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Kate Taylor

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Kate Taylor is a sociologist, mother and tea and cake lover. When not working in sociological and marketing research with her company, Galilee Research, Kate can be found talking about political philosophy on the school run.


Prime Minister Theresa May has today declared her intention to hold a national election later this year, whilst Conservative polls appear to be holding steady. The latest YouGov poll sees them leading with 44% whilst Labour trail behind at 23% – a 2% rise and fall respectively.

However, before the election on June 8th can go ahead there must be a vote in the House of Commons, set to take place on Wednesday. May will need a two thirds majority to secure the impending political race. After denying an early election for many months, likely down to the current Brexit negotiations, the PM has now said that her decision is down to the feeling that “the country is coming together but Westminster is not.”

Indeed, public and officials alike on both sides of the fence are in agreement with this; the push for Brexit, selling off chunks of the NHS faster than the media can report it and the hush hush tone of yet more state cuts have targeted the fear in voters. This is the problem Labour now faces in its uphill struggle to secure a majority election win.

Corbyn has today said that the party intends to reach every town and city in the upcoming weeks – and they’ll need to. A big part of their last defeat was down to preaching to the choir, tail between their legs; the party avoided disillusioned voters and those who were fed up with working hard yet still struggling.

The problem many don’t see is that regardless of your political ideals, the Conservative party are categorically dismantling our welfare state, our education system and our National Health Service.

Benefit fraud is and always has been dramatically lower than many would make out – it accounts for 1% of all benefits and 2% of estimated fraud in the UK; unlike tax evasion which accounts for an overwhelming majority at 69%.

Teachers are leaving schools at an ever increasing rate due to the pressure not only put on them, but on their students. This year GCSEs have been dismantled and haphazardly put back together with a completely new grading system (which FYI – educational establishments still haven’t been given full guidelines on even though exams are impending. Many spend their lunch breaks checking out TES and other publications for some sort of clue to help their classes).

Richard Branson secured a £700m deal to take over 200 NHS care services at the end of last year in the latest privatisation deals made by our government.

We cannot go on like this. Our children are being set up to live in poverty, and our full time jobs are not enough to raise them. Our disabled and elderly are living in abject poverty in what is supposed to be one of the richest nations in the world.

What have these cuts, the swath of privatisation and dismantling of each and every part of our great and glorious country, actually done for us, the public?

Who of us is better off in 2017? If there are any millionaires reading this I doff my cap to you — if you could set up a Direct Debit to your local food bank that’d be of help. Working 50 hours week to make the same amount 38 hours used to cover is not progress. Worrying that your elderly parents may not survive the winter because they can’t afford heating or sort out sufficient at-home care is not progress. Your disabled neighbour being stuck in her house because her mobility car has been taken away is not progress.

Our country needs infrastructure, it needs an economy that helps everyone from top to bottom, and it needs a future that we can be proud to leave to our offspring. This is not what our ancestors fought for. They gave their lives so everyone could live in peace and equality with no fear of prejudice nor poverty.

At this point it has nothing to do with being on the left or right, it’s about our humanity for each other as well as ourselves.

Kate Taylor is a sociologist, mother and tea and cake lover. When not working in sociological and marketing research with her company, Galilee Research, Kate can be found talking about political philosophy on the school run.

Dear Father Christmas,

I am afraid. This time, it really is a case of ‘the children, won’t somebody please think of the children!’ I live in a country that decided to bomb countless innocent children and their families alike in ‘retaliation’ of the countless innocent lives taken. Acceptable collateral is a term used to blind us, but all it does is poke me sharply in the eye.

This week I have seen people ‘point out’ that Calais is not full of families but young, single men. Perhaps I’ve had my head screwed on backwards but I was fairly certain their lives matter, too? What have we become when we play God so liberally, only to bash others for following another?

We are blessed with different views, but when so many take the vitriol of Donald Trump with a nod of the head or a growl of praise, well…what then? There have been plenty of comparisons to Hitler over the past week, but is it merely a piece of comedic writing?

Denying freedom of speech (closing down the internet), freedom of movement (banning certain ethnicities and religious denominations from entering or exiting the USA) not to mention breaking, nay, burning, the constitution the far right cling so dearly to. That, well, that doesn’t sound very amusing to me.

The only thing we have to fear is fear itself. Truer words have never been spoken, well, not for what I’m writing. People are being shot because there aren’t enough guns. You heard me, more lethal weapons means fewer fatalities. What is this madness? The sheer insanity is spreading like cancer and the only thing we can do is stand up to the malformed cells that instigate the hatred.

There have always been men willing to raise hell off of the back of fear, and there have always been those that will blindly follow. I do not blame the latter though they mostly remain a mystery to me. The commies that want peace, how pathetic of them.

There has been a ‘ban Trump from the UK’ petition going on, and doing very, very well. This I disagree with too. It seems everyone is fighting fire with fire, even the best of us. What else do we have left though? Well, I’m still a firm believer in the pen being mightier than the sword, or, at least, the hand that presses the H-bomb release button.

Santa I have two small children, and I do not know how to explain the hatred and fear. I tell them that sometimes it’s easy to get confused, but if you always remember kindness comes first, you won’t go far wrong. Is this just lip service?

How long until we become what we fought so hard to keep at bay? How far will we go before realising that if we want to continue our existence on this little planet of ours, we need to stop.hurting.others – or we’ll all be hiding in fridges whilst the news tells us to keep calm as the bombs drop.

Are the decision makers sending in the fighter jets based on fear though? That’s where I get really confused, what do we get out of this?

So I guess what I’d like Santa, if it’s at all possible, is a little national perspective. If you can spare any for America that’d be greatly appreciated. Is there a ghost of wars past you could muster up for number 10?

Kate Taylor is a sociologist, mother and tea and cake lover. When not working in sociological and marketing research with her company, Galilee Research, Kate can be found talking about political philosophy on the school run.

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