I don't think this is anything to do with being sold down the river, it's just the periodical bloodletting we get in our inner cities, which always gets worse in recessions.Blue Peter wrote:I think that 'disenfranchisement' is probably a bit of a weak term for what has happened; "sold down the river" might be nearer the mark. Who's got the proceeds of all that debt that's been taken out? Not them. Who's going to pay for all that debt? Them.featherstick wrote:To my mind this is a symptom of the long disenfrachisement of Britain's voters, especially the disengagement of youth from the political process. If they were more engaged, they'd be trashing Whitehall and Downing Street, and marching on Chipping Norton.
I'm sure that they don't understand it cognitively, but viscerally they do,
I can understand the community's anger about the shooting of Duggan, but most people just join in a riot for the fun of it - hence the copycat riots that you always see.
Everybody's very quick to blame "our" bankers and "our" politicians but this is a global, systemic problem, and most of the people now self-righteously demanding the heads of bankers etc. were happy enough to take out mortgages with a view to a profit in their time.
It's a total waste of energy looking for someone to blame - this problem was built into capitalism at the start and anyone who thinks it's just the fault of "the bankers" is missing this fact.
Yeah, most people don't like to think they're just stuck with a problem and that there's no one they can make dig them out of it, but that's the situation we're in. People can scream all they like, they'll only make things worse for themselves in the long run.