Dystopiary
putting up a hook to hang my hopes upon
Thought this warranted a new thread, unfortunately. It's really started up again.
I posted last Friday in the campaign against welfare cuts and poverty about Jeremy Vine's revolting tweet asking people if "we" should crack down on disability benefits.
I see he's now deleted it - perhaps he got a level of pushback that he didn't expect.
However, he's not alone in his attempts to stir up that kind of hatred. It's starting up again isn't it? Politicians and the media working in tandem to demonise people who can't work.
Dr Frances Ryan on twitter
Only the day before, Dr Ryan had this article published. She was right:
A decade after the Tories demonised disabled people on benefits, it’s happening again | Frances Ryan
However, let's not forget it was a Labour government who got the ball rolling; their changes to the benefits system were devastating for thousands of people, and many lost money they'd relied on to manage. The language they used was also demeaning, and fast forward to the present they're making it quite clear they're the party "for working people." Many of us know that only too well as a dog-whistle for being very much against benefit claimants.
Meanwhile, back to the Telegraph. Today they pushed the message a bit more:
Dr Frances Ryan on twitter
I posted last Friday in the campaign against welfare cuts and poverty about Jeremy Vine's revolting tweet asking people if "we" should crack down on disability benefits.
I see he's now deleted it - perhaps he got a level of pushback that he didn't expect.
However, he's not alone in his attempts to stir up that kind of hatred. It's starting up again isn't it? Politicians and the media working in tandem to demonise people who can't work.
Dr Frances Ryan on twitter
Only the day before, Dr Ryan had this article published. She was right:
A decade after the Tories demonised disabled people on benefits, it’s happening again | Frances Ryan
It is exactly a decade since former chancellor George Osborne launched cuts to the benefits system totalling tens of billions of pounds, and with them, fuelled rhetoric so toxic that it caused an increase in hate crime towards disabled people. This was the era of Benefits Street and the Sun’s Beat the Cheat campaign, where it was quite normal for a national newspaper to invite readers to report their disabled neighbours to the benefit fraud hotline.
Fast forward 10 years and we bleakly find ourselves back here again, with labour shortages and a population in ever poorer health. Now politicians and the media are setting their sights on the so-called “economically inactive” and “record numbers” of long-term sick.
However, let's not forget it was a Labour government who got the ball rolling; their changes to the benefits system were devastating for thousands of people, and many lost money they'd relied on to manage. The language they used was also demeaning, and fast forward to the present they're making it quite clear they're the party "for working people." Many of us know that only too well as a dog-whistle for being very much against benefit claimants.
Meanwhile, back to the Telegraph. Today they pushed the message a bit more:
Dr Frances Ryan on twitter