I think his social and economic policies still make a lot of sense to a lot of people.
We live in a Britain where the establishment default is right wing. The scandalous profiteering taking place in infrastructure is a national disgrace. Other countries around the globe have nationalised key services and infrastructure, but somehow, in this country, it’s become a dirty word. Someone in, say, Norway wouldn’t bat an eyelid at Corbyn’s economic policies. To them they’re the sensible views of a social democrat. Here, they’re mercilessly slaughtered as ‘extreme left’ and ‘loony’ by a media bewitched by the 1980s experiment. That experiment being: if your nation owns it, then sell it to your mates. As a sideline, taking back control would, in its true patriotic sense, mean re-nationalising so many services and industries screwed up by the private sector. Your average Daily Fail reader doesn’t see this discrepancy, though. They want to be independent and take back control WHILE getting shafted by (often foreign) governments and countries. Yep, that’s right folks. Loads of our rail and energy sectors are owned by foreign governments, often to subsidise their own. So nationalisation is a taboo in the press here, and the re-aligned Overton Window politicians who suck the shift to the Right like a teat. But it’s ok if the nationalised industries of our neighbours/rivals own our stuff, innit?
People rightly see this as indefensible and contradictory madness, and they look at his ideas, and they think, that’s GOT to be a better alternative. And if not, it’s at least worth a try, because this crap show we have now is slowly destroying the nation, and the politicians and their media masters are too pissweak to challenge that failed orthodoxy. That’s why he still garners so much support. Many can’t separate his fitness to lead from his economic policies, that’s the issue.
We live in a Britain where the establishment default is right wing. The scandalous profiteering taking place in infrastructure is a national disgrace. Other countries around the globe have nationalised key services and infrastructure, but somehow, in this country, it’s become a dirty word. Someone in, say, Norway wouldn’t bat an eyelid at Corbyn’s economic policies. To them they’re the sensible views of a social democrat. Here, they’re mercilessly slaughtered as ‘extreme left’ and ‘loony’ by a media bewitched by the 1980s experiment. That experiment being: if your nation owns it, then sell it to your mates. As a sideline, taking back control would, in its true patriotic sense, mean re-nationalising so many services and industries screwed up by the private sector. Your average Daily Fail reader doesn’t see this discrepancy, though. They want to be independent and take back control WHILE getting shafted by (often foreign) governments and countries. Yep, that’s right folks. Loads of our rail and energy sectors are owned by foreign governments, often to subsidise their own. So nationalisation is a taboo in the press here, and the re-aligned Overton Window politicians who suck the shift to the Right like a teat. But it’s ok if the nationalised industries of our neighbours/rivals own our stuff, innit?
People rightly see this as indefensible and contradictory madness, and they look at his ideas, and they think, that’s GOT to be a better alternative. And if not, it’s at least worth a try, because this crap show we have now is slowly destroying the nation, and the politicians and their media masters are too pissweak to challenge that failed orthodoxy. That’s why he still garners so much support. Many can’t separate his fitness to lead from his economic policies, that’s the issue.
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