It only took the Tories' ramshackle leadership and useless tomfuckery to push towards a potential general election and not Labour aggresively decrying the years of calculated wealth inequality entirely caused by austerity measures, social cutbacks, and the near-fatal deterioration of wages and living standards.
Labour are basically just the janitors of the British politics. Some suck up and try to be the ruling Tory establishment, those that don't are derided and quickly put back in their place by it. And being in power consists of coming in to mop up the shit and put out the fires our rulers spread about and started, just efficiently enough that the establishment can come back in the morning and get back to work doing it all over again, but worse.
Due to an unfortunate series of events a number of years ago, I ended up desperate for ANY reading material and read lots of things that I normally wouldn't choose. One of them was a book called Watching the English, written by an anthropologist about English behavior. It ended up being more interesting than I expected, though I've forgotten most of it. Only one thing has really stuck in my memory from the book, and that's the author's example of the quintessential English protest: "What do we want?" "Gradual change!" "When do we want it?" "In due course!"
It only took the Tories' ramshackle leadership and useless tomfuckery to push towards a potential general election and not Labour aggresively decrying the years of calculated wealth inequality entirely caused by austerity measures, social cutbacks, and the near-fatal deterioration of wages and living standards.
Because that didnae fucking happen.
Labour are basically just the janitors of the British politics. Some suck up and try to be the ruling Tory establishment, those that don't are derided and quickly put back in their place by it. And being in power consists of coming in to mop up the shit and put out the fires our rulers spread about and started, just efficiently enough that the establishment can come back in the morning and get back to work doing it all over again, but worse.
The UK has had 70% conservative governments since its founding.
It is the sick cranky man of Europe.
And a good chunk of the Labour ones (which make up less than the other 30%) was barely distinguishable.
Politicians work best when they are scared of their voters at least some of the time.
UK needs to up its ability to riot.
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Due to an unfortunate series of events a number of years ago, I ended up desperate for ANY reading material and read lots of things that I normally wouldn't choose. One of them was a book called Watching the English, written by an anthropologist about English behavior. It ended up being more interesting than I expected, though I've forgotten most of it. Only one thing has really stuck in my memory from the book, and that's the author's example of the quintessential English protest: "What do we want?" "Gradual change!" "When do we want it?" "In due course!"