We have been promised 'the biggest industrial action for a generation' this coming Wednesday.....for the last few weeks, Trade Union leaders have been issuing all manner of Lear-like threats, so what can we expect on Wednesday?
I'm putting my bet on 'a damp squib'.
The malaise in which the Left finds itself - with the Labour leadership dithering, a la Kinnock, about what to do - is the result of decades of lazy thinking (read:non-thinking) and wilful refusal to face up to the facts of a changing world on the part of its leaders and fellow travellers. The Left knows how to protest (though it knows virtually nothing about EFFECTIVE protest), but - if asked for its solutions to the banking crisis/recession/Eurozone problem - it turns out it hasn't got any; or, if it has, they are old and generally discredited ones (nationalisation, or 'social ownership' as Hattersley termed it when he trying to remove the stigma attached to the n word).
In the 70s, the Left's response to the rise of the new Right was to ignore it and blithely assume that people would never go for such daft ideas: there was no attempt to come up with a saleable alternative to popular capitalism and tremendously popular (and populist) initiatives like council house sales (which may have been a popular policy but was hardly a good one, as it contributed to the present housing crisis). On nuclear power, Leftists allowed themselves to be painted as Luddites until they were forced to abandon this core belief by the fact that popular opinion had decisively moved on.
As far as I'm aware, the only serious solution to our present problems was the one posited by the former Lord Stansgate (Tony Benn to you) in the 70s, when he advocated a withdrawal from NATO and the Common Market leading to a type of 'fortress Britain' economy- which, as he readily admitted, would have led to a dramatic drop in living standards for just about everyone in the UK. This was probably politically impossible in the 1970s; it would certainly be politically impossible now, though our living standards will probably - probably - remain higher under free market capitalism than they would under Benn's system.
So, my prediction is that this Wednesday will represent another humiliation for the Left in the UK, with millions crossing picket lines because they JUST CAN'T AFFORD TO GO ON STRIKE, even though they know they're being royally screwed over by Cameron and Co in re: their pensions.
The bottom line is this: yes, capitalism got us into this mess; but only capitalism is going to get us out.
I'm putting my bet on 'a damp squib'.
The malaise in which the Left finds itself - with the Labour leadership dithering, a la Kinnock, about what to do - is the result of decades of lazy thinking (read:non-thinking) and wilful refusal to face up to the facts of a changing world on the part of its leaders and fellow travellers. The Left knows how to protest (though it knows virtually nothing about EFFECTIVE protest), but - if asked for its solutions to the banking crisis/recession/Eurozone problem - it turns out it hasn't got any; or, if it has, they are old and generally discredited ones (nationalisation, or 'social ownership' as Hattersley termed it when he trying to remove the stigma attached to the n word).
In the 70s, the Left's response to the rise of the new Right was to ignore it and blithely assume that people would never go for such daft ideas: there was no attempt to come up with a saleable alternative to popular capitalism and tremendously popular (and populist) initiatives like council house sales (which may have been a popular policy but was hardly a good one, as it contributed to the present housing crisis). On nuclear power, Leftists allowed themselves to be painted as Luddites until they were forced to abandon this core belief by the fact that popular opinion had decisively moved on.
As far as I'm aware, the only serious solution to our present problems was the one posited by the former Lord Stansgate (Tony Benn to you) in the 70s, when he advocated a withdrawal from NATO and the Common Market leading to a type of 'fortress Britain' economy- which, as he readily admitted, would have led to a dramatic drop in living standards for just about everyone in the UK. This was probably politically impossible in the 1970s; it would certainly be politically impossible now, though our living standards will probably - probably - remain higher under free market capitalism than they would under Benn's system.
So, my prediction is that this Wednesday will represent another humiliation for the Left in the UK, with millions crossing picket lines because they JUST CAN'T AFFORD TO GO ON STRIKE, even though they know they're being royally screwed over by Cameron and Co in re: their pensions.
The bottom line is this: yes, capitalism got us into this mess; but only capitalism is going to get us out.
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