sally cinnamon wrote:Let me guess a few things about you cod'ead:
- you're a lifelong Labour voter
- you consider yourself a socialist of some form
I am a life-long Labour supporter to greater or lesser degrees, that does not always equate to being a life-long voter. I have also always had socialist leanings and firmly believe in fairness in society
sally cinnamon wrote:- you hate Tories with a vitriolic passion
Did you not bother reading the last part of my sig?
sally cinnamon wrote:- you are generally favourable towards nationalisation and trade unions
Quite how you link the two is something I'm struggling with. I was a union member (and shop steward) for many years of my working life and firmly believe there is still a very real need and a constructive place for an effective trades union movement. As for nationalisation, I belive that certain services should be in the hands of the nation and not left to unfettered free enterprise. These include but are not limited to water and sewerage, gas and electricity and rail transport. All have shown that "free enterprise" does not work and when things go wrong, they are rescued by the taxpayer.
sally cinnamon wrote:The problem is the majority of the electorate are not those four things (although there is probably a larger proportion of the third one than there used to be). Tony Blair reached out to them.
I would coontend that the majority of the electorate do not see a true picture, rather they see only what is fed to them by the media
sally cinnamon wrote:I expect (if you are old enough) you voted for Labour under Foot, Kinnock and Brown in general elections too, but it was just people like you who ticked those boxes above who voted for them, which is why Labour lost. When Blair was leader, the electorate voted for Labour en masse.
I have voted Labour in most elections but not exclusively. I have sometimes employed a tactical vote but have NEVER voted conservative, nor would I
sally cinnamon wrote:If Ed Milliband does his purge of the Blairites then again, it will be you and people like you that vote for them. But they won't win an election.
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Unfortunately too many politicians, particularly Blairites, see winning as the goal and not the start of a journey. The problem with British politics is that five year terms aren't nearly long enough to build anything and most governments only look towards the next election and the hope that first and foremost, they keep their jobs.
Contrast that to what happened after WW2. We were skint, we had hundreds of thousands of men returning from horrible conflict, determined that things would change. Thankfully we had a Labour government that was determined to introduce that change. Despite initial and often vociferous opposition from tories, the surprise was that when they regained power, they continued with the building programmes. It wasn't until Thatcher's time that we saw a systematic dismantling of the state in favour of "free enterprise". This agenda was drive by neo-liberals who sold the dream of trickle-down economics, a dream that has been comprehensively shown up for what it is, an illusion of riches. We have in fact turned back to where we were pre-WW1, the difference being instead of us serving the landed gentry, we are serving multi-national organisations whose sole reason of being appears to be to make as much money and avoid as much tax as possible. Kinda like a corporate Leona Helmsley.
This situation MUST change, the "big people" must start to pay their share of taxes. If they give a fair proportion of what they earn back to the state, we will all, as a society, benefit. Unfortunately blairites are still in complete thrall to the neo-liberal ideal.
If Labour are gulty of anything, it is not getting a coherent message of social responsibility and justice across to the electorate.