• Syldon@feddit.uk
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    9 months ago

    I think the donations Liz Truss received shows just how emotionally stunted she is when it comes to money. Her leadership campaign alone got her £500k. There is nothing idealistic with the Tories, they are driven by money and nothing else. Just look at the people she wanted to give honours to in her leaving list:

    Truss’s list of life peers includes Sir Jon Moynihan, a big pro-Brexit donor to the Conservative Party, and Matthew Elliott, who ran the Brexit campaign in 2016, The Sun reported. Others are said to be Ruth Porter, Truss’s deputy chief of staff in No 10, and Mark Littlewood, head of the Institute for Economic Affairs think tank that backed her mini-budget.

    • DessertStorms@kbin.social
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      9 months ago

      You only become that clueless about money, when you’ve never wanted for it.

      That’s still not a mental illness.

    • frog 🐸@beehaw.org
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      9 months ago

      You do realise that when people are driven by money, it’s because there’s some other hole that needs filling, right? Emotionally healthy people don’t need to grasp after money.

      Liz Truss’ leaving honours shows her doing the same thing all Prime Ministers do: giving stuff to her allies. Is it the right thing to do? No. Is it an entirely normal human thing to do? Yes. People do favours for friends, family, and allies all the time. And while I think politics should be regulated in a way that doesn’t allow it to happen, due to the corruption it inevitably leads to, it stems from a natural impulse that everyone has felt (and most people have acted on) at some point. The big difference is in a matter of scale: one person getting a discount on goods/services because they know someone that works at the company is a much smaller “perk” than getting a peerage because they knew the Prime Minister, but it’s the same impulse.

      I don’t hold politicians up on some pedestal, expecting them to be better than everyone else. Because they’re not. They’re humans, which means they’re flawed, but for the most part are not deliberately malicious. Better rules, which are better enforced, is what’s needed. Not some idealistic wish that politicians will somehow not have the same flaws as everyone else.

      • Syldon@feddit.uk
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        9 months ago

        I don’t hold politicians up on some pedestal,

        I am sorry but I do hold them to a higher standard than anyone else. This is a massive failure in the UK, and one that has been abused by the current batch of Tories. Truss is very much part of the corruption that has gone on for the last 13 years. She was complicit in £150m for PPE which could not be used. To say they should not be held accountable and they are just human after all is just plain contempt for the money we have lost because of them. Labour have said they will hold them to account as soon as they are gone. I for one will be waiting for that day.

        • frog 🐸@beehaw.org
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          9 months ago

          I think the rules should hold them to a higher standard, because as human beings, they are not capable of living up to high standards unless there are consequences for not doing so. I specifically said that there needs to be better rules that are properly enforced, although it seems you simply skimmed over my post instead of actually paying attention to what I was saying. Saying “they’re humans that are flawed” is not the same as saying “they shouldn’t be held accountable”. The reason we need rules is because it has never been realistic or possible to expect anyone to behave perfectly unless there are enforced rules to hold them accountable. It’s nothing but wishful thinking to believe they’ll behave perfectly of their own accord, because they’re human like everybody else.

          • Syldon@feddit.uk
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            9 months ago

            I read your post in its entirety. It negates the driven greed that has been the feature of the Tory policy machine. You try to justify their actions as just human nature. It is not, they have abused the power given by grabbing more power. They drawn up laws to penalise those with differing opinions. They have done all this from the playbook of the Republicans across the water, who have done exactly the same as the Tories only to a much higher degree. The phrases used by both parties are the same. The gerrymandering is done in exactly the same fashion. They have both changed voting procedures just to prevent opponent voters from getting to the polls. Much the same as the PiS party did in the recent Polish elections, who believe it or not are National Conservatives.

            Nothing the Tories have done is because of misunderstanding; everything has been deliberate and to the playbook of advisors from the likes of the IEA. The Tories are not just single entities without any real direction. They have a lot of money advising them. By all means google 55 Tufton St.

            It’s nothing but wishful thinking to believe they’ll behave perfectly of their own accord, because they’re human like everybody else.

            This contradicts your opinion that they should be held to account. Being held to account does not mean you look for excuses. Being a human being does add up to mitigating circumstances.

            • frog 🐸@beehaw.org
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              9 months ago

              I mean, if you look at the entire history of the human race, abusing power by grabbing power is human nature. This has literally been going on for thousands of years longer than the Conservative party has existed. Humans being shitty to each other is human nature. There has never been a point in history when humans have lived side by side in perfect harmony, without anybody taking more than their fair share or abusing whatever power they seized for themselves.

              And no, believing Tories are humans doesn’t contradict holding them to account. Expecting (as in, anticipating that) people will behave perfectly contradicts holding them to account. That’s literally the basis for the “good chaps” principle in government: that people will behave themselves and therefore don’t need rules to hold them to account. Recognising that people don’t behave perfectly and are party to the base impulses of human nature is why we create rules to hold them to account; it sets a boundary for what is acceptable, and it creates consequences for when that boundary is broken. If you put politicians up on a pedestal, thinking that they must inherently be better than everyone else, that’s when you create the conditions that allow abuse of power, because they’re not inherently better than other people. They’re just people.

              I think we’re actually in agreement in principle here, but are disagreeing on semantics. We both agree that rules should be in place to prevent abuse of power. We should expect (as in, insist that) politicians maintain high standards of behaviour. Where we differ is in how realistic we think it is for politicians to inherently meet those standards. I think it isn’t realistic, and that’s why rules need to exist, so that we can say “we set these rules, you knew about the rules, and you broke the rules, so this consequence is now being imposed”.

              Most crimes stem from human nature too. Humans doing human things, in response to human emotions and human experiences with life. But they cross boundaries that have been set (generally in the name of ensuring the safety of others), so the fact that the action stemmed from human nature doesn’t mean we don’t impose consequences or hold people accountable for their actions. It’s in knowing that some people will break laws that mean we need to have them. We don’t have laws against things that nobody is going to do, and if nobody ever, say, committed murder, it would be unnecessary to have laws about it. The very fact that murder happens is what necessitates having laws saying that we don’t accept it in our society. And while it’s nice to hope that one day we can have a world where nobody murders anyone and everyone just lives up to that standard inherently, in the meantime we accept reality as it is: sometimes this is something that happens, and no matter what the very human motivation was behind it, we still hold murderers to account. And we (should) still treat murderers like humans, rather than dehumanising them.

              Remembering that breaking laws/rules stems from human nature helps to ensure we don’t dehumanise those who cross the boundaries. When you start saying “it’s not human nature to do X”, it becomes entirely too easy to start dehumanising those who do X. That holds true for politicians too. We’d like them to behave perfectly, and we should hold them to account when they break the rules (and we should set those rules pronto), but we shouldn’t treat it as an aberration when they fail. We should anticipate that they will screw up sometimes. Because they will.

              The thing that really changed for me when I started following politics closely was that I saw how incredibly human these people are. All of them. And yeah, lots of them are stupid, many of them are misguided, far too many are incompetent and in over their heads, and a few are malicious. Sometimes I want to grab them and shake them and tell them to stop being so short-sighted. But they’re not monsters or robots. They’re just… people doing what people do. They lack self-awareness and empathy, to levels that seem pretty consistent with the lives they’ve had, but ascribing some grand scheme to their largely disorganised flailing just doesn’t seem realistic to me.

              • Syldon@feddit.uk
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                9 months ago

                I would agree with what you are saying, but evidence of premeditation is very prevalent here. Everything the Tories have done is by design and under advice.

                Braverman and Patel do not give a crap about the amount of refugees that come into the country. They are stoking a furnace to justify their inactions. The reality is that people are making money from those refugees being held in stasis, and that in turn creates Tory donations. Truss has evidence of misappropriation that should be looked into. Sunak will jump on a plane quicker than you can pack a bag once he looses the election, because he knows how quickly the light will be shined in his direction. Zahawi, Johnson, Hunt, Anderson, the list goes on and on. When a group of people do this sort of thing deliberately, then there is no excuses and only collective responsibility.

                You think these people are incredibly human, and yet all I see is role play. To me, it is an act and nothing more. Look into US politics and the similarities are so stark on many levels.

                Your idea that this is human behaviour holds water, as this will happen again unless steps are taken. Where we differ is that I see this as unacceptable human behaviour, and you are saying it is understandable actions of human beings. That may be semantics, but to me it is crucial to holding these people to account. The idea of holding to account is not about retribution or justice. The Tories have committed the biggest heist the UK has ever seen. People have suffered and even died because of it. I never want to see this happen in the UK again.

                ascribing some grand scheme to their largely disorganised flailing just doesn’t seem realistic to me.

                A final note to prove a point. If Sunak really wants to improve the country he will want his party to succeed. My belief is that he really does not. There are two by-elections this week. You will not see Sunak on any canvas trail. You may get a twitter note wishing the candidates good luck. I doubt you will see anything more than that. This is a sign of utter contempt for his own party and the constituents they serve.

                I believe Sunak is in it for that last gig. He wants the India deal. I do not believe in anyway shape or form that he wishes to be an MP after the next election. I highly doubt he will canvas his own area at the next GE. I would not be surprised in the slightest if something is released about him once the India deal is signed, something that will sour his chances of being re-elected. If this one turns out to be correct then you can only conclude it is by “grand design”.

                • frog 🐸@beehaw.org
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                  9 months ago

                  Where we differ is that I see this as unacceptable human behaviour, and you are saying it is understandable actions of human beings.

                  We don’t differ here, actually. A lot of human behaviour is understandable but still unacceptable. Like, again, most crimes. One can understand the human impulse behind the crime without thinking it’s acceptable behaviour. I simply draw a distinction between being angry/annoyed/whatever because of the action, while not devoting energy to hating the person.

                  And yeah, a lot of politics is acting. Doesn’t mean that it’s not possible to see what’s underneath that. That’s the human element I see. Not humanity in, say, Braverman’s vicious, spiteful rhetoric, but the massive lack of self-esteem underneath. Not humanity in Johnson’s egregious lies, but in the emotionally damaged toddler underneath. I don’t think it excuses or justifies the behaviour, I just think it explains it. All the lies, corruption, fraud, financial gain, etc… not acceptable, they should all lose their jobs (and arrested if it rises to the level of criminality). But they’re still just behaving in ways that we know humans behave when they’re in a position to get away with it, because we haven’t developed a sufficiently rigorous means of making sure they can’t get away with it. Where everyone in this thread seems to be wilfully misunderstanding me is assuming that because I understand why they’re doing it, it means I think it’s okay and that they shouldn’t be held to account. Knowing why someone did something unacceptable doesn’t mean it’s okay that they did it or that they shouldn’t face consequences for their actions, whatever those consequences may be. It’s just about not engaging with a tribalistic “I’m good, they’re evil” mentality. Hatred and black and white thinking is corrosive of democracy and of society as a whole, regardless of who is doing it, and it’s impossible to hate someone when you’ve taken the time to consider what normal human impulses are driving them. You can still judge the action, while refusing to fall into the trap of perceiving them as less human or more malicious than you are.

                  Sunak is weak. He’s an intelligent enough guy, but he’s not assertive enough to actually control his party, and that’s what’s necessary to make it succeed. He wants it to succeed, he just doesn’t have the strength to make it happen, ultimately because so many of the MP’s are fucked up emotionally stunted children who are too unruly for someone as weak as Sunak to wrangle. He’s also got a lot of that traditional conservative “if you want to succeed, you should put in the work yourself” mentality, because that’s how life has always seemed to go for him - ignoring, of course, that he had a lot of luck in his favour, and advantages that others never had access to. A lot of people who’ve had fairly easy lives think their success is because they worked really hard, when the reality is they’ve often had to work less hard than others. Sunak is intelligent, but because he’s sailed through life on easy mode, he’s actually pretty lazy and isn’t able to work hard to get through a real challenge.

                  A description I saw of him a month or two ago (from a left-leaning publication) really resonated with me: he is actually working as hard as he can, and he really resents the fact that right now, it’s not getting him what he feels he deserves, and he’s annoyed with the fact that the electorate aren’t sufficiently grateful. That would be because he’s trying to give the country what he thinks it needs, rather than what it actually needs, with the result being that the electorate have nothing to be grateful for. Sunak’s biggest weakness is in believing that everybody should be just like him. He can’t control his party because most of them aren’t like him, and he can’t relate to the electorate because most of them aren’t like him either. Doesn’t mean he’s evil, just kind of spoiled and insulated from the realities of life for most people.

                  Definitely agree Sunak will jump on a plane and head back to the US when he loses the election, though. Not because he’s fleeing the scene of the crime, so to speak, but purely because it’ll be a “they don’t understand my brilliance, so they don’t deserve to have me” tantrum. He’ll want to go somewhere where he feels people “get” how “brilliant” he is.

                  • Syldon@feddit.uk
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                    9 months ago

                    Always good to hear a different view, but when the evidence is so vast, you have to wonder what it would take to convince some people just how parasitic these scum are. Enjoy your day.

          • DessertStorms@kbin.social
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            9 months ago

            Saying “they’re humans that are flawed” is not the same as saying “they shouldn’t be held accountable”

            And yet you’ve spent this entire thread creating imaginary excuses as to why Truss shouldn’t be (and worse - claiming she needs help, the poor soul).

            You’re pretending as if those who write the rules don’t it to maintain their own power, or as if they didn’t create a system that encourages and rewards her kind of behaviour (which is perfectly in line with every other Tory, are they all mentally ill?), because it’s simply easier for you to label her as mentally ill than it is for you to deal with the uncomfortable reality (which includes the fact that actually mentally ill people are some of the least likely to make it to positions of power because of how ableist our society is, and this thread is an example of that).

            • frog 🐸@beehaw.org
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              9 months ago

              Where did I say Truss shouldn’t be held accountable for her actions? It was right that she was removed from being Prime Minister, it’s right that nobody is taking her seriously or would trust her with power again. The rules that allowed her to happen in the first place need to be tightened up and better enforced. I just don’t think there’s anything to be gained from continuing to punish her. Nor is there anything to be gained from assuming malice when incompetence is a better explanation.

              Many, many politicians (Tory and otherwise) do actually suffer from mental illnesses. If they didn’t when they went in, by the time they’ve been doing it for a couple of years, they do genuinely suffer from diagnosable levels of depression, anxiety, cPTSD, and the like. This has actually been documented. Those who vehemently hate all Tory MPs on principle probably wouldn’t bother listening, but several Tory MPs have spoken out about their struggles with mental health - Steve Barclay (I think it was) gave a very eloquent interview on the subject, and Charles Walker has talked about it as well. I can empathise with the real emotions they experience as a result of their mental illnesses without agreeing with their political views or thinking their mental health problems mean they can do whatever they like with impunity.

              But even without that, there’s more to someone’s state of mind than whether they’ve got something diagnosable or not, and the vast majority of politicians (of all parties) do suffer from distorted worldviews and maladaptive coping mechanisms, because if they didn’t, they wouldn’t want the job in the first place. The world isn’t divided into the mentally ill and everyone else. Everyone is screwed up, it’s just a matter of degrees and how it impacts on behaviour - and this impacts the kind of careers people want to go into. There’s two types of people that go into politics: the ones who do it for power and influence, and the ones who do it because they feel driven to help others and that’s how they think they can do it. That’s not a guarantee that they can help others, or that they have the right ideas about how to do it; I’m speaking only about the motivation, not the methods.

              I didn’t say Liz Truss was mentally ill. I said she’s emotionally stunted in ways that have led her to buy into ideologies that make sense to her, despite the fact they don’t work in reality. Just because she doesn’t meet the threshold to be diagnosed with a mental illness (that we know of - who’s to say she doesn’t have depression or anxiety? That’s between her and her doctor), doesn’t mean she’s 100% okay. And just like I believe criminals deserve to have health care while they’re in prison, I believe Tory MPs deserve therapy when they need it. That’s because I can judge someone’s actions without dehumanising them. Apparently my unpopular opinion of the day is that Tories are human, not monsters.

              The mistake you appear to be making here is that because I’m not frothing with rage about how Liz Truss is evil incarnate, that means I don’t think she’s responsible for her actions. She is. She made choices and should have to face the consequences of those choices. Where we differ is you see entitlement and malice in her actions, and I see an emotionally damaged human being. I see that in Boris Johnson, too - once I realised that emotionally he’s a 3 year old child who never grew out of the “everything is about me” stage of emotional development, it actually became kind of sad. I’m angry about the things he did and about the flaws in the system that allowed him as much power as he had, and he’s still responsible for his own actions. But I can still recognise that as a person, he can’t help but be anything but a child, and in many ways he’s quite a pathetic figure.

              And sure, we could argue about whether he should be an adult, given the position he was in, but reality is what it is: a lot of politicians, and indeed a lot of people in powerful positions elsewhere, are emotionally damaged, emotionally stunted people who cannot grow up. Boris Johnson is never going to be anything but a 3 year old yelling “ME ME ME”. Liz Truss is a 17 year old girl who’s learned some cool things at college and thinks the whole world would be better if those things were put into practice. Rishi Sunak is 21, thinks he knows everything, thinks hard work matters more than luck, and is very proud of how mature he is compared to the 17 year old Truss and 3 year old Johnson. Suella Braverman is 15 years old, has self-esteem so low you couldn’t find it if you dug a hole to the middle of the planet, and has turned to being a mean girl because if she’s bullying others, the other bullies will be her friend instead of bullying her. Jacob Rees-Mogg has never matured beyond the age he was when he was sent to boarding school, 7 or 8.

              Most of these people could actually be better than what they are, but it’s not something they (or indeed any human) can just choose to do: it takes work, and often a lot of help. Once you stop being blinded by hatred and see them for what they are, you can be angry at their actions, and even dislike them, without seeing them as inhuman. Personally, I think Suella Braverman is a really nasty piece of work that utterly disgusts me on so many levels… but I can simultaneously see the insecure teenager that she so clearly is.

              Obviously, in an ideal world, there would be systems in place to prevent such people from gaining power in the first place. That’s the kind of change I’d fight for, rather than yelling about how Tories are evil and therefore don’t deserve help. If only well-adjusted, emotionally mature people were allowed to be politicians, we’d have a much better political landscape overall, regardless of which party was in power. They would be more empathetic, and more focused on practical solutions to real problems over ideology and imagined threats. And I wish the politicians we already have would get help. You might write off their various emotional development issues as not being “real” because they don’t fit neatly into a diagnosis checkbox, but the reality is that if they got help, they would be more self-aware and empathetic, and would be better at their jobs as a result. That would be better for the country.