Lots of lively stuff on here, and some people have incredible memories (that have jogged mine). There are two key issues for me. The first is that under the Tory government, austerity measures have been incredibly cruel and damaging for some individuals and families, the like of which we have never seen before. Most people can cope with a change in benefits or tax that costs them a few pounds a week, but we are talking in thousands of pounds a year in some cases. The second is Brexit. We had the Referendum because Cameron was terrified of the upsurge in the support for UKIP after the financial crash of 2008, who were determined to convey to the public that all their ills were down to immigrants who were taking their jobs, bleeding the economy by claiming state benefits, and this applied equally to immigrants from the EU as well as war-torn developing countries. Cameron needed something to focus on and, confident that he would get a result that would please his members, he decided to have a Referendum on membership of the EU. That's two Tory MP's in succession who are incapable of judging the public feeling on things - not surprising as they don't actually KNOW any members of "the public" as such.
The referendum failed to get the result Cameron wanted, and he resigned. The public fell for UKIP's blarney by a very small majority for such a major "decision", and so we are leaving the EU. We didn't need to leave the EU, the referendum was only an indication of public feeling and not a legal message that we had to leave, but Mrs May decided to treat it as a valid vote to leave, and a chance for her to go down in history as the PM who successfully took us out of the EU. She thought it would be a doddle. She was wrong. She is wrong. She will be wrong.
It is all so sad and unnecessary. Even the Remain voters have given up any fight (including Corbyn) for the biggest decision of our lives, following a vote that was taken on the back of lies and serious misrepresentations to the public at large, who are very fickle.
So now we find ourselves with Theresa May and the gang of ten about to ruin our country with immeasurable effect. No relief now for the thousands affected by the Bedroom Tax or the Fitness for Work shambles. No time to even THINK about the NHS, and the police only get a look-in because of three major atrocities carried out.
What a sad, sad country we have become, faced with all this mess. What happened to our welfare state where, in the 1960s, compassion was shown to those with severe health problems, with extra money to help replace their lost incomes or pay for additional help so they could enjoy their lives? What happened that caused men like Nick Clegg to lose his seat after all the effort he put into the country between 2010 and 2015 to moderate some of the even more terrible things that Cameron would have done, had he had the chance, and why does everyone remember him for the one mistake he made in promising the abolition of tuition fees when he wasn't able to carry out his promise, and in any case the revised scheme only affects the middle and upper classes in reality, most of whom can cope with it easily. Let's not forget that it was LABOUR who introduced tuition fees, and really the new scheme is just a graduate tax, which is not an unreasonable idea. Following Tony Blair's pledge to get 50% of teenagers going to University, the only result of that is that Unis were full of kids who just scraped in with the bare 3 A-levels (sometimes only two, and there were other routes in), struggled with the level of work required of them, and ended up working in call centres. There simply isn't room for 50% of people to have graduate-level jobs and there are better routes to good careers for the majority who are able.
So two things matter to me - or have I now made it three? One is the poverty caused by Tory austerity measures that we were all supposedly "in it together", one is Brexit, sold to the people on the basis of lies, and is now making us look stupid in the eyes of the wider world for allowing an "advisory vote" to dictate to us. And the that has now wheedled its way into my thoughts is why did Theresa May not seek her extra votes from the Lib Dems (who would definitely NOT have considered a coalition), but are a party that most of the British people at least know, and understand what they stand for, and they are not extreme in their views.
I never could do short emails.