Jasonrobards83
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 2 Nov 2021
- Messages
- 45
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- Man City
Todays contribution from the Daily Mail who are now concerned Johnson and the Tory party may lose the next election.
Everything possible will be done to drag Labour rightwards, why? because the further right Labour go the less threat they are to the owners of capital, they just become a less Tory version of the current Tory party which given how far to the right the current Tory party are, it will mean Labour occupy ground to the right of centre and anything to the left of centre is further into the wilderness.
Large swathes of the electorate become unrepresented as the choice becomes a party of the right, a party of the further right and a party of the far right. That in effect makes the centre ground of UK politics the further right. The relentless move towards right wing politics continues apace and leftism disappears from the political discourse. The free market rules unopposed, the NHS is sold off, the introspection of natural Conservatism becomes the norm and the nation becomes a regressive hell hole of serfdom, poverty and exploitation. Its back to the dark ages, rights for by the working class fought for, for generations will disappear and the owners of capital will sit in their ivory towers laughing their fucking heads off at how gullible the British people have turned out to be.
Yes - that makes lots of sense actually.
Can I just say one thing though that I know people will come at me over: the NHS is outdated and something else needs to be put in place... I say this for a couple of reasons: i) the long ages people live to these days in Britain and ii) the wealth gap between large swathes of the population.
I was thinking about this recently as I watched a Channel 4 Dispatches show on how Pfizer Biontec has been taking the piss (profiteering) with its covid jab (and boosters). I was actually not that bothered about the main thrust of the argument: company invents something that everyone wants, makes billions selling it around the world, shock horror!
The thing that interested me was the £2.3 billion the NHS had paid them, because when I went for my booster recently, I was in and out and my debit card stayed firmly in my pocket. I could afford the £25-£30 quid cost and would have gladly paid it, so how come its free?
Why not say anyone earning over x amount a year has to pay for the booster, or indeed other common medical treatments (probably via some sort of insurance system), whilst those on UC or below a certain pay threshold get free healthcare?
I'm not particularly well-off by-the-way, but it just seems crazy to me that this NHS mantra of 'free at the point of delivery' continues in current times - it was necessary (and wonderful) in 1947 but much time has now passed. The thing is no party dare step up and say this, because they know it would be electoral suicide (as Theresa May found out when she tried to reform the care system and botched the communication of that, a few years ago) so they will end up tinkering with the system or reforming it stealthily, when really we all need to face up to reality. In 1947 a person would retire at 60/65 and then likely live another ten to fifteen years. Nowadays, even though national retirement is slightly older most of us reading this will live well into our 80s and 90s - the NHS just can't handle that whilst staying true to its laudable original ideals.