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On the anniversary of the birth of the Chinese philosopher Confucius (and myself), I was struck by the relevance of one quote attributed to the great man (see above). It would appear that our present Prime Minister has not studied much Chinese philosophy.
Monday’s speech, like many made in the past by the dour one, has needed time to properly assess and determine what it really meant.
NHS – a significant part of speech was given over to discussing his tragic teenage experience of losing vision in one eye. He promised to defend the NHS that had saved his sight. In fact, Mr Brown the surgeon saved your sight not the system. And, if you are pledging to save our NHS, how come despite authorising a doubling of expenditure during your time as Chancellor, NHS productivity has hardly changed, cases of hospital infection have continued to rise and disllusionment within the medical profession has dramatically increased? Responsibility Mr Brown?
Education, education education – that famous empty slogan was allegedly coined by the PM. Why, after a significant increase in education funding, do we hear this week about ‘new’ policies to guarantee the ‘three Rs’ in all 11 year-olds? Why has that not been achieved in the last 10 years, Mr Brown?
Poverty & Wealth- In his speech Mr Brown claimed success in fighting poverty. He failed to mention, however, that during his term as Chancellor, he presided over a reduction in social mobility, whilst at the same time he created the highest tax burden in British history. Our public debt has soared once more during August and furthermore, personal debt is at an all-time high. Who raided our pensions and sold the nation’s gold, Mr Brown?
Law & Order – much was made of the promise of ‘new’ technology to help policeman on the street deal with crime. Which government has increased the paperwork? Which government has dramatically increased the number of laws in this country? Clearly, Mr Brown believes in spending money on police, spending money on unnecessary bureaucracy and then spending more money on technology to deal with that unnecessary bureacracy. Responsibility Mr Brown?
Rural Affairs – Mr Brown trumpeted his love of the countryside, the “oxygen” for us all. What of the rural payments fiasco, Mr Brown? Foot & Mouth? The building of thousands of new homes on the green belt? Responsibility Mr Brown?
I could go on – Foreign Policy, EU Constitution, Immigration, etc…There are plenty of examples of where Mr Brown bears full responsibility for the state of the country’s public services and the country’s parlous economic position.
The Conservative Party has the opportunity next week to present its new policy ideas to the British electorate. It will then have a General Election campaign to highlight Mr Brown’s complicity in the causation of the problems Britain now faces and how a Conservative Party under David Cameron would provide a brighter future for us all.
