MaliA wrote:
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/aug/29/tony-blair-labour-leadership-jeremy-corbyn?CMP=share_btn_tw
I agree with a lot of this
Meh, interesting...
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There is a new phenomenon in politics or perhaps the revival of an old one. But whatever it is, it is powerful. Someone said to me the other day re Corbyn mania: “You just don’t get it.” I confess they’re right. I don’t get it, but I’m trying hard, and I read with care Rosie Fletcher’s passionate piece in praise of Jeremy Corbyn in last week’s Observer.
The Corbyn thing is part of a trend. So Donald Trump leads the field of Republican candidates with thousands at his meetings, despite remarks about women and Mexicans that you might think would be a disqualification in a nation where half the voters are women and Latinos, the fastest growing group of voters.
Bernie Sanders is wowing the Democrats on a platform that wouldn’t carry more than a handful of states. The SNP win a landslide in Scotland after the collapse of the oil price means that the course they advised the Scottish people to take last year would have landed the country in the economic trauma unit.
The former Greek prime minister led in the polls on a bailout programme significantly harsher than that of the government he put out of office precisely on the issue of the bailout.
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There is a politics of parallel reality going on, in which reason is an irritation, evidence a distraction, emotional impact is king and the only thing that counts is feeling good about it all.
Yes, precisely what I've been saying; Blair politely refers to 'a politics of parallel reality in which reason is an irritation, evidence a distraction and emotional impact is king', whereas I, with considerably less tact but with precisely the same basic message refer to 'swivel-eyed loons'. This latest 'movement', if we can call it that, whereby the whole pesky, inconvenient business of empirical efficacy, truth and demonstrable folly of the absurd 'policies' being pursued - whether that be the SNP's White Paper that disintegrated utterly and laughably before the ink was even permitted to dry (man, if ever a document needed to be printed on perforated, absorbent paper...) or Syriza's empty, vapid "anti austerity" rhetoric (or SNP's for that matter) - is just completely ignored.
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It’s a revolution but within a hermetically sealed bubble – not the Westminster one they despise, but one just as remote from actual reality. Those in this bubble feel good about what they’re doing. They’re making all those “in authority” feel their anger and their power. There is a sense of real change because of course the impact on politics is indeed real. The Labour party is now effectively a changed political party over the space of three months.
Indeed, indeed.
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However, it doesn’t alter the “real” reality. It provides a refuge from it. Because Trump and Sanders aren’t going to be president; Scotland did vote No and even if it votes Yes in the future, the pain of separation for all of us will be acute; Syriza may win but only by switching realities; and Jeremy Corbyn is not going to be prime minister of the UK. And Le Pen as French president? Let us hope not because that collision with “real” reality will be brutal for all of Europe.
But people like me have a lot of thinking to do. We don’t yet properly understand this. It is about to transform a political institution we spent our whole lives defending.
Heh! The guy must be hopping mad, but I guess you (eventually) reap what you sow. Michael Foot may well have been swivel-eyed and unelectable in the extreme, but he was, at least, intellectually honest.
As an aside, amusing to think that Blair can regard himself as anything other than the most loathed man in Britain, and therefore his interventions as anything less than entirely helpful to his opponents...? A rather chronic lack of self-awareness, there.
I think the watershed moment for me was when our own Doc G posted Stu C's latest bustup with pre-GCSE physics in that other thread, apparently some 5-6 years after the original debacle. It occurred to me when I read that, that these types are just never, ever going to give an inch, not ever, and no matter how perfectly persuasive an argument presented to them may be, no matter how objective and compelling the evidence - it will make NO difference. You cannot get a more black-and-white case of being plainly and absolutely wrong than this; it would be impossible to have this degree of certainty in an argument about politics, political concepts and suchlike. Me? Even as someone who's been proven wrong many times, I cannot for the life of me imagine sticking to my guns (and coming back years later to do the same), when having been shown to be unequivocally and absolutely wrong.
I'm not particularly picking on Stu here; there are many, many others like him who've been saying the same old crap, unaltered, since they were 18 or whatever, or for at least as long as I've known them. The point is, there is NO point in trying to argue with people having such a, ahem, mentality/mindset, because it's clearly an impossibility to change their mind even if you could present the most powerful, optimally researched argument with every conceivable citation and corroborative evidence. It seems to me that it is these types people who are the swivel-eyed demographic for the likes of Corbyn, the SNP and Syriza
et al and the drivers of this reality-free 'new politics'.
Thank goodness they're outnumbered by sensible, rather more discerning and cerebral small-'c' Tories, or at least in terms of those who can be bothered to turn up at polling booths. Well, in England at least.