An angel who fell from grace, shunned by his once beloved family and burdened by pure fury and loneliness. He hated the royalty of the Aicexutis Kingdom, having a strong power-hungry thirst for bloodshed. An assassin as swift as an unsuspected blade would come to him, taking this as an opportunity for lying and forced love.
“The past was erased, the erasure was forgotten, the lie became the truth." (George Orwell)
In July 2021 we were able to read this headline:
“Labour pledges to end ‘gig economy’ and hand all workers same legal rights. Millions of workers in the gig economy who cannot rely on regular hours or wages will be given new rights and protections under a Labour government, the party has pledged. (Daily Record: 27/07/21)
But like so many of Starmer’s pledges, this one too has now been abandoned.
“Labour rows back workers' rights pledge in latest U-turn” (Independent: 18/08/23)
It is becoming more and more apparent that there is really little difference between Starmer’s Labour Party and Sunak’s Tory Government. Starmer has broken promise after promise in his self-absorbed bid for power, becoming more Tory-like with each passing week.
We all suffered the consequences of Boris Johnson’s “do anything, say anything” approach to becoming prime minister. Johnson lied to the electorate during the Brexit campaign and he continued to lie after he became Prime Minister. In the end, even his own party were so appalled by his behaviour that they unceremoniously dumped him.
To even engage with these incorrect assumptions feels a bit like legitimizing their baseless premise, but when about a third of Americans believe a conspiracy theory based on misleading presumptions, there’s value in carefully deconstructing the false narrative. And when the toothpick scaffolding that holds up the theory is exposed, it’s clear what’s really supporting this narrative: racism and fear.