Thursday, August 20, 2015

Corbyn the interloper

YVETTE COOPER has played the sexist card: so desperate she is to become the first female leader of the Party. She has insisted that Andy Burnham who is ahead of her in the polls should stand down and let her harvest his supporters. This, she insists, is the only way of defeating Jeremy Corbyn. There is of course another way: if she stands down and let Andy Burnham defeat Corbyn.
                
               The brothers and sisters are at loggerheads over those who are unfit to run the country in the national interest; but only in the interest of women in Cooper's case; and in his own interest in Burnham's case. The truth is that Jeremy Corbyn is the court Jester, who is about to be crowned King, thanks in no small way to Ed Miliband who made Leftist politics once more respectable within the Labour Party, but forgot about the country.
                
                The truth is none of the candidate's in this election has the intellectual propensity to lead a town hall, let alone a country. There is only one candidate that can lead Labour's fight for power, and he now resides over the pond, no doubt putting two fingers up to his party. Yes, you've got it – the other Miliband; a Blairite in his analysis of the way forward for the Labour Party who, intellectually, surpasses his brother's, and equals Tony Blair's.
                
                 But the unions would never tolerate David Miliband's presence as a political Young Pretender as they see it, occupying the Labour Party throne. He is the only one that can keep the political oxygen flowing into the Labour Party lungs that would secure a Labour victory in a general election.  He was Blair's heir who the unions rejected for his Marxist brother - if the Labour Party does not abandon the unions; then the people will abandon the Labour Party.
                
                 When we talk of unions today we speak of those whose members who are in the public sector; the sector which the private sector subsidises through taxation. This is an anomaly of the type consistent with having to pay taxes on the ownership of a television set. The Public Sector which is the great behemoth that drains the oxygen away from ambition and enterprise: yet the Labour party has always encouraged its expansion; until, that is, Tony Blair did away with Clause IV; that wretched imbecilic construction that has dragged the Labour Party down to defeat after defeat. Clause IV lost its imperium decades ago in countries like the Soviet Union that encompassed much of Eastern Europe: in Cuba, China, and topically today among the Left, Venezuela.
                
                 All over the world Jeremy Corbyn's vision of socialism has, time after time, proved a cruel and bloody failure in terms of the human lives socialism has destroyed on the mere whim of an ideology within an inbuilt dystopian vision for human advancement. Socialism, in terms of the cruelty it has inflicted, bares comparison with Nazism. I would suggest the tally of death under Marxist regimes mad the Nazis look like liberals.
                
                 But the folksy, bearded, and staid Corbyn, who travels the country evangelising on behalf of an almost psychotic political ideology that has wrought (wherever it has triumphed throughout human history) only ignominy and failure of a kind resulting in barbarism in its intolerance of any opposing ideology which they tar and feather as bourgeois. It is socialism of which I write. Those on the Right, particularly within the Conservative party who joined Labour in order to receive a ballot paper on line to vote for Corbyn, I would say this – be careful for what you wish.
                
                Corbyn will win the vote for leadership of the Labour Party unless he can be stopped by dubious practices that can result in the whole electoral process being abandoned for a rerun at a future date. We saw this pattern of behaviour in Ireland and Holland when the public dared oppose the EU in a referendum. The solution was to re-run the referendums until the 'right' result was procured. We witnessed a similar casual abuse of democracy when both Italy and Greece had imposed upon them by the EU, technocrats to administer each of their countries after the people had voted into power politicians.
               
                Corbyn, if he wins, will no doubt prove victim of the same anti-democratic shenanigans as went on in Europe. He will be gotten rid of at the earliest opportunity as party leader. In fact I doubt that Corbyn even wants to be prime minister. It would scare the hell out of him. He just wants a stage to perform upon; a stage where as the leader of the main opposition; the media has to take notice and give him an equivalent air-time to David Cameron. He wants only one thing; to propagandise on behalf of socialism; which is why his many supporters do not think that the attainment of power should be the prime objective of the Labour Party.
                
                Corbyn is not prime ministerial material. He knows himself that he does not have it in him to govern a country. For one thing he lacks the mental aptitude for such a position. He would have to concentrate on the fine details of government instead of his ideological banalities regarding the advancement of socialism. Corbyn is not yet a danger to the country and hopefully he never will be.

JEREMY CORBYN has earned his position as the front runner for the Labour Party leadership. He did not sabotage the rules of the competition for his own benefit. He has obeyed the rules for the election of a leader that Ed Milliband introduced; which were meant to weaken the influence of the trade unions and to distance him from them; but purely to gain the occupancy of No 10 Downing Street which for the country's sake he managed to avoid.
                
                I hope the Labour Party is finished. I hope that if Corbyn wins the party will split once more. If it doesn't then some other party according to Darwinian evolution will eventually provide a credible opposition to the Tories.

               


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