You have to know that you're not the only person who feels that way.Chie wrote:I honestly can't decide where I am in terms of class or social status, although in this position it does mean I can view all social groups from a neutral standpoint.
The class system per se is an anathema in this age - yet you've used it in pretty broad brush strokes when you're taking about labour v tory "types". I've been trying to express that its not about social scale or income as such, but about an ideology.
That was the 80s. The decade of massive personal successes. "Loadsamoney". You've seen it yourself in a different decade for sure, but its happened before - and again the, "fuck you, I'm doing well" ideology is there.The biggest problem I've got with the whole thing is that a lot of the people who've made it over the last decade, who've gone from being working to middle, used to whinge on incessantly about how we should all help each other and how rich people were snobs. But now they have made it up the ladder, they wouldn't piss on you if you were on fire. They've become exactly like the snobs they used to moan about when they were poor.
By no means am I trying to oversimplify a whole political movement, but yes - the net result is to make the rich richer - or at least, to lessen the amount of tax they pay back. The idea is that they've earned it and shouldn't have to pay back to society on death a proportion of what they gained by living and trading in that society.But then you could argue that if you reduce their inheritance tax liability and capital gains tax, they'll have more money to spend on the ground and therefore help to get the economy going again. There must be a logical reason the Tories want to do it anyway, unless they've got a death wish and really do want to help the rich become richer.
Its an ideology. And not one I'm comfortable with.
I take a more egalitarian and yes, socialist view. I know that in a democracy, ultimately people will vote in a way that best serves them - and secondarily you hope that your choice makes for the greater good for everyone too.
But one ideology sticks out more to me than the other of maybe making those two things happen together.
Does that make sense?