In the 1970s the UK was in the grip of strike fever.
Union officials gleefully called wildcat walk-outs, sympathy strikes,
occupations, mob picketing and any form of action that could bring an
organisation to its knees. Even some private companies found themselves caught
up in the madness, choosing to close their doors rather than give in, resulting
in their work-forces picketing the dole office instead. In nationalised industries, days-long ‘beer and
sandwiches’ meetings were held, during which union moochers flexed their
muscles and managements were held to ransom.
Inevitably these strikes achieved little to nothing. Necessary
redundancies went ahead anyway, in some cases hastened by the very industrial
action intended to prevent it. And in the case of the most militant of unions,
longer term plans were put in place to render them impotent within a decade. As a result, the Labour Party, the former party of the workers, was banished for a political
generation. Talk about shitting on your own doorstep.
It is the job of opposition to oppose. But it is not the
job of any responsible party to simply obstruct. Decisions have been made with
which you may not agree, but continuing to fight a battle long after the victor
has left the field is denial and folly. Whilst politics itself may be a game,
governing the country should not be; at a time when differences should be put
aside for the national interest, undermining our position is tantamount to
treason.
But it isn’t just here and it isn’t just Brexit. Across
the developed world populations are awaking, trudging to the ballot boxes and saying
no to the entrenched positions of increasingly socialist regimes. Fed up of
being ignored, alarmed at mass migrations, the apparent elevation of minority
rights above the rest, the fiscal failures of welfare states, ordinary men and
women have found their voice. And the left doesn’t like it one bit.
Donald Trump was elected President of the USA. He didn’t
just break in and assume control; he was voted in, democratically. And Hillary
Clinton lost, democratically. The Conservative Party are the elected government
of the UK, albeit by a thread. Angela Merkel cannot form a government, because
the German people no longer want what she wants. Those who were promised a
socialist utopia are disillusioned and no longer afraid to speak out.
Like the union wreckers of old, the left are not
interested in giving the majority of people what they have said they want; they
exist to oppose, to frustrate and to generally get in the way of progress. This
is somewhat ironic for a movement that calls its politics ‘progressive’, but
then, just like the so-called ‘anti-fascists’ their headspace is an irony-free
zone. Meanwhile, Momentum pushes ahead with its takeover of local councils,
despite what voters actually want – which is credible governance, not ideology.
The left love to talk about everybody else as dinosaurs; dull,
lumbering beasts who should be extinct. But if anything it is the resurgent
hard left who are the dinosaurs, harking back to the smoke-filled rooms of the
seventies and the destructive deployment of union muscle. Then as now, it is
the young who are taken in by promises of what will never be; aimless cannon
fodder, all too ready to swear allegiance to a false prophet in the guise of Labour’s
latest ‘Uncle Joe’, Jeremy Corbyn.
Did you ever wonder what being
on the winning team was like?
Like generations before them they will surely come to
learn how they were used, then look on in exasperation as the next wave of
recruits marches and chants and does all it can to be part of the problem. But
instead of always being against, how about a little experiment? How about a
year – one, single year – in which those clamouring for a change they are not
going to get stand silent instead? Or, even better, get on board. Try being on the
winning team for once; you never know, you might even get to like it.
If the opinion polls do not alter between now and the next election then we are going to find out what being on a socialist/Marxist winning team is like. No doubt the belief then will be "we should have thrown he game". It will be too late as everyone will find that they are not only relegated from the 2nd division(the UK no longer could every qualify for the 1st) but thrown out of the leagues altogether.
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