slowly in a posh voice does not make you intelligent "

Doesn't matter if he learns it, the electorate need to learn it.

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By *itzi999Woman
over a year ago

Slough

[Removed by poster at 07/06/22 22:50:14]

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By *itzi999Woman
over a year ago

Slough

Jacob Rees-Mogg started investing in the stock markets aged 10 (and made a profit) and studied at Trinity College Oxford. How many of you are anywhere near as intelligent as him

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"Jacob Rees-Mogg started investing in the stock markets aged 10 (and made a profit) and studied at Trinity College Oxford. How many of you are anywhere near as intelligent as him"

Is he more intelligent than you?

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By *ayturners turn hayMan
over a year ago

Wellingborugh


"Jacob Rees-Mogg started investing in the stock markets aged 10 (and made a profit) and studied at Trinity College Oxford. How many of you are anywhere near as intelligent as him"
. Well said. Many people are simply jealous of his success . Only a small minority have the intelligence to pass the Oxford entrance exams . Most people on these forums would love to be as successfull as he is . Unable to achieve it they simply spend their time criticising others. Others live in a world of false reality. Look at how successfull Boris Johnson is yet if we listened to people on here you would think everyone despised him.

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By *ustintime69Man
over a year ago

Bristol


"Jacob Rees-Mogg started investing in the stock markets aged 10 (and made a profit) and studied at Trinity College Oxford. How many of you are anywhere near as intelligent as him. Well said. Many people are simply jealous of his success . Only a small minority have the intelligence to pass the Oxford entrance exams . Most people on these forums would love to be as successfull as he is . Unable to achieve it they simply spend their time criticising others. Others live in a world of false reality. Look at how successfull Boris Johnson is yet if we listened to people on here you would think everyone despised him. "

Pat is definitely a BOT!!!

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By (user no longer on site) OP   
over a year ago

Educated and intelligence are two different things.

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By *itzi999Woman
over a year ago

Slough

He is both educated and intelligent

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By *elanie de la CoeurTV/TS
over a year ago

Dublin

I think nanny's homemade marmalade is the secret of his success.

Do share the recipe Jacob

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By *ddmanMan
over a year ago

Norwich

Reese-Mogg is the product of priviledge enabled opportunity, a knack for opportunism and a lifelong, tory elitism. RM's parents positioned him for easy success by opening the doors with cash. He capitalised on that risk cushion because he was educated in the means and techniques to do so. He has made no hard choices, nor deviated from the path to personal aggrandisement.

A 2:1 in history proves the regurgitation of fact and adequate analysis. It is not a marker for creative intelligence nor leaps of insight. He wishes he'd read classics - fact-free history in greek. True, the Oxford schedule is tight; he'll have read and written a lot, but that's about dedication to avoiding distraction, something he probably had time for as his peers, at *oxford*, considered him obnoxious

Not many people pass the oxford entry exams because, in the late 80s, not many people got the chance; the private school feeder system gated access, itself gated by wealth. At eton, ad well as being crammed for exams, he learned *social* skills - how to oil, network, present as the right type and 'fit'. His upbringing taught him he deserved it, while his education provided the contacts and correctly branded tickets into opportunities by backdoors he exploited that most can't.

An example might be his career start:

- do something you love and you'll never work a day.

- to make easy money, be near easy money

- to be a big fish, choose a small pond

- where's easy money in recession 90s? Not in Britain, dad says it's in Hong Kong

- trade on name, education and chutzpah to get a banking job on the other side of the world.

- being an ex-eton, ex-oxford, ex-pat in finance, expect invitations to mix with the great and the good.

And beating the market at 10, with a £50 windfall, in a stock your enobled millionaire financier dad picked for you, and telling the board of GEC to do one because your ROI isn't enough isn't clever, it's a nice story illuminated by the precocious spark of arrogance.

The myth that he's significantly better than average,and deserves to be is something he's still selling from atop that mountain of advantage.

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By *ohnnyTwoNotesMan
over a year ago

golden fields


"Jacob Rees-Mogg started investing in the stock markets aged 10 (and made a profit) and studied at Trinity College Oxford. How many of you are anywhere near as intelligent as him"

Just a normal upbringing, that's probably how he can relate so well to ordinary people.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"Reese-Mogg is the product of priviledge enabled opportunity, a knack for opportunism and a lifelong, tory elitism. RM's parents positioned him for easy success by opening the doors with cash. He capitalised on that risk cushion because he was educated in the means and techniques to do so. He has made no hard choices, nor deviated from the path to personal aggrandisement.

A 2:1 in history proves the regurgitation of fact and adequate analysis. It is not a marker for creative intelligence nor leaps of insight. He wishes he'd read classics - fact-free history in greek. True, the Oxford schedule is tight; he'll have read and written a lot, but that's about dedication to avoiding distraction, something he probably had time for as his peers, at *oxford*, considered him obnoxious

Not many people pass the oxford entry exams because, in the late 80s, not many people got the chance; the private school feeder system gated access, itself gated by wealth. At eton, ad well as being crammed for exams, he learned *social* skills - how to oil, network, present as the right type and 'fit'. His upbringing taught him he deserved it, while his education provided the contacts and correctly branded tickets into opportunities by backdoors he exploited that most can't.

An example might be his career start:

- do something you love and you'll never work a day.

- to make easy money, be near easy money

- to be a big fish, choose a small pond

- where's easy money in recession 90s? Not in Britain, dad says it's in Hong Kong

- trade on name, education and chutzpah to get a banking job on the other side of the world.

- being an ex-eton, ex-oxford, ex-pat in finance, expect invitations to mix with the great and the good.

And beating the market at 10, with a £50 windfall, in a stock your enobled millionaire financier dad picked for you, and telling the board of GEC to do one because your ROI isn't enough isn't clever, it's a nice story illuminated by the precocious spark of arrogance.

The myth that he's significantly better than average,and deserves to be is something he's still selling from atop that mountain of advantage."

Well said, I will repeat the line that I have often said about Boris, Mogg etc, they are very good at fooling foolish people

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"Jacob Rees-Mogg started investing in the stock markets aged 10 (and made a profit) and studied at Trinity College Oxford. How many of you are anywhere near as intelligent as him

Just a normal upbringing, that's probably how he can relate so well to ordinary people.

"

Ha, but these Tory voters are impressed, they bow down when they here a posh accent, they know their place

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"Reese-Mogg is the product of priviledge enabled opportunity, a knack for opportunism and a lifelong, tory elitism. RM's parents positioned him for easy success by opening the doors with cash. He capitalised on that risk cushion because he was educated in the means and techniques to do so. He has made no hard choices, nor deviated from the path to personal aggrandisement.

A 2:1 in history proves the regurgitation of fact and adequate analysis. It is not a marker for creative intelligence nor leaps of insight. He wishes he'd read classics - fact-free history in greek. True, the Oxford schedule is tight; he'll have read and written a lot, but that's about dedication to avoiding distraction, something he probably had time for as his peers, at *oxford*, considered him obnoxious

Not many people pass the oxford entry exams because, in the late 80s, not many people got the chance; the private school feeder system gated access, itself gated by wealth. At eton, ad well as being crammed for exams, he learned *social* skills - how to oil, network, present as the right type and 'fit'. His upbringing taught him he deserved it, while his education provided the contacts and correctly branded tickets into opportunities by backdoors he exploited that most can't.

An example might be his career start:

- do something you love and you'll never work a day.

- to make easy money, be near easy money

- to be a big fish, choose a small pond

- where's easy money in recession 90s? Not in Britain, dad says it's in Hong Kong

- trade on name, education and chutzpah to get a banking job on the other side of the world.

- being an ex-eton, ex-oxford, ex-pat in finance, expect invitations to mix with the great and the good.

And beating the market at 10, with a £50 windfall, in a stock your enobled millionaire financier dad picked for you, and telling the board of GEC to do one because your ROI isn't enough isn't clever, it's a nice story illuminated by the precocious spark of arrogance.

The myth that he's significantly better than average,and deserves to be is something he's still selling from atop that mountain of advantage.

Well said, I will repeat the line that I have often said about Boris, Mogg etc, they are very good at fooling foolish people "

Thats the golden ticket right there. They have worked out that all they need to do is trick the thickest 20% of the nation with a tag line or 2 and the rest will take care of itself. The worst and most dangerous part of the internet was the chance for everyone to have a platform to speak and be spoken too.

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By *iman2100Man
over a year ago

Glasgow

For me he is am MP in Parliament to look after the needs of the people of this country.

Whatever he has done for himself he has not convinced me he is in parliament for us. He is clearly there for himself and his chronies. That is why I would like to see him gone.

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By *ustintime69Man
over a year ago

Bristol


"Reese-Mogg is the product of priviledge enabled opportunity, a knack for opportunism and a lifelong, tory elitism. RM's parents positioned him for easy success by opening the doors with cash. He capitalised on that risk cushion because he was educated in the means and techniques to do so. He has made no hard choices, nor deviated from the path to personal aggrandisement.

A 2:1 in history proves the regurgitation of fact and adequate analysis. It is not a marker for creative intelligence nor leaps of insight. He wishes he'd read classics - fact-free history in greek. True, the Oxford schedule is tight; he'll have read and written a lot, but that's about dedication to avoiding distraction, something he probably had time for as his peers, at *oxford*, considered him obnoxious

Not many people pass the oxford entry exams because, in the late 80s, not many people got the chance; the private school feeder system gated access, itself gated by wealth. At eton, ad well as being crammed for exams, he learned *social* skills - how to oil, network, present as the right type and 'fit'. His upbringing taught him he deserved it, while his education provided the contacts and correctly branded tickets into opportunities by backdoors he exploited that most can't.

An example might be his career start:

- do something you love and you'll never work a day.

- to make easy money, be near easy money

- to be a big fish, choose a small pond

- where's easy money in recession 90s? Not in Britain, dad says it's in Hong Kong

- trade on name, education and chutzpah to get a banking job on the other side of the world.

- being an ex-eton, ex-oxford, ex-pat in finance, expect invitations to mix with the great and the good.

And beating the market at 10, with a £50 windfall, in a stock your enobled millionaire financier dad picked for you, and telling the board of GEC to do one because your ROI isn't enough isn't clever, it's a nice story illuminated by the precocious spark of arrogance.

The myth that he's significantly better than average,and deserves to be is something he's still selling from atop that mountain of advantage."

Well said

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By *ohnnyTwoNotesMan
over a year ago

golden fields


"For me he is am MP in Parliament to look after the needs of the people of this country.

Whatever he has done for himself he has not convinced me he is in parliament for us. He is clearly there for himself and his chronies. That is why I would like to see him gone. "

Same as all the current Tories. People seem to like it though, they keep voting for them.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

Jason Rees-Mogg speaks...?

You mean he's not a mute..? Or a ventriloquist dummy..?

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