My despair is for the fact that there is NO UK political party that is prepared to articulate these obvious and well-established economic facts and articulate a coherent plan to address this like the first steps towards one that I set out in my post at 11:06.
These threads always descend into arguments about irrelevancies. I see very little of anybody putting forward a coherent plan or even attempting to discuss solutions.
Politicians thrive on polarising society. It’s great for their election results. Then they continue with it in order to appease their party members and vested interests in order to maintain power so they are not making decisions that are to the benefit of the electorate. They are deliberately misleading them. The more polarised the political debate becomes the more this effect will be exaggerated and the lower the chance of any sensible evidence-based policies being enacted.
My hope it that the electorate will take a step back from their personal grievances about “unfairnesses” and recognise that these will only increase as we go further into a doom loop of dividing up mouldy cake crumbs between us, and that the only way out is to redirect public spending to areas that will raise productivity and growth.
If we do not do this, living standards will continue to fall in perpetuity. It is a certainty upon which I’d bet my entire life earnings. I am starting to see the attraction of short-selling… abhorrent as that practice might be when it means betting against your own country’s future.
My “passion” as you call it, is a desperate plea to people to wake up before it is too late and demand competent politicians. MPs do listen when their email inboxes are flooded with emails all saying the same thing because like all humans, they are primarily motivated by self-interest and want to be re-elected. A country gets the type of political leadership that it demands. Sadly, out of desperation the UK has demanded promises of cake that will never materialise (when I do credit the majority of the population with more intelligence than to believe in impossible cake) over realistic messages about the situation and no politician has the backbone to articulate what needs to be done, the consequences of not doing so, and most importantly a hopeful but realistic and actually viable plan for how to fix it.
I hold out very little hope that it will happen. Apparently the electorate aren’t done with this stupidity yet and are determined to vote for ever-more implausible promises of not just unicorn cake but flying unicorns that you can actually ride to a fluffy land of candy floss trees and marshmallow skies.
I hope for someone to put forward a credible plan and some realism and believe that the majority of the people in the UK are not extreme, do actually want an improvement and just need to be given some hope that someone with a coherent and actually realistic and plausible plan is available for them to vote for who will gradually improve things even if some difficult things need to be done in order to do that.
With an electorate crying out for change (the basis upon which Labour were elected and Reform rising in the polls - total insanity) and a large majority but a shallow one which will not be repeated no matter what they do, this Government needs to grasp the situation and take the steps necessary to start to effect positive change.
They won’t, though.
And then people will likely vote in a Reform Government which will be the final nail in the coffin or any chance of UK economic success for many, many decades.
The calibre of people we have in politics and what the British public will tolerate in comparison to many of our old comparator countries in Europe is, frankly, astonishing.
I think it’s probably beyond repair already because nobody will accept the slightest measure that will not benefit them personally, everyone is now focused on their particular flavour of scapegoats and attacking each other, and nobody seems interested in uniting behind and rational plan with actual solutions based on evidence. You see it in these threads here, which presumably are largely populated by people actually interested in these topics, so what hope is there for a sensible discussion with the electorate on a country-wide basis? I can only see it happening if a politician capable of articulating a vision for the future actually emerged and did so, with “passion” and conviction but also FACTS.
I think a sufficient proportion of the electorate don’t want this social division and polarised politics and are just very frustrated/ angry/ desperate at the incompetence. I think the British mentality has always been moderate and sensible and generally reasonable and not extreme and we desperately need someone in the centre ground - which is entirely deserted - who is economically competent to articulate this and stop focusing on political soundbites and optics and many voters feel politically homeless because there is nobody in the centre anymore and they have nobody to vote for and have to vote for what they think will be the least horrific option, election after election, with worse and worse results.
It’s all extremely depressing and my bet is that people continue further with their polarisation, no action whatsoever is taken on the economic issues that need to be addressed, and we end up with an even worse Government next time who will finish the job of consigning the country to the dustbin, with no prospect of even slowing the decline in living standards let alone reversing it. I have to say I have adjusted my personal investments away from the UK already to reflect this likelihood.