...so you may not want to read any further, and I know there are some folks who don't like to read anything that hints of argument, so they should definitely stop reading at this point, don't worry, I'll keep reading it until it gets a respectful number of reads.
You may have noticed that the British Labour Party is having a leadership contest, although I am not sure contest is the right word given the ridiculous antics we are currently witnessing, in particular the silliest idea they may have ever come up with, pay a couple of quid, promise that you love the Labour Party and you can vote in the leadership election.
Then, just to make it a more "balanced" election, Jeremy Corbyn gets nominated, Mr Corbyn hails from the leftish part of the Labour Party, some might say the very leftish part of the party.
On the face if it you might be a tad confused about the idea of electing to the Labour leadership someone who has so badly disagreed with his own party he has voted against them over 500 times since 1997.
But that's not the point of this diatribe. The opponents of Mr Corbyn are crawling out of the woodwork in ever increasing numbers, and their central argument seems to be the same and that is that rather than risk the Labour Party becoming "the perpetual protest" political party, Labour needs policies and leadership that will make the Labour Party a "credible alternative" to the Conservatives.
Now, for the record, although it may not be a true fact, I do occasionally imagine I am one of the last Socialists that exist in the Isle of Man, so now you can assume any political bias you wish in regards to why I wrote this.
Finally the point, I think. How did being a two-faced lying toe-rag become a credible alternative? Is this simply a sliding scale of morality versus potential votes?
"I think we should nationalise everything" Oh, they won't like that one, too unelectable.
"I think we should nationalise essential services" Better, but still, loony left and all that.
"I don't think we should nationalise anything" Now you're talking, at last, a credible alternative to the Tories. Really?
I'm not saying we should nationalise everything or anything, nor do I agree that much with a lot of what Mr Corbyn plans if he wins the leadership election. What I am asking is why has it become so simple to abandon your principles and beliefs, no matter how wrong or right others may perceive them to be, simply to win.
If you happen to believe in nationalisation, large or small, if you happen to believe nuclear weapons should not play a part in national defence, and if those ideals of yours are likely to prove too unpopular to get you elected, why is it now apparently perfectly acceptable, instead of morally repugnant, for other politicians to suggest you abandon your ideals or principles and adopt theirs which are more "realistic" or more of a "credible alternative"?.
Is it naive to prefer people to stick to what they believe in, unless reasoned argument should change those beliefs, fighting for what they believe in, rather than fighting for what might just win.
In reality of course becoming a credible alternative just means your policies are essentially the same as the other lot, that way the great unwashed can choose who to vote for based on egos, personalities and nice legs without being bothered by confusing policies too much.
Feel free to kick the soapbox out from under me at any point.