Jeremy Corbyn - Not Not Labour Party(?), not a Communist (BBC)

No, I just have never agreed with socialism and think Corbyn is devious self serving hypocrite.

He literally has 0 integrity.

If people choose to support him and believe he has good intentions, then great, but I can’t get behind the politics of envy and hate on any level.

While I think he's no saint, like any other politician, are you saying JRM and his ilk are better? At the moment, it's a choice of the least bad and Corbyn looks like he's not as awful as the Tories to most.

The fact some gullible ordinary voters think JRM's one of them is as depressing as when this happened with Trump.
 
I don't get the rail nationalisation argument, in all honesty. I've never been on a train and thought "This service would be far more efficient, cheaper and more enjoyable if civil servants were in charge."

Definitely think there should be government stakes in utilities.

Don't you think economies of scale should make the train cheaper than the car?
 
The Labour party, or perhaps specifically Jeremy and John (McDonnell) seem to be living in a world I remember almost 50 years ago.

At that time the two principle things that were held by many to be 'wrong' with nationalisation of public services (except funnily enough the NHS) was that there was a lack of opportunity for investment for infrastructure development and renewal, because of competing interests (i.e. from all the different sectors) for Government cash. Also the lack of a profit motive, meant that eventually the nationalised industry's became monolithic, run-down and incapable of change and perhaps even more debilitating was that although supposed to be services/sectors operated for the benefit of the public, they were anything but, in fact they seemed to many people who used them to be run only for the benefit of those employed in those services/sectors.

Of course Jeremy and those of his ilk, never seemed to see these arguments and hence their belief that the state knows best continues and nationalisation will always be a priority for them, even if they have to potentially bankrupt the country or borrow so much money to make their dreams come true, that our great, great, grandchildren will still be paying off the debt... in their dotage!

The view of many however is that 'nationalisation', or other such government intervention should only be undertaken in those areas where national defence, health or retaining a strategic interest in an industry because of world wide conditions (e.g. presently in steel making), are required to maintain the essentials, for the safeguarding of the Country. The objective from day one should be to prepare for privatisation at a date in the future, where the burden on the state is perceived to be needed to be lifted and private investors can step in. However it seems this view is now also out of date, so combined with the naysayers on Brexit, it seems we are all heading to hell in a hand cart, with Theresa feeding the horse at one end and Jeremy is preparing to shovel the s*** at the other.

Where do we turn next?

So I take you'd lobby for a privatised healthcare system similar to the US where something like 20% of GDP is spent on healthcare. Sounds efficient

I also don't know why you think private monopoly's or oliogopolies will not seeing vast profiteering.

What about German, Dutch and French nationionalised rail companies profiteering from British rail networks and pumping profits back into their own national rail networks? Is that good business for Britain?
 
Couldn't agree with you more, obviously this didn't come across in what I wrote.

Nationalisation, whatever it was for, has, in my mind had its day, although I would concede that where vital markets are effected by 'dumping', the example I gave was steel, then a case for state intervention could be made on a limited basis where such matters can effect state security.

I was thinking of the supposedly famous letter from Churchill to the Japanese government prior to Pearl harbour when he pointed out the differences in steel making capacity between the USA and Japan and that the Americans' in fact had the capability to put planes in the air faster than Japan could shoot them down! They still went ahead anyway, but true or false it makes a good story
!

That has nothing to do with nationalisation and everything to do with the size and economic capacity of the US. Also it's a bit ironic that you've mentioned a nationalised industry in the US Military that takes up a big chunk of governmental spending.
 
I don't get the rail nationalisation argument, in all honesty. I've never been on a train and thought "This service would be far more efficient, cheaper and more enjoyable if civil servants were in charge."


Definitely think there should be government stakes in utilities.
Depends how often you catch the train, in London, I know there are plenty that would welcome TfL taking over commuter lines. As they have with TfL rail and the Overground, and from what I've gathered, they've improved the service.

I definitely see the benefits in doing so, as I do with many markets where there is a natural monopoly, it just can't or shouldn't be done so quickly.
 
No, I just have never agreed with socialism and think Corbyn is devious self serving hypocrite.

He literally has 0 integrity.

If people choose to support him and believe he has good intentions, then great, but I can’t get behind the politics of envy and hate on any level.

Except he has more integrity than any politician in Westminster and is anything other than self serving or a hypocrite. He's always believed in causes and has never waivered from them and he's never looked to use his position to be 'self serving' in any way.

You're simply upset because he wants to tax the wealthy (perhaps yourself) to fund combating poverty. But you don't have to be completely dishonest because you're upset.

BTW he's not envious, he simply wants to tax the rich and probably should bring in more wealth taxes into his fiscal planning.
 
Nationalization of utilities people cannot live without is certainly worth debate. Water and power being the main ones of course. Food would be in theory, but can't because of the way we consume as a species. With water and power though, there can't ever be a situation where people are priced out of the market or where private companies decisions Allan determine availability. There will always have to be safeguards to ensure full accessibility regardless, so putting them in private hands is always going to be artificially moderated by the state anyhow. May as well just have them state run, with incentives for efficient management. I don't know why we haven't approached nationalization like that anyway. In the private sector the motivating factors are profit and efficiency, so why not put efficiency of delivery as the management key delivery objectives and have bonuses/firing conditions tied to those anyway. Why does it have to become 'jobs for life/heavy unionization' just because it's state owned.
 
Whatever is nationalised under Labour will be later privatised by the Tories at knockdown prices. They will then use the proceeds to buy another term or two while the wealthy reap the dividends. Same old, same old...
 
So I take you'd lobby for a privatised healthcare system

No, read what I said about what's wrong with nationalisation ( except funnily enough NOT the NHS!)

I also don't know why you think private monopoly's or oliogopolies will not seeing vast profiteering.

Of course they will, its up to the Government to prevent this, but not via nationalisation, its not the answer to everything!

What about German, Dutch and French nationionalised rail companies profiteering from British rail networks and pumping profits back into their own national rail networks? Is that good business for Britain?

If they run them efficiently and cheaper than we can do it then yes its is good business for Britain, we get the service level we require at a cost we cannot provide ourselves, I would say a 'win-win'!

That has nothing to do with nationalisation and everything to do with the size and economic capacity of the US

So you spotted that did you, well done.

I was simply using the 'Churchill letter' story to refer to the value of a country having a steel production capacity, enabling it to manufacture armaments when necessary, to defend its self
 
Why does it have to become 'jobs for life/heavy unionization' just because it's state owned.

It shouldn't be, but the trouble is when the Government is the direct employer its open to 'political pressure' which often means acquiescing to whatever or whoever protest group shouts the loudest, by and large the private employer will have a better chance of resisting such pressures, because if its forced down a route where it cannot make a return on its investment, it will withdraw its capital and seek other areas for investment. Generally most of its employees know this and have to moderate demands.

In the past a culture of 'jobs for life' was created within state run organisations and then protected by ensuring 'closed shop' unionisation. Private enterprise can work but only if the Government applies proper oversight and regulation, to stop profiteering and ensure the national interest.

At the moment the public perception seems to be that in many areas like energy, railways, etc. this proper oversight is not being exercised by Government, hence the clamour for nationalisation. The question that should be considered is 'if the Government cannot regulate a sector or an organisations activities properly, that is in the national interest, then what makes anyone think they would be able to run the actual enterprise properly in the national interest?
 
Last edited:
It shouldn't be, but the trouble is when the Government is the direct employer its open to 'political pressure' which often means acquiescing to whatever or whoever protest group shouts the loudest, by and large the private employer will have a better chance of resisting such pressures, because if its forced down a route where it cannot make a return on its investment, it will withdraw its capital and seek other areas for investment. Generally most of its employees know this and have to moderate demands.

In the past a culture of 'jobs for life' was created within state run organisations and then protected by ensuring 'closed shop' unionisation. Private enterprise can work but only if the Government applies proper oversight and regulation, to stop profiteering and ensure the national interest.

At the moment the public perception seems to be that in many areas like energy, railways, etc. this proper oversight is not being exercised by Government, hence the clamour for nationalisation. The question that should be considered is 'if the Government cannot regulate a sector or an organisations activities properly, that is in the national interest, then what makes anyone think they would be able to run the actual enterprise properly in the national interest?

Political pressure doesn't come from thin air but has an underlying idea. If the idea is good it should be implemented and vice versa. You don't want a.) privat employers to not give a feck about a legitimate claim, equally you don't b.) want a public employer to enforce an idiotic one. Either way political pressure isn't really an argument, because in case a.) politics should regulate anyway. Normally public employers give their workers better deals in exchange for higher prices. Whether that's ok or not should be debated in politics.

Re your question: if the govt. can't properly oversight it's probably down to a lack of political will not the absence of apt concepts or their implementation.

The key question is much more: is there functioning competition on these markets?
 
Nationalization of utilities people cannot live without is certainly worth debate. Water and power being the main ones of course. Food would be in theory, but can't because of the way we consume as a species. With water and power though, there can't ever be a situation where people are priced out of the market or where private companies decisions Allan determine availability. There will always have to be safeguards to ensure full accessibility regardless, so putting them in private hands is always going to be artificially moderated by the state anyhow. May as well just have them state run, with incentives for efficient management. I don't know why we haven't approached nationalization like that anyway. In the private sector the motivating factors are profit and efficiency, so why not put efficiency of delivery as the management key delivery objectives and have bonuses/firing conditions tied to those anyway. Why does it have to become 'jobs for life/heavy unionization' just because it's state owned.

I think most do at a senior level, certainly in the NHS. Such targets have their issues as you'll see short term planning and as a consequence a high turn over of leadership.

Is it even true that a job for life applies at senior levels in the public sector? I'd say its at a lower level because it's hard to get rid of staff public or private when they're heavily unionised.
 
Of course they will, its up to the Government to prevent this, but not via nationalisation, its not the answer to everything!

It's the answer to markets without competition of strategic importance. Otherwise those markets will be inefficent ones for consumers. Unless you believe in price capping

If they run them efficiently and cheaper than we can do it then yes its is good business for Britain, we get the service level we require at a cost we cannot provide ourselves, I would say a 'win-win'

Well obviously we can provide a cheaper service through nationalisation if other countries national rail can provide the same service at a profit. Unless you think the British are incapable for some reason.
 
If they run them efficiently and cheaper than we can do it then yes its is good business for Britain, we get the service level we require at a cost we cannot provide ourselves, I would say a 'win-win'!

That's just an ideal though and just as ridiculous as the claims that nationalisation solves everything, if that was true then yeah privitisation would be great but there's clearly not common place.

Tendered companies will always go for the minimum viable service to increase their profits and when its a basic service that the state relies on then that spells disaster. No agreed service levels can fully resolve that conflict and that's the same whether the government or private enterprise tender services.
 
If the idea is good it should be implemented and vice versa

Of course but who decides what is a good idea and what is not?

The trouble is that every political party has its dogma, which it believes tells it what are good ideas and what are not. Every company has what it believes are good ideas to help its aim to make as much money as possible, every employee as his or her own idea about what he/she thinks is a decent wage, every consumer has ideas about what they consider is a great service or first class product and they can get it for as little as possible, admittedly some consumers might be prepared to pay a bit more, if for example its part of fair trade arrangements, but not the poor, they want 'bang for their buck', they have no choice.

So who decides what is a good idea? Who is total neutral in their approach? Who is fair? Probably in the final analysis its the courts, but who can afford to take a claim to court? what basis will the court use to make a judgement, presumably its based on the law of the land? Who makes the laws... back to politics, everything is affected by politics at some point or other?
Political Pressure and Political Will, drive everything, I would like to think Political Sense comes into it as well but consensual politics doesn't seem to work in Britain, e.g. even when everyone seemingly agrees there are problems with our NHS, we cannot get a consensus... why because of politics!
 
It's the answer to markets without competition of strategic importance

How does nationalisation induce competition of strategic importance?
Surely there would be no one to compete with, the consumer would have to take what the Government offered and like it? ["You can have any colour you like, as long as its black!" quote from Henry Ford and his Model T car]
The Government could raise prices, cut supplies (e.g. power supplies, the 3 day week in the 1970's), as it wished, it could in the extreme, force people to behave how it wanted (George Orwell 1984?) or deny them access to whatever!

A totalitarian state in the making, is that what Jeremy wants?
 
How does nationalisation induce competition of strategic importance?
Surely there would be no one to compete with, the consumer would have to take what the Government offered and like it? ["You can have any colour you like, as long as its black!" quote from Henry Ford and his Model T car]
The Government could raise prices, cut supplies (e.g. power supplies, the 3 day week in the 1970's), as it wished, it could in the extreme, force people to behave how it wanted (George Orwell 1984?) or deny them access to whatever!

A totalitarian state in the making, is that what Jeremy wants?
:lol:
 
How does nationalisation induce competition of strategic importance?
Surely there would be no one to compete with, the consumer would have to take what the Government offered and like it? ["You can have any colour you like, as long as its black!" quote from Henry Ford and his Model T car]
The Government could raise prices, cut supplies (e.g. power supplies, the 3 day week in the 1970's), as it wished, it could in the extreme, force people to behave how it wanted (George Orwell 1984?) or deny them access to whatever!

A totalitarian state in the making, is that what Jeremy wants?

My lord you are a poor poster.
 
How does nationalisation induce competition of strategic importance?
Surely there would be no one to compete with, the consumer would have to take what the Government offered and like it? ["You can have any colour you like, as long as its black!" quote from Henry Ford and his Model T car]
The Government could raise prices, cut supplies (e.g. power supplies, the 3 day week in the 1970's), as it wished, it could in the extreme, force people to behave how it wanted (George Orwell 1984?) or deny them access to whatever!

A totalitarian state in the making, is that what Jeremy wants?

First you are strongly against nationalisation now you seem to reveal that you don't actually know that much about it altogether. Nationalisation obviously doesn't build on competition but on the absence of it. It has also nothing to do with totalitarian tendencies.
 
That's just an ideal though and just as ridiculous as the claims that nationalisation solves everything, if that was true then yeah privitisation would be great but there's clearly not common place.

No sorry, ( see WackyWengerWorld # report 8551 21.50 yesterday) this poster claimed other countries were running our railways and ploughing the profits back into their own, so its not ridiculous. If someone can run our railways efficiently and do it cheaper than we can, then that's a 'win-win'
 
It's hard to understand the current policy of public investment while private companies piggyback of it and charge you through the nose. It would be fine if either A) it was cheap, or B) the trains were fecking amazing. But neither is the case.
 
My lord you are a poor poster.

Whys that then, because I asked an embarrassing question, that nobody may ask of Jeremy, please do give us a break? Jeremy wants to nationalised everything he doesn't perceive is working... "its not working John, lets nationalise it". We been here 50 years ago it didn't make sense then and it doesn't now.
 
Whys that then, because I asked an embarrassing question, that nobody may ask of Jeremy, please do give us a break? Jeremy wants to nationalised everything he doesn't perceive is working... "its not working John, lets nationalise it". We been here 50 years ago it didn't make sense then and it doesn't now.

:lol: As if one would have to do it the same way again. That's a poor argument.
 
First you are strongly against nationalisation now you seem to reveal that you don't actually know that much about it altogether. Nationalisation obviously doesn't build on competition but on the absence of it. It has also nothing to do with totalitarian tendencies.

Firstly I am not against Nationalisation, the example I quoted previously was to protect Steel making production. Nationalisation takes out all opposition/competition, that's a fact, you then take it or leave it, no competition whatsoever.
Jeremy's 'song' is about the gradualism of creeping state control in every aspect of our lives, read some of his old speeches!
 
No sorry, ( see WackyWengerWorld # report 8551 21.50 yesterday) this poster claimed other countries were running our railways and ploughing the profits back into their own, so its not ridiculous. If someone can run our railways efficiently and do it cheaper than we can, then that's a 'win-win'

Do you consider our Railways to be run efficiently though? I mean there's a major investment problem there for one and poor service secondly. Or have you misunderstood and you just mean at a profit?

Privatisation does serve some well but sadly all too often its the likes of Branson who profiteer off goverment subsidies.
 
As if one would have to do it the same way again. That's a poor argument.

Its not a question of how its done, its about the State being in total control of an industry, sector, whatever, that's what Nationalisation means!
 
Firstly I am not against Nationalisation, the example I quoted previously was to protect Steel making production. Nationalisation takes out all opposition/competition, that's a fact, you then take it or leave it, no competition whatsoever.
Jeremy's 'song' is about the gradualism of creeping state control in every aspect of our lives, read some of his old speeches!

I know what nationalisation is. In the absence of competition the national company could skim the whole economies of scale effect for example, which would lower prices. But this is a rather complex issue that needs to be discussed in each area specifically, since the settings are different in all of them. Most infrastructure in areas where it would be unsustainable to have different sets of them (imagine every company builduing their own railways) are nationalised in order to allow fair competition in the first place.

Its not a question of how its done, its about the State being in total control of an industry, sector, whatever, that's what Nationalisation means!

Yes, obviously. But to say that just because it didn't work 50 years ago with that specific approach back then in the unique setting back then it cannot work today is just a useless argument.
 
Aaaaaand back to being a poor poster again.

Oh, so I did meet with your approval at some point... must have missed that one..? anyway Jeremy's hoping to take us somewhere I would rather not go and whilst I respect the fact the man has held these views all his life.. they are still wrong!
 
Oh, so I did meet with your approval at some point... must have missed that one..? anyway Jeremy's hoping to take us somewhere I would rather not go and whilst I respect the fact the man has held these views all his life.. they are still wrong!

They aren't "wrong" at all, they are just a different political view to your own. His views closely align to Scandy politics and as a UK national, who's now a Swedish citizen I personally think he's got some good ideas. But hey, each to their own.

You met my approval in your first response @I Believe , as you actually tried to add to the debate rather than harping on with some absolute bollocks about a totalitarian state.
 
I know what nationalisation

Do you now, well sorry it sounds to me like you don't, or maybe you have a romantic view of how everything in the garden of
(energy, railways, etc.) would be rose like if only we nationalised it?

But this is a rather complex issue that needs to be discussed in each area specifically

Precisely, its exactly why we should keep the Government away from it with a barge-pole if necessary, Governments are good a politics, not at running public services. That does not mean private industry is the best either, it means on public services at large we need a public consensus on what the service should be and how its to be delivered, what we should pay for it and who should run it. I would almost guarantee that if we could get a consensus on the first three, the what, the how and the price, the fourth choice that of operator, would not be the government

50 years ago with that specific approach
I am talking about the 'idealism' that surrounds nationalisation or state ownership and operation of an industry or sector. Yes it sounds fantastic let nanny state look after everything, but who's looking after nanny?
 
They aren't "wrong" at all, they are just a different political view to your own.

No,Sorry.. I should have added that they are different to my own... however they are still wrong, because they didn't work last time and as far as I can gather, Jeremy's just 'putting old wine in new bottles', very attractive looking bottles, especially to those coming out of a period of austerity, who probably haven't been able to afford any wine at all.