JessM, have you misread my post? I was a very poor youngster, and my peers too recognise that we felt real poverty back in the 60s. We knew nothing else, but money was extremely tight. We were often hungry, often cold and I remember well my Mum making cardboard insoles for our leaking shoes because we couldn't afford new ones.
I don't seem to remember charity shops or food banks either back then. No one helped the poor. The fact that we have charity shops and food banks now means that sort of poverty is at least recognised and aided. It will never be eradicated.
Land of milk and honey? Where does that come from? I suggested the opposite. Life is so much better for my grandchildren than it was for me and the poor of the 50s and 60s. Poverty still exists and will never be eradicated, but it is recognised today, and there is sympathy for those who struggle, whereas in years gone by the plight of the poor was seen but not alleviated in any way.
As I said, we won't eradicate poverty - it's existed all my lifetime, under Labour governments too, for a number of reasons. Those who make out the Conservative government are against the poor are grasping at straws. The modern Conservative party has moved more to the centre of politics than at any other time in their history, ironically as Labour moves more to the extreme left and is danger of imploding because the party is so divided.
Working class people cannot trust Labour who have become anti establishment and the party championing .....well, what exactly? They don't speak for working people, ordinary people. Corbyn's rise is thanks mainly to the under 25s with little real life experience who'd quite like to upset the status quo/bring on the revolution. Been there, done that, grew up and out of that sort of mindset. It doesn't appeal to vast swathes of the electorate.
As for the person who jeered 'this is how old people think', well done for illustrating just how out of touch the left wing of politics has become. That elitist sneering does your cause no good.
Do you really think people writing here are "young"? As Grandparents we are likely to be past the first flush of youth, but we are informed, intelligent, au fait with technology, some of us work, we are well read and, if lucky, still energetic. That poster wrote off someone with views differing to her/his own as old. Why stop there? Why not fling around 'stupid', 'uneducated', racist and homophobic too? That's par for the course for many on the left unfortunately, and it's alienating even more people who despise that sort of arrogant, superior one upmanship, typical of those who dismiss the views of others.
In current uncertain times, I am admiring May more and more. She has her finger on the pulse and is wise enough to appreciate how people need to feel heard.
I suspect she is very aware of the course the Tory party has to take, and it's one very far removed from the reactionary, out dated stance of left wing politics in the UK today. Of course the response to this is 'Labour will rescue the NHS'. Standard response sadly, and now so over used to mean much.. Use scare tactics. The government which dismantles our precious NHS will be on a collision course to oblivion. Theresa May is smart enough and compassionate enough to appreciate the NHS has to exist. I imagine she also has ministers looking into wastage of funds, and recent reports would suggest an enquiry into spending is long overdue. I am perfectly OK with that. I suspect most people are.