A U G U S T
It’s worth repeating:
It was around 1979 when postWW2 consensus politics took a cosmic lurch to the Right. The emerging politics of a fairer, more equal society, being replaced by a self-serving, self-seeking mentality reminiscent of a bygone age. A divisive age. Championed and nurtured by the might of the Right-wing press. Controlled and administered by the few. With no sense of the common good.
Time is for change. For 21st century society to break free from the edicts of RWI and the clutches of £billionaires created as a consequence of the power of their accumulated wealth – wealth created by the labours of the many, to the greater benefit of the few. As predicted by the 19th century philosopher, Karl Marx. (1818-1883)
True to his prediction, RWI has become responsible for delivering swathes of 21st century society into a world not dissimilar to the glaring inequality of preWW2.
Time RWI was kicked into the bin of history and UK’s accumulated wealth was controlled and administered to the greater benefit of the millions that created it.
Indeed, while ever RWI is tolerated, life for swathes of society will continue to fall short of that made possible by its collective endeavours.
S E P T E M B E R
The problem with 21st century society is that for far too long it has remained trapped and contained by the edicts and diktats of RWI – an ideology synonymous with life in preWW2, when the ‘few’ of the day rode supreme over the ‘many’.
Strikingly, much the same still applies to 21st century society. The many, still constrained and corralled by the edicts and diktats of RWI – an ideology out of time and touch with the values, senses and morality of the 21st century world. The few – still pulling all the strings.
History will show it for the out-dated ideology it truly is.
Not until it is replaced by something that better serves the wants and needs of the many, can the quality of life available in 21st century society be shared by all – not just the few.
For want of a name, I think of it as ‘Societyism’.
O C T O B E R

