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Is this democracys death spiral Are we, in this country and others, falling into a lethal cycle of fury and reaction, that blocks the reasoned conversation on which civic life depends The Guardian view on language in politics: playing with fire | EditorialRead moreIn every age there have been political hucksters using aggression, lies and outrage to drown out reasoned argument. But not since the 1930s have so many succeeded.Donald Trump, Boris Johnson, Narendra Modi, Jair Bolsonaro, Scott Morrison, Rodrigo Duterte, Nicol谩 [url=https://www.stanley1913.com.es]stanley cup[/url] s Maduro, Viktor Orb谩n and many others have discovered that the digital age offers rich pickings. The anger and misunderstanding that social media generates, exacerbated by troll factories, bots and covertly funded political advertising, spill into real life.To [url=https://www.stanleycup.cz]stanley termohrnek[/url] day, politicians and commentators speak a language of violence that was unthinkable a few years ago. In the UK, Johnson mocks the memory of the murdered MP Jo Cox. Nigel Farage, talking of civil servants, promises that once Brexits done, we will take the knife to them . Brendan ONeill, editor of the website Spiked, a publication that has received funding from the Koch brothers, told the BBC that there should be riots over Brexits delay. They must all know, particularly in view of the threats and assaults suffered by female MPs, that violent language licenses violence. But these statements seem perfectly pitched to trigger unreasoning aggression.Surely voters must now wake from this n [url=https://www.stanleycup.cz]stanley termoska[/url] ightmare, dismiss Rsbg Construction firm Sweett fined over Abu Dhabi hotel contract
Ken Clarke s sentencing reforms could still fuel a 2,000-strong cut in the record prison population in England and Wales, according to official projecti [url=https://www.stanleycups.ro]stanley cups[/url] ons.The Office for National Statistics ONS figures also show that Clarke succeeded in arresting the rise in prison numbers during his period as justice secretary and prison numbers have stabilised over the past 12 months at the 86,300 mark.Clarke faced constant attack from the Tory [url=https://www.cup-stanley.fr]gourde stanley[/url] right and the tabloids during his two years as justice secretary after he launched a scathing attack on the Victorian bang- em-up prison culture of the past 20 years and set out plans to stabilise the growth in prison numbers.The official prison projections show that prison numbers rose by more than 2% a year under the last Labour government between 2005 and 2010 from 76,190 to 85,002. Since then prison numbers have steadied and are now at the same level they were 12 mo [url=https://www.stanley-cups.ro]stanley cup[/url] nths ago.The ONS said that on a steady state scenario it now expected prison numbers to fall to 84,600 by next June. It said a combination of factors including Clarke s sentencing and punishment legislation, the release of last summer s rioters as they completed their sentences and a fall in the numbers the courts sent to prison would cause the fall.Clarke had hoped to deliver a deeper cut in prison numbers of up to 6,000 but a crucial part of his penal reform package 鈥?his proposal to increase maximum sentence discounts from 33% to 50% for early guilty pleas