tenebrisnox

joined 1 year ago
[–] tenebrisnox 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Absolutely correct.

I often wonder whether the UK is used as a petri dish for neoliberal macroeconomic experimentation in the West (in the same way China does with certain megacities and provinces). How far you can cut taxes, how low you can drop living standards, how well you can use the media to manipulate the way that a population behaves.

[–] tenebrisnox 0 points 1 year ago

What nonsense.

I think there’s more chance SIR Keir is on the payroll of the Establishment.

I guess you’re one of those that keeps on saying that Corbyn is a racist and anti-semite.

[–] tenebrisnox 1 points 1 year ago

I think all three of them are not “great reforms”:

  • Great British Energy is a mechanism to attract PRIVATE investment . The actual sums being proposed are to subsidise private enterprise. It’s not a state-owned energy company. Labour spin it like that to appeal to people who want to see utilities brought back into public ownership. The devil is in the detail.
  • Labour MIGHT bring in gender reform but Starmer’s drift towards anti-trans positions doesn’t look promising.
  • Labour have been very clear that they WON’T repeal the existing anti-trade union legislation. This has irked the TUC and Labour are not supporting the TUC taking legal action on an international level.

We need radical policies that address thr extreme poverty and collapse of our social services in the UK. Things must be made better for the poorest (eg. increasing social security, rent caps, free school meals for all, greatly increase the minimum wage) and start taxing the excessively wealthy and corporations.

Labour won’t do this because they are now utterly a tool of the Establishment to maintain the power and wealth of the excessively rich.

[–] tenebrisnox 0 points 1 year ago (5 children)

Your analogy is only an analogy. Certainly, on issues I consider important Tories and Labour hold the same positions at the moment. For instance, many people are in utter poverty in this country. We have friends who both work and have to make decisions about whether they pay their extortionate rent or feed their kids. No one in the UK should have to put up with that.

And what do we hear from Labour? Nothing about rent comtrols, nothing about free school meals, nothing about raising the minimum wage to a genuinely living wage, nothing about taxing the excessively wealthy (or anything about redistributing wealth in fact). All we hear from Labour is that they will - like the Tories - “Grow the economy”. I’m sure you heard Rachel Reeves caught out on LBC recently by having her former words about the need to tax the wealthy.

Labour - with SIR Keir - are part of the Establishment and exist to make sure that the excessively wealthy and those with inherited wealth maintain their power and economic position.

That’s not an “optical illusion”, that’s looking at things very clearly in broad daylight. Perhaps your “moderate” postion where you can accept a country where half a million children live in destitution/extreme poverty is the vantage point that needs to be examined.

[–] tenebrisnox 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Groan. Western countries have at times used taxes on wealth to enable massive infrastructure development. Straight after WW1 and WW2 almost all Western countries introduced “profit” taxes of 80-90% and increased taxes on the wealthy. It was the only way the UK, for instance, could rebuild after the war and why we have an NHS and used to have a great welfare state.

I don’t actually believe we should tax the excessively wealthy. I think we should take what they’ve stolen over the centuries back into common democratic ownership.

[–] tenebrisnox 4 points 1 year ago

Schools are also providing free meals and access to hardship funds for teachers who can’t survive on their salaries.

UK is a horror show of increasing poverty across the board.

[–] tenebrisnox 0 points 1 year ago (3 children)

It’s a shame that Labour can’t articulate what the differences in things like civil rights and foreign policy actually are.

Can you actually tell me a single major policy where Labour fundamentally disagrees with the Tories? (Not vague “We will just do things better” promises. Though I’ve no doubt Starmer and co will run a Tory economic policy better than the Tories.

[–] tenebrisnox -3 points 1 year ago (13 children)

At this point does it really matter whether the next government (or mayor) is Labour or Tory?

I can't tell them apart on any major policy. They have "stylistic" differences but there's now nothing of substance that differs.

What's left is politics of personality. And more austerity.

[–] tenebrisnox 1 points 1 year ago

The whole animated series is up on the internet archive. I’ve been watching it recently. It’s… well… something.

[–] tenebrisnox 1 points 1 year ago

I’ve witnessed children forced to read three or four thin “books” in an Accelerated Reader lesson so they can be tested 3-4 times to improve their “data” / test results.

I’m HIGHLY sceptical about the quality of the data the tests produce (reading ages and some sort of AR “progress”).

The whole idea of ACCELERATING reading of books is just repulsive and wrong. Some children (and adults) get more out of a book by simply reading at their own pace and enjoying it.

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