i want the them out it is clear they have to go, but who else is there to choose? The entire system is run to benefit the elites. Do we place our trust in labour? Or the lib dems? no thank you, the who political system needs a radical change, and this is so scary.
Peter Hitchens: “Voting is not a Sacrament, it's not even a civic duty, and it's certainly not an emotional spasm. It's a practical act with a measurable effect, and in modern Britain the intelligent and reasonable person knows, because he ceased long ago to believe in Father Christmas and the Tooth Fairy, that voting FOR things is a waste of time, you won't get what you vote for. But there are definitely occasions when you can effectively vote AGAINST things, and this is an occasion where you can effectively vote against the Labour party and against Keir Starmer and prevent them from coming to office. It's still possible, the opinion polls don't dictate the result of the election, you don't have to be told what to do by propaganda, you can actually use your own mind and your own will to vote.” “Keir Starmer makes a weathercock look like a signpost.” “We have probably the biggest political, economic and social change which this country has undergone in its modern history, and an election campaign of total vacuity in which no major issue was ever discussed. Voting in order to punish the Tories: “It’s mistaking a political act for an emotional spasm, or the other way around.” “If you are able to make a living somewhere else – as things are, I've never seen a country more wrecked than this one, and more and more determined to pursue a path of wreckage.” “I would call myself a British Gaullist. It's an extraordinary combination of strong defence, patriotism, a strong welfare state and national independence.“ Peter Hitchens - Wikipedia Not to be confused with his late brother: Christopher Hitchens - Wikipedia Stephen Davies: “The Conservative Party has not faced up to the new voter alignment in which national identity is now a primary issue. They can no longer make free markets the centre of their pitch and hope it will unite nationalists and cosmopolitans around economic liberalism. About half of the voters who like markets reject nationalism while about half of the nationalist ones reject free markets. The two stable combinations are free markets and globalism or nationalism and state intervention. This is the choice the Party has ducked. In doing so they have alienated voters on both sides and fallen below the critical 30 per cent vote share. The example of the Liberals shows what can happen. Unable to choose in the then new alignment between capital and labour or socialism and capitalism, they were ground down from both sides. The Conservative Party has to decide which of the two courses described it follows – or even divide. If it does not choose it will suffer the fate of the old Liberals and be replaced, sooner or later and probably sooner.” Source