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Re: Starmer’s chronicles
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We know this change has been slowly happening for a while but the terminally online examples he gives are a symptom of underlying democratic shifts as opposed to the left-wing being hijacked by people on social media. I think several things are happening. The most obvious one is that the left-wing base in the UK and America has shifted from manual workers without degrees to university-educated service workers. Labour voters are now more likely to have further education and are trending younger. These people are more likely to be socially liberal rather than just economically liberal which is what I think he is getting at when he refers to 'old left'. This is where there is a disconnect and I agree that the broader left has had a problem speaking to social conservatives. The left isn't one big cohesive block but some elements of the left, especially online, have a problem speaking to the country at large as well. The Corbyn faction of the Labour Party hated Starmer doing speeches in front of the Union Jack but these people are a minority of the left. But I think he is also making a mistake in thinking the working class is one big monolithic bloc that isn't itself also more fragmented. Quote:
The left can speak very well to some of them and not at all to others. The disconnect is higher when it comes to culture, age and education as opposed to class. |
Re: Starmer’s chronicles
Your analysis Damien is leaps and bounds above the tired opinion piece which Chris shared. Thanks for taking the time to share this with the Forum.
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Re: Starmer’s chronicles
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In fact, McKenna’s entire thesis is grounded not in economics but in social policy, whether conservative or liberal/progressive. His complaint about the working class being told what to say, think and eat is a complaint about genderism and food and alcohol regulation, things which I admit may be less obvious to English readers but all of which have been addressed (sometimes very badly, IMO) in primary legislation in Scotland in the last decade. All of these tendencies exist UK-wide but the Scottish government has been under socially liberal control for some time now so the fault line is somewhat clearer here than you’re perhaps aware of. Quote:
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Re: Starmer’s chronicles
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That's sort of the point. There are white rapists and paedophiles, there's more of them in this country than those of Pakistani heritage. because we are still, for the time being, a majority white nations. But the rape gangs of Pakistani heritage far out weigh their population % Plus culturally, white abusers are unlikely to have a drunk or drugged teenager in their flat, and then call uncles, cousins, brothers to come over and rape her. It's completely different and to try and deflect by claiming "racism", which is what you're doing is nothing but predictable. |
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We're also seeing an increased gender divide as women go more left-wing and men more right-wing. Why? I think that will increasingly become the biggest problem for the left, how to speak to young men of any class. Incidentally, the reserve question can be asked of the right. Why are the right losing ground with younger people, especially women, and with people who have more formal qualifications? The ground is shifting for everyone here. Quote:
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Re: Starmer’s chronicles
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Re: Starmer’s chronicles
Who voted?
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Re: Starmer’s chronicles
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https://t.co/p6OtPdUlxR |
Re: Starmer’s chronicles
Can you actually "Run for Prime Minister" ?
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Re: Starmer’s chronicles
No. You need to get 326 sympathetic people to run in constituencies across the country, win every single one of them, then get them to nominate you to be PM. There are 650 parliamentary constituencies and the only way to be PM is to be the person most likely to “enjoy the confidence” of a majority of the MPs elected to serve them.
You can add ‘constitutional illiterate’ to the long list of Mr Tate’s flaws. |
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I really thought you were better than this. That is the end of this subject for me. |
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A. You report me to the police. B. You distance yourself from me but possibly don't take any action. C. You pop over to the flat. I would guess C is the most unlikely, but for some cultures it seems it's not that clear cut. There needs to be an inquiry that concentrates on the specific issue of these grooming gangs, the cultural element and why the authorities did not take action. The claims that the police and social services have learnt from it is not a good enough answer, the public needs to know what lessons they have learned and what action is being taken. My wife is a social worker, she has worked for a number of local authorities and previously worked with similar vulnerable children. She told me many years ago that almost every town has at least one kebab shop or the like known to the authorities. She has taken on cases where the white social workers have been afraid to take action because of the threats by certain cultures, for example where the males tell her they don't have to speak to her because "she is a woman" or threaten to report her for being racist. My wife is black, so unlike most white social workers she's not afraid of the racist label, she tells them to crack on and report her. I don't think Starmer wants anything to do with an enquiry, because I think we are potentially looking at something which will end up being called the "Rape for votes scandal". |
Re: Starmer’s chronicles
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