FriedGreenTomatoes2
Mr Farage also dismissed accusations that he led a āone-policy partyā, and said that part of its success was ābecause people see us as positiveā.
āāFamily, community, countryā, thatās our slogan. We are the things we think matter to people, the things which are being undervalued and have been damaged by successive governments. We have many strings to our bow,ā he told the newspaper.
He went on to estimate that Reform had a ā35 to 45 per cent chanceā of him, or a āyoungerā Reform candidate, becoming prime minister at the next election.
Yes, but āfamily, community, countryā is just sloganeering. āKinde Kirche Kucheā sort of thing. It doesnāt mean anything beyond an appeal to nebulous concepts that most people, of whatever political affiliation, probably value. When groups hijack universal concepts and claim them for their own itās always a sign that we need to dig deeper.
āMany strings to our bowā is another empty slogan. What does it mean in practice? What tune would the fiddle be playing with its overstrung bow?
This awful degeneration into slogans and soundbites worries me. It hard to tell truth from lies, or fact from fiction these days as it is. If we canāt talk in our own language any more (with any attempt at precision at least) how can we pretend to be a democracy?