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It doesn’t occur to SW1 and the media that outside London their
general outlook is seen as extreme. Have an immigration policy that
guarantees free movement rights even for murderers, so we cannot
deport them or keep them locked up after they are released? Extreme.
Have open doors to the EU and don’t build the infrastructure needed?
Extreme. Take violent thugs who kick women down stairs on CCTV, there
is no doubt about their identity, and either don’t send them to jail
or they’re out in a few months? Extreme. Have a set of policies that
stops you dealing with the likes of ‘the guy with the hook’ for over a
decade while still giving benefits to his family? Extreme. Ignore
warnings about the dangers of financial derivatives, including from
the most successful investor in the history of the world, and just
keep pocketing the taxes from the banks and spending your time on
trivia rather than possible disasters? Extreme. Make us – living on
average wages without all your lucky advantages – pay for your
bailouts while you keep getting raises and bonuses? Extreme and stupid
– and contemptible.This all seems like an argument for arbitrary powers exercised by the government and against the rule of law. I guess that makes me a bubble dwelling elitist for saying it.
That said, these are two concepts that are inconvenient for politicians so they are not exactly incentivised to explain to their voters why they are a good thing
It is a very interesting read, especially to see where the whole "£350 million per week/NHS" meme came from, exactly.
And then there's this:
And this:
His first point, whilst I think has truth to it as regards the better educated middle to upper middle class, falls down at the failure of memes to infiltrate the consciousness of the working class and their apparent tendency to not adhere to groupthink.
If memes didn't effect this group as much as he says then so many wouldn't have fallen for the campaign's main points, such as the £350 million into the NHS nonsense.
And in his blog post castigating "SW1" for being clueless, incompetent imbeciles with absolutely no insight into policy, the political process, or how to run a country (let alone a campaign to remain); then admitting that he had no time for thinking about how the complex act of leaving the EU would be instituted if they won considering the very same government would be handling the process...
The second quote has much validity to describe why so many people outside of the political/financial/media bubble world of London and the south-east view it so.