TOMORROW THE Labour Party will put the crown on their
party's court-jester's head. Jeremy Corbyn would be dangerous for the country
in the unlikely event that he is allowed by the British to wave a stick with a
pig's bladder attached, into number ten: if such an event were ever to occur we
would need another Cromwell, and all that is implied by his name to be rid of
him. But thankfully comrade Myshkin will never take that walk of victory down
Downing to become the executioner of his own country.
But
that is not to say it could not happen. It may be farfetched but not all that
farfetched: consider the state of the global economy in 2020 for instance. The
slowdown in China; the deficit, and further cuts to welfare; plus a divided
Conservative Party after the EU referendum whatever the outcome: neither
Europhiles nor sceptics within the government benches will be satisfied with
the result; and with such a small majority Cameron will face challenges to his
leadership. So, although the Labour Party is in a perilous position today: the
Conservative Party may be in a similar position just months before the next
general election.
My
brother suggested months ago that we Kippers should rejoin the Labour Party to
give Jeremy a helping hand to destroy the Labour Party. I resisted and
convinced him to do the same. I told him to 'be careful what you wish for' if
you go ahead. After all, the liberalista pooh-poohed Nigel Farage – need I say
more. I also remember when the late John Smith died, a small collective of
Tory's standing beside the Speaker's Chair in parliament were seen cheering the
news (they were quite rightly reprimanded by their party leader for their
inanities); but what followed? Tony Blair gave the Labour Party 13years of
power.
The
simple truth is that we live in interesting times. The Conservatives may, at
the moment be looking for another victory in 2020; their ebullience at the
state the Labour Party has got itself into, due in no short measure to ED
Milliband, will be short lived. No political party, particularly in Europe,
should ever be confident in their future as events unfold: we live in troubled
times of a type that has not been with us since the Second World War and may,
in the coming decades, destroy European Western civilisation; which I fear is
far more likely to occur than Corbyn becoming prime minister.
I have
little enthusiasm for the destruction of progressive[1]
Western civilisation which has advanced humanity at a far faster rate than
those cultures of a medieval ilk like those of Islam; which now stands on the
brink of a great renaissance and resurgence of the medievalism that prevented
human progress in the past; but that allowed them to nearly conquer Europe – but
from where? From the East of course.
It is the
kind of medievalism that comrade Myshkin would welcome if he was given the
power to so do. His simple naivety, like Dostoyevsky's creation, attracts
understanding, compassion, and kindness from those more familiar with the world
and human nature. I have heard how wonderful Corbyn is in private. People warm
to him. He has sat on the backbench's undermining his own party whenever they
were in power? But this has only endeared him to a rightly cynical public who
distrusts all politicians – a distrust they have brought upon themselves.
CORBYN IS THE next leader of the Labour Party and the
Conservatives are rubbing their hands together at such a prospect of 'The Idiot' taken straight from a 19th
century novel, leading Her Majesties' opposition. A weak and terminally ill
opposition leaves the nation exposed to the democratic dictatorship of the
ruling party of whatever political persuasion it emanates.
The
Labour Party, if they wish ever again to see government, must be rid of Corbyn.
It is dangerous for democracy to have one party government because the inanities
of the opposition have made them un-electable. Corbyn can never present a
convincing challenge to the Tories that would ever convince the British public
to vote for him.
In a democracy
a one party government, brought about by the unpalatable policies of the
opposition, can only leave the party of government ruling without challenge, or
credible opposition for the electorate to vote for. This effectively gives the
governing party the power of a dictator. Free of any credible opposition, and
with a workable majority in parliament, can (admittedly theoretically) pass
legislation to suit its own ideological prejudices.
In my
65-years I have never seen Western democracy on the brink of failure, since the
Cuban crises: and no, it is not because of the elevation of Corbyn to the
Labour Party. But I believe we as a Western culture within Europe are embarked
upon a strategy that will lead to a perfect storm, and Corbyn's role will be
negligible for Europe – but for the UK? We have to await, 'events dear boy'.
The 24-hour media loves what has happened to
the Labour Party: they will continue to pimp off Jeremy Corbyn and will do so
to retrieve a headline that will sooner or later be wrapped up in a parcel of
news print for the consumers of fish and chips.
Corbyn
will destroy the Labour Party as a party of the Left; by this I mean a party of
the traditional white working class; which had already been disposed of by
political correctness mapped out under the Blair years, which is no doubt
supported by Jeremy.
The
Corbynistas that court his ideas are ignorant of the damage that his ideology
has wrought in terms of human suffering. I at first did not understand why such
ignorance of this pernicious ideology, was still prevalent. But I do now. As
far as Corbyn's student constituency is concerned; they have been given a
'progressive' interpretation of history, as well as everything else, by teachers
and lecturers who have in turn been instructed themselves in the same liberal
vernacular form throughout their own pedagogical advancement ever since the
1960's to this present day - to this present day when throughout the whole of
academia, from nursery to university; the Left have dominated the agenda.
[1]By
this I mean progressive in its most literal sense; and not in the comic sense
that the Left uses it.
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