In fact, the dialogue is likely to be less iconic than any of the excerpts quoted in this film. The last time Pinscher resigned for alleged sexual harassment – of course there was one last time – he was accused of dragging a former Olympic rower back to his house before reappearing in a bathrobe, massaging the victim’s neck and unrolling his face. he whispered, “You will go far to the Conservative Party.” Just say Harvey Winetime. Speaking of going far to the Conservative Party, however, after this incident Pinscher rose to the position of deputy leader, with the whip office being of course the place you are supposed to go with your concerns about sexual misconduct. by MPs and so on. It all raises the question: who whips the whips? Vague. A sadist in Battersea, you guessed it. But if he or she is out for a week, I do not think it would be very difficult to find holiday coverage. Just walk down any of Britain’s main thoroughfares and ask who wants to let go of their frustration with how they are governed. However, it is wonderful to see the government turning to Netflix for sex scandals. Forgive me for backing down to the most incoherent of favoritism, but you have to admit that Johnson’s administration is an inflated monster, deeply overpriced and built on a huge debt to the public that will eventually have to be recovered. For now, let’s take a look at the resignation letter sent to the Prime Minister by Pinscher, who inevitably – but in some ways still unbelievable – has obviously been nicknamed Ass Pincher for a long time. This protest to the Prime Minister is a state-of-the-art minimization. “I’m ashamed of myself and other people” is definitely the strongest way to say, “I’m supposed to have sexually assaulted two people.” It is the Live, Laugh, Love of predatory behavior. As with these things, it was not long before Pincher’s allies announced that the Tamworth MP was “vulnerable.” This line was also reportedly blocked at the Downing Street meeting this morning, with staff saying from communications director Gutto Harry “to think about how he feels today”. Correctly. Maybe the guys who allegedly sexually assaulted that night were also vulnerable? Maybe it is now? Why weren’t Downing Street staff encouraged to think first about how they felt? Probably because Pinscher was a key part of Operation Save Big Dog, which played a key role in the shadowy flogging operation that brought the Tories MPs back to Johnson as Partygate revelations piled up. The prime minister was briefed on the “issues” with Pinscher in February, when he tried to promote him as a reward for all this. However, Johnson went anyway. Politico revealed this morning allegations that Pinscher had been assigned a “conservator” to ensure he left the scene “without drinking too much and getting into trouble”. Where was the carpenter on Wednesday night? Or did it touch the mind? I mean, anything is possible. What we can say with certainty is that Pinscher and those who appointed him are not the only ones in positions of power who are trying very hard to give up everything. As soon as the resignation letter fell, the Prime Minister’s feathered tufts were out there explaining why it was okay that Pinscher had not withdrawn the whip. There is no doubt that impunity will last longer than the time it takes me to type this paragraph, let alone until noon. However, it is important to understand the situation. Always listen to this reflexive first reaction, because it tells you exactly what they really think and consequently why such situations continue to happen. As a Tory source explained shortly after Pinscher’s revelations last night: “The prime minister believes he did the decent thing by resigning. There is no need for research and there is no need to suspend the whip. “ Oh, I understand – Boris Johnson thinks he did the decent thing. Well, that’s really the feature. Where do other people who have been convicted of breaking their laws stand on this moral issue? What about other people trying to 150 150,000’s infant tree houses from their donors? Other people reportedly caught in a “compromise” in their office with a junior colleague? Tell me what they think, because I just need to know! I do not think I will be able to draw it completely in the dignity chart until I hear from every other sculpted sexual incontinence who recognizes the word victim only as a term that applies to him. While you wait, listen to Welsh Secretary Simon Hart, the new head of government, who is ostensibly sent once a week to do the job of cleaning up after the latest scandal. Simon was on the morning show today, where he explained about the Pincher horror show: “It’s not the first time and I’m afraid it won’t be the last. This happens from time to time in the workplace… » To which the only logical answer is: WHAAAAAAAAT?!?! Can you imagine if – in the last three months alone – five high-ranking BBC executives have been accused of serious sexual harassment? Can you imagine what people like Simon would say about the BBC? Or think of your own workplace. Can you imagine if five senior executives there had been involved in major sex scandals since April? We just entered July! The line for Hart is reminiscent of that of the Tories’ recent candidate for Wakefield (a seat was vacated when the last MP was convicted of sexually assaulting a child). This guy continued the news with the most impressive version of “a bad apple” you will probably hear, explaining that the public should still trust the Tories MPs because Harold Shipman did not make them stop trusting GPs. . Sorry to announce this shocking statistic again, but 56 current MPs are reportedly facing charges of sexual harassment. Assuming that the vast majority of them will be men, this is about one in eight male MPs. Among them will be Labor MPs and others, so you can be sure of that – although for a purely repulsive series, no one can touch the Conservatives at this time. However, everything goes. Westminster is a rotten and backward workplace and nothing serious or substantial is done about it, because the people in power actively do not want to do anything about it, and in many cases engage in abuse themselves. What do they like to say so much? Oh, yes: “We work for you”. In this case, consider stopping before more people get hurt.