Doc Holliday wrote:Quite a few years ago I read a book about British forces returning home. One of them said that after fighting through Holland, the thing which stuck out for him and his unit was the standard of living there. All of the houses had indoor plumbing including bathrooms and toilets. No tin bath in front of the fire once a week and boiling pans and kettles to have it. For him that was the thing which stood out in his memory. Just a simple thing like that, not the might of Empire.
That's why Quentin Hogg said "We must give them reforms or they will give us revolution." So, Labour adopted a Liberal plan and made a welfare state. Not because they wanted to, but because they had to.
Listen I am totally supportive of the Social policy changes after WWII. It gave the working classes basic access to minimum levels of care and support that were badly missing previously.
I also am grateful that the Labour party was formed in the first place, the conditions of working class "workers" if you excuse the grammar, were shocking and something needed to be done.
However, that was then, this is now. Their purpose has been served.
There is a massive difference between getting legislation passed in parliament to stop some greedy mill owner from putting employees lives in danger through cost cutting, or ensuring that the people who survived firefights with the SS didn't come back to England only to die of TB in the East end of London and what happens now- i.e. providing some workshy chav with enough money to keep him in White Lightening until the next giro hits the carpet.