BenGarfield
Active member
No of course not. Times change.
By hard lefter I mean someone who has never been as happy as she/he is now, because Corbyn is labour leader. The sort of person who thinks of Blair as a traitor. The sort of person who is convinced labour will win today. The sort of person who will blame the electorate and the manipulative tory media if Corbyn loses. The sort of person who will hope Corbyn carries on as labour leader even if he loses because it is inevitable the people will eventually come to their senses and vote him in. The sort of person who, actually, does not regard winning the general election as the most important issue today (the education of the masses being the most important issue). The sort of person who favours the deselection of labour candidates who do not back momentum.
And of course it won't be hard left to renationalise the NHS if it is sold off. It won't even be hard left to renationalise the railways. It will, however, be tricky because it would be illegal to renationalise the railways without paying the going rate. The government can't simply appropriate goods on a whim, like the Chinese do. For that reason renationalisation of the railways might be impossible. There is a world of difference between bailing out an industry on the brink of bankruptcy (old school nationalisation) and forcibly appropriating a going concern.
Also, if the NHS is sold off, and labour don't get back in for 5, or 10, or 15 years, it may then be impossible to renationalise it for the same reasons of cost. It would be possible as appropriation only if the NHS had been asset stripped in contravention of the laws surrounding provision of health care (albeit Boris could change the laws - and he might).
For renationalisation (as opposed to nationalisation to bail out a failing concern) the stable door is a good analogy here. Even Corbyn understands the stable door - this is why labour are not proposing to forcibly renationalise ex-council houses, even though it is equally as defensible as renationalising the railways, or the NHS, from the perspective of (hard left) doctrine.
And please don't throw MacMillan at me. The times change. The post war concensus meant that even the tories were largely content that huge swathes of UK industry and service was state owned in the 50s and 60s. It was Thatcher who changed all that (driven by doctrine - unconcerned whether the national assets flogged off at cut price were a success or went down the shitter like the coal industry, and unconcerned whether the effect was creation of market competition, or a private monopoly with a licence to print money, like BT and British gas were for a long while, and permitted to proceed by the electorate owing to the opportunity to make easy cash, Sid).
Times change. The hard left are stuck in the past. A past that no longer exists (because it is the past).
Thanks for that (genuinly) at least you try and address the issue unlike some on this board who just rebuff with smears and insults. I reject your idea of opposing the failed neo-liberal establishment as being stuck in the past. I think rather the zeigeist points in the opposite direction. The underpinning of Keynsian consensus has a lot to offer us now allied with Modern Monetary Theory, a green new deal to tackle such issues as global warming. Are the Greens, here and in Europe, and the young justice democrats in the USA such as AOC, and lIhan Omar in the USA also stuck in the past?