Jeremy Corbyn and his barmy army of pals in Number 10 would be a disaster Britain cannot afford
House of chaos
THE very idea of Jeremy Corbyn in Downing Street sends a shiver down the spine.
Mercifully, it seems most of those he approached to form a “Government of National Unity” are as horrified by the idea as the rest of the country.
Anybody with two brain cells to rub together knows that a “time-limited” Government with him in charge would be the start of a Marxist experiment that this country simply cannot afford.
Magic Grandpa, his sinister pal John McDonnell and their barmy army of anti-Semites and half-wit economists would be off to the races. And the country would be off to the dogs.
The Lib Dems rightly rubbished the plan but then managed to outdo even Labour’s collective idiocy by proposing Ken Clarke or Harriet Harman as leaders to unite the country. Or at least the 48 per cent of it they care about.
The contrast between the Opposition parties — as well as their lunatic Tory rebel pals — and the Government couldn’t be clearer.
One is busy playing Westminster Dream Team. The other is getting the country ready for Brexit.
Clucking mad
THE faux-outrage about chlorinated chicken is laughable.
It’s safe. And if you’ve got a beef with the idea of chlorine on your chicken, you might want to throw out your salad and stop drinking tap water — because it’s there too.
Alarmists claim the procedure hides hygiene flaws earlier in the treatment process and that Britain’s current system is apparently perfect.
Nobody mentions that more than half of the chickens sold here have traces of the very bacteria that a chlorine treatment is designed to eliminate.
The political posturing over food safety is just people squawking nonsense.
A-level the field
CONGRATULATIONS to those who got the A-level results they wanted.
But only half the country’s 18-year-olds take them. Just as important for the other half are BTECs, the results of which get very little fanfare.
New Education Secretary Gavin Williamson must make vocational studies a priority.
The route to success doesn’t have to go via university.
Sweet nothings
THERESA May’s legacy: 220 different measures to cut salt and sugar.
The octopus-like reach of the Nanny State stretches ever further. Boiled sweets are next in the crosshairs.
It leaves a bitter taste indeed.
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