Empty Vessels
Posted: 18 Dec 2021, 11:04
No, not the ones that make the most noise, political parties.
To me and to many others, the Conservatives aren't very conservative any more and since the days of Tony Blair the Labour party hasn't been the party of the working class (imo). Parachuting the sons and daughters of academics into safe working class northern seats proved that, I think.
Anyway recently the Conservatives have come out with stuff like this:-
"A trans woman is a woman" - Penny Mordaunt.
"Owning a car is outdated 2oth century thinking" - Trudy Harrison.
And now the Conservative government is to introduce new rules saying that a car must give way to a pedestrian at a junction, and that it is perfectly OK for a cyclist to cycle in the middle of the lane, thereby holding a line of cars up.
99.99% of the people would disagree with Penny Mordaunt and Trudy Harrison. Ms Harrison's statement indeed sounds more like something from a communist.
And those rules for cars, bikes and pedestrians are going to lead to anger and accidents for sure.
But here's the thing. Virtually nobody outside parliament would agree with any of this, but just about everybody inside parliament would.
So how are we a representative democracy? None of this represents our views.
More, where's the differences between the parties? If they all agree on so much stuff what's the point of voting for any of them? However you vote you get the same policies.
We need some new parties but people are just tribal; they will go on voting for the same old same old no matter what.
To me and to many others, the Conservatives aren't very conservative any more and since the days of Tony Blair the Labour party hasn't been the party of the working class (imo). Parachuting the sons and daughters of academics into safe working class northern seats proved that, I think.
Anyway recently the Conservatives have come out with stuff like this:-
"A trans woman is a woman" - Penny Mordaunt.
"Owning a car is outdated 2oth century thinking" - Trudy Harrison.
And now the Conservative government is to introduce new rules saying that a car must give way to a pedestrian at a junction, and that it is perfectly OK for a cyclist to cycle in the middle of the lane, thereby holding a line of cars up.
99.99% of the people would disagree with Penny Mordaunt and Trudy Harrison. Ms Harrison's statement indeed sounds more like something from a communist.
And those rules for cars, bikes and pedestrians are going to lead to anger and accidents for sure.
But here's the thing. Virtually nobody outside parliament would agree with any of this, but just about everybody inside parliament would.
So how are we a representative democracy? None of this represents our views.
More, where's the differences between the parties? If they all agree on so much stuff what's the point of voting for any of them? However you vote you get the same policies.
We need some new parties but people are just tribal; they will go on voting for the same old same old no matter what.