Update September 30th 2022.
"Kwasi Kwarteng, the chancellor, has already announced plans to cut benefits to encourage more people into the job market, saying that this was part of the government’s plan to “make work pay” by not allowing people to rely solely on welfare as their main form of income."
This is the strategic stance of the English Ruling Elite, the Aristocracy, the Land owners and the Corporate Bosses and their Shareholders.
Their strategy is to remove state provided social and economic support in order to drive people into low paid work. This planning involves privatisation of NHS, Education and Social Care, keeping wages low and undermining democratic regulation of Industry and shared commons monopolies.
The most brief analysis of socialism is that it is designed to abolish poverty by regulating the power of the Oligarchy using the means of the Legislature.
In practice it is 'Nudge' (introduced by Cameron, previewed by The Work Capability Assessment). Or, more harshly, withdrawing social support to herd poor people into a situation designed entirely to maximise Wealth Extraction aka shareholder returns, irrespective of the harms it will cause, (raw sewage from Chicken Factories destroying entire river systems, polluting our shores), all the while well aware of those harms. It is brutal and purely for the purpose of Wealth Extraction. Psychopathy runs through the corridors of power in England. Lies, gaslighting, bullying, hate campaigns and grift.
"The day after we published Monitoring Poverty and Social Exclusion 2016, Indy Bhullar, curator for Economics and Social Policy at LSE library, shared this fascinating excerpt from Charles Booth’s famous survey of the East London poor, first published in 1889. He shared it because the percentage of ‘very poor’ households categorised as being in ‘great poverty’ by Booth due to having insecure, irregular and poorly paid work was the exact same proportion of people in poverty in the UK in a working family in 2016: 55 per cent"
"Booth’s belief that some poverty is attributable to laziness (‘idleness’) or immoral habits (‘drunkenness’ and ‘thriftlessness’) also resonates very clearly today. The circumstance of being in poverty (especially if you receive any working-age social security benefits) is taken as a sign by much of the media, political establishment and the general public to be a sign that you are feckless and lazy. Problems relating to addiction, from substance misuse to smoking are still viewed by many as ‘bad habits’, as a recent proposal from a CCG in Yorkshire to limit surgeries for smokers highlights.
While Booth referred to illness, disability and family composition as ‘circumstances’, many of the policies of the last five years- from the increased scrutiny of people receiving disability benefits to the limit that only two children per family will be eligible for support through Universal Credit and Tax Credits from next year- show that what Booth termed ‘circumstance’ are increasingly seen as bad ‘habits’ which must be quashed.
There are fundamental problems with attempting to draw a line between the ‘deserving’ and ‘undeserving’ poor. We need to ask ourselves what price, both financially and ethically, we are willing to pay as a society in the service of this paternalistic view of the poor. In 2015/16, 93 per cent of JSA sanctions that were reviewed were overturned- this is just one of the many indications that mechanisms within our current system for separating the ‘deserving’ from the ‘undeserving’ are applied in contradictory and inconsistent ways. Is it worth significant public money being spent on gatekeeping to ensure no one with ‘bad habits’ is benefitting from our public safety net? Is the possibility that someone ‘undeserving’ may get support from our social security system really worth other people who are disabled, raising a young child alone, or unable to find work suffering?"
The fundamental question is this - is the suffering of so many people a harm that can be avoided, and if it is not being avoided who deems that harm worth it, and why?
~
A Guardian report on the release of the Cabinet Discussion Paper, in 2012, under the 30 years rule.
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W.E Du Bois is much respected as an influential writer and thinker, of some wisdom. These are his words.
~ “We should measure the prosperity of a nation not by the number of millionaires, but by the absence of poverty, the prevalence of health, the efficiency of the public schools, and the number of people who can [and] do read worthwhile books.”
― ~
Poverty levels of State assistance and the social deprivation that acknowledged as directly linked to petty crime, ill-health, bad nutrition and much else besides as a causation.
~
Another nonsense that has caused a lot of harm is the Work Capability Assessment, introduced in 2005.
2021 - By removing the £20 uplift, poverty will increase among the 6 million claimants of Universal Credit. 40 percent of these claimants – over two million people - are in work
~
There's a lot of PR involved in all of this. Selling the product, (it's like flu, it doesn't affect children, they would have died anyway) making the sale determines elections more than does policy well explained and thus accurately understood by the electorate.
Marketing
The world of marketing is predicated on the ability to manipulate people's emotion and perception in order to make a sale.
Workers can be manipulated into accepting just above poverty wages by lowered levels of social support programs, privatised health care and education, and much else besides, availability, price, presentation and bias, vulnerability, 'personal choice' or by 'restrictions', (price increase, scarcity). Nudge has been around for a long time indeed!
The Story of Stuff : Consumerism's origins
Consumerism is undermining our environment, our social systems : bookmark this 20 minute video, because it speaks eloquently and accurately of when consumer culture was birthed, and why. And who benefits the most.
Do the Ruling Class understand the individualism of the consumer, and the isolation, the addiction, the disempowerment that develops with that addiction, and how that assists in the the political dissolution of organised workers that consumerism amidst real poverty seems to inculcate?
Here's a recent find, for me, saw a reference to it in a tweet. The Paper I mentioned above.
The 1982 Cabinet Report
A document prepared in September 1982 for the Cabinet, discussing long term policy, including topically enough, privatisation of the NHS. They had just 'won' the Falklands War.
What I see here.
What I see here is that it is that the politicians operate as the public front, they shield the Establishment ruling class within the Civil Service, who direct and influence the the politicians as much as the corporate billionaires do.
The public facing politician's function is, in part, to take the popular ire 'on the chin' in the theatre we call The News, to protect The System, safe in the knowledge that their pension and future wealth is secured and that custodial sentencing is not likely, under any circumstances, no matter how egregious their behaviour.
The adulation of the monarchy preserves the status of the aristocracy, as a political power base rooted in the class system, and it maintains the power of the aristocracy through the undemocratic House of Lords. Take away the monarchy and the House of Lords crumbles. Lords and robber barons dominate our political situation.
Here is a brief report from the Health Policy forum on the NHS part of Cabinet Document.
https://navigator.health.org.uk/theme/thatcher-cabinets-private-consideration-radical-reform-nhs
Pdf file of the document, 30 pages on carefully typed paper, photographed. Take a look. It's informative.
The Theme
If poverty is thought of as a relative condition, adverse redistributive effects become hard to accept. If, however, it is recognised that there is such a thing as an absolute level of poverty from which people should be protected. and that poor people should share in the increasing wealth of the country, but perhaps mot in full proportion, then some redistributive effects can be accepted - as they must be if the amount of wealth for distribution is to increase."
In other words in order to maintain poverty as a whip, as a nudge, the system will need to offer just enough support to people to avoid destitution, just enough support to make low paid work attractive and they will use media to portray that choice to work as being 'honourable' and that all of this subterfuge and rigging is essential to the continuation of that which generates their Wealth.
The tone between 'redistribution' and 'distribution' of wealth is worth noting.
Shunak is operating the old tradition to the tee!
Here's an excerpt on the NHS from the planning discussion document.
Then the document looms over privatisation of Education, page 4, paragraph 11, discussing the move towards wholesale privatisation, slowly, slowly, starting promoting more private schools, reducing State spending on State Schools. 1 982.
https://www.tes.com/news/heads-condemn-dfe-plan-cut-school-improvement-fund
Cuts to social support designed to nudge behaviour by the stress of real poverty.
One rule for the Rulers, a swath of rules and sanctions for us. To get us to behave. Behaving didn't get the Unions far in the 1890s onwards, that's for sure.
In my view there's a degree of cruelty and callous recklessness in all of this that is deeply, profoundly uncivilised bordering on sado-monetarism. The gaslighting and lying to maintain that trajectory is a huge red flag.
I know that the only way for the people to counter this is to build a united grass roots front, from a shared sense of human solidarity, as persons, from the poorest to the most comfortable that elects decent men and women into our legislatures.
Stephen Reicher on why elimination of community transmission prevents surges, lockdowns and restrictions - precisely because the protocols when carefully set, give the population more choice, more freedom.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/oct/28/covid-measures-choice-restrictions-science-freedom-infections-safe
Mr, Reicher is on point, and utterly correct.
What say you?
Kindest regards
Corneilius
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