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If I may...it's a bit bullshit to think "middleclass" people think it's ok not to send murders back (which is actually bullshit in many cases) the big issues are government incompetency (information not being exchanged), lack of investment etc.
All difficult sells, along with "human rights for all" and getting rid of faith schools, so a "BUT THE EU DID IT" is the easy way out for politicians.
Cos Mr Hook Man is a twat, but if you need to explain to people that exceptions to human rights will at some point end at their door, because bad things also happen to good people, that point won't go in easily.
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It's more Cummings's point than mine, I don't agree that every single point he has is valid. I do see that he is very right about where the anger is being directed by these disaffected classes and why they hold these views.
The major one for me is still the public paying for the vast excesses and failure of the financial industry, then being hit with "tighten your belts as the books have to be balanced". That can fuck right off.
The thing is now is that much of that anger has been redirected against minority groups, the disabled and sick, the long term unemployed and the underclass, all who have little to no recourse to counter such propaganda and defend themselves; and the real issues are not given the same media space.
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.