Where To Now?
I apologise in advance for this incoherent ramble, but there's a lot of stuff going on at the moment, and I'm late to the keyboard tonight. The current existential crisis of socialism in this tiny group of islands we call home - and it definitely is a crisis - stems from a number of sources. First and foremost, of course is the [genuine and justified] feeling amongst the ordinary voting public that they have simply been left behind and marginalised: left out in the cold by a Labour movement that speaks in bold, sweeping terms of change and an improvement in the daily lot of the many, but which has thus far delivered little that can be seen on the actual surface of people's daily lives. This of course is the soft flesh from which populists like Nigel Farage leverage their specious views in fictitious defence of the vulnerable [majority]. Myth-making is the stock in trade of the empty-headed, and Farage is deeply embedded in that process; in the absence of any real politics, ...