Jeff Bloke
5.2K posts

Jeff Bloke
@BlokeJeff
Privileged middle class people doing 'class solidarity' (TM) is the absolute literal definition of identity politics.

@KirkLubimov Straight from Hayek's road to serfdom. If you want big gov b/c you don't like the sociopaths running big corporations, just wait until you centralize the power into a single source (gov), and discover who gravitates there and ends up on top.


People in power underestimate the power of people at their peril. In the upcoming local elections, Your Party is proud to back independent candidates who are standing up for their communities in the name of redistribution, inclusion and peace. theguardian.com/politics/2026/…



I thought it would be helpful to do a proper thread addressing this. The scenes in Clapham aren’t just about crime or policing. They point to something deeper: what I've come to call "urban nihilism". 🧵


@orgreavejustice @UKTogetherAll seriously lads you think the greens, the performative left, the posh twat middle class radical liberals really give a shit about coal miners? They literally repeat thatchers mantras about destroying the coal industry with the same fear & hatred of the actual working class.





Can the Left march for victory while losing the working class? There is a speech circulating in left-wing circles in Dublin that ought to unsettle every socialist in Britain. Not the kind of unsettling that produces a conference resolution or a letter to the Guardian. The kind that keeps you awake at three in the morning. The kind that names something you have half-known for years but lacked the honesty, or the courage, to say aloud. It raises the question nobody on the British left seems willing to answer. While tens of thousands march through London holding the correct signs and saying the correct words, something else is happening quietly across the country. In places like Scunthorpe, Middlesbrough, Grimsby, and dozens of towns that built the Labour movement, people are not marching. They are not voting. They are not listening anymore. The biggest political story in Britain is not Reform, the Conservatives, or even Labour. The biggest political story is the slow, quiet withdrawal of the working class from politics altogether. For years, the left has traded solidarity for signalling, class for culture, and real communities for applause from people who already agree. It talks endlessly about representation, but less and less about wages, housing, industry, energy, or the material conditions people actually live in. The truth is uncomfortable but simple. The left did not just lose the working class. It slowly stopped being a working-class movement and became a liberal one instead. Somewhere along the way, the movement founded by trade unionists, miners, dockers, engineers and factory workers became a movement of graduates, professionals, NGOs and think tanks. It stopped organising in communities and started marching in cities. It stopped building power and started performing virtue. It stopped listening and started instructing. The working class hasn’t disappeared. It hasn’t turned fascist. It hasn’t forgotten its interests. It just stopped listening to a left that stopped listening first. The left did not lose the working class overnight. It lost them slowly, through a thousand small decisions, each one dressed up as progress. And if the left cannot reconnect with the people it was created to represent, it will continue to march in London, trend online, win arguments at dinner parties, and lose the country. Watch the speech. Read the full article here. 👇 labourheartlands.com/marching-for-v… #TheLeft #TogetherMarch #ClassWar







“Now if we did blackface, we would be wrong” America:


The problem with the left viewing the past through a persistently negative lens is that "we forget our own tradition". At our Downstream IRL event last month,@AyoCaesar argued that the Lancashire Cotton Famine shows how the left should own its history of class solidarity.






NEW: Health minister @zubirahmed has told @cathynewman he would cross the picket line if he were still a junior doctor, that’s despite being a member of the BMA for 27 years. @TimesRadio



