By Gilad Atzmon
Desperate to maintain his political relevance, Milliband distances himself from his predecessor, Gordon Brown?s, rhetoric. He (Brown) went on record saying: "I am not going to promise 'British jobs for British workers'?. Here, I must mention, that the reference to ?British workers?, used so often by Labour politicians, is obviously and completely out of date. Our elected politicians care nothing for the ?worker?. They are far more interested in transforming those who used to be workers, into consumers.
In fact, all Western governments are there to regulate consumption and are therefore, openly and completely submissive to big monopolies and global interests. Accordingly the rest of us, immigrant or a native, have but one simple role in life: to buy, or more accurately, to spend money we don?t have.
So Miliband diverts our attention from the real issues. He blames Brown for being ?disconnected from the concerns of working people." Now, I wonder, what could Ed Milliband, that political toddler, possibly know about ?working people? or for that matter, work in general? Did Ed Milliband ever spend one day of his life in a factory or farm? Did Ed Milliband ever produce anything except empty rhetoric?
Milliband picks on immigration because he is, quite simply, a banal populist. He longs to appeal to some imaginary British national collective. At first he is apologetic: "Why didn't we listen more?? he says as if he, Ed Milliband, could ever manage to listen. Then, he ?empathises? with the weak: ?We lost sight of who was benefiting from that growth - and the people who were being squeezed. And, to those who lost out.? As the son of an immigrant Jewish cosmopolitan socialist, I would expect nothing less of Milliband than to transcend himself beyond any such fake, righteous British tribalism. If Ed Milliband really cared about the ?squeezed? then he would be perhaps a universalist and care about all those who fall behind - both indigenous Britons and immigrants.
Ed Milliband speaks about ?immigration? today because to him, the very concept of production and manufacturing is alien. It is so much easier for his lame mind to appeal to the lowest form of British xenophobic feelings. But the truth is, as ever, quite simple: if Britain wants to save herself and to stand again on her own two feet, she must flee the service economy and pursue real production that would imbue the presently archaic notion of ?British worker?, with a new and vibrant meaning.
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River to Sea
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