Imagine if Andy Burnham as Secretary of State for Health in a Labour administration just turned up scruffy, tossing around his blonde locks, guffawing loudly.
Or if he was pictured in pubs, regularly having pints of bitter, looking like an escapee from your local golf club?
It just wouldn’t wash. What sort of country is it that likes buffoons and not statesmen? One made by the BBC.
The BBC have relentlessly not discussed the Health and Social Care Act (2012). They refuse to admit that it turbo-boosts the awarding of contracts to the private sector.
It doesn’t wish particularly to mention hospital closures, either.
Both Farage and Johnson clearly love themselves, and nobody knows what their policies are on anything.
And yet they represent highly dangerous people. Narcissistic in approach, they are both capable of being fiercely ambitious.
They might seem perfectly innocent, until you consider the danger posed by a Tory-UKIP coalition. Oliver Letwin is thought to think it’s only a matter of time before the general public wishes to discuss ‘the flat tax’. And guess what – Farage has been said to like the flat tax.
This current Government has made a big song and dance of people not paying their own way, the “something for nothing” culture. A favourite is of course that bloke with his curtains drawn, just as off you’re off to work.
But never mind the corporate tax dodgers. There are some people who would love to get away with paying the rock bottom for the NHS. They would happily see social care completely go to pot.
A flat tax would be perfect for those who want to contribute the bare minimum for the NHS. These are the same people that have pedalled the myth that it is the ageing population that is the big driver of the NHS budget: it is not, it is the aggressive pimping of technology by the corporate sector.
But behind these sinister agenda, ably implemented by the BBC, lies two buffoons, for whom butter wouldn’t melt in their mouths.
Andy Burnham would never be able to get away with the lack of policy on health as per Nigel Farage. He would never get away with acting like the faux idiot like Boris Johnson.
There are millions of people who want a stop to this crap, and want a properly funded NHS, comprehensive, free at the point of need, with a real sense of collaboration and solidarity led by competent statesmen.
What we instead get is a media over-promotion of people who pride themselves on behaving like a couple of airheads, Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage.