Bornphree :
In an age where the few continue to grow richer while the many struggle to get by, Jeremy Corbyn’s message strikes at the heart of what true democracy should be. His words are not just political slogans—they are a call to awaken the conscience of a nation. For too long, power has been concentrated in the hands of an elite minority: billionaires, big corporations, and disconnected politicians who make decisions behind closed doors. Corbyn calls for a reversal of this imbalance—a radical redistribution not just of wealth, but of power itself.
He envisions a society where ordinary people have a real say in the decisions that shape their daily lives. This means public ownership of essential services like water, rail, and energy—so they serve the public good, not private profit. It means strengthening trade unions and workers’ rights, so those who build society are no longer treated as expendable. It means investing in communities, not cutting them to the bone.
At the core of Corbyn’s vision is the belief that democracy isn’t just about casting a vote every few years. Real democracy is participatory, local, and ongoing. It's about giving people control over housing, education, transport, and health. It's about trust—trusting people to govern themselves with fairness, empathy, and collective wisdom.
And crucially, he believes that young people—the often overlooked and underestimated generation—must not just be included, but empowered to lead. They are not the leaders of tomorrow; they are the leaders of today.
In this vision, power flows from the ground up. From the streets, the unions, the schools, the parks, the homes. From the people. Because as Corbyn reminds us, when the people are empowered, politics becomes more than a game. It becomes a force for justice.
2025-07-19 07:49:47