Wag the Dog

Another MP tells it like it is.

A Conservative politician has been caught on tape suggesting there is no need for his party to worry about attracting “dog-end voters” who live in “the outlying regions” of Britain.

Every five years these people have to feign interest in what we want in order to get enough votes to keep themselves on the gravy train. That’s it. They are not, and never have been, interested in what we want or need, nor in our inconvenient opinions. Because, you see, they know best, They are our betters and we are merely the plebiscite, the great unwashed, white van man, bigots who need our betters to manage our lives and tax us to penury – for our own good of course.

These people are scum. Utter, utter scum. They are parasites beneath contempt and not one of them deserves a vote – not one vote, not one endorsement. What they need is a length of hempen rope and a lamp-post.

So, fine, as far as I am concerned Garnier has simply confirmed what we already knew.

6 Comments

  1. There’s a wonderful irony in the fact that the Westminster Political Classes still view this stuff with a kind of magnificent autism that tells them that the “people don’t mean it”, that it’s all about policy and that all they have to do is reconnect (i.e. talk at us) some more until we see sense.

    To a large extent, Nigel Farage’s popularity stems from that. He appeals to the commonly held view of “see those c**ts, let’s chuck them out, for no other reason thamn they are awful, condescending c**ts” – it is certainly a strong enough incentive for many people to vote UKIP I can tell you…

  2. String them all up outside traitors gate and let the public go and mock and jeer like they did in the old days, maybe then the politicians would be a little more likely to realise actually they are not in charge.
    Your right of course they are all as bad as each other and there is no respite in sight, even if we get rid of the government and the politicians there would still be all the health quangos and nanny state morons to contend with. It’s all to scary to contemplate.

  3. I’ve told my ( personally very pleasant, does her best for her constituents, hard-working ) MP that, in spite of all that … she is part of the problem, not any part of a prospective solution.
    And I still don’t think she “gets it”

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