Sounds good? Which American left-winger would you attribute this to? Or maybe it is Jeremy Corbyn, the new leader of Britain’s major opposition party, the Labour Party? Well, no: it is George Lansbury, Corbyn’s predecessor as leader from 1931 to 1935. A prominent socialist, Lansbury was a pacifist who resigned rather than support sanctions against Italy after Mussolini invaded Abyssinia/Ethiopia in 1935. Lansbury is quoted in 1939 speaking in the House of Commons in opposition to the outbreak of war with Germany, a war in which gas was indeed used by Germany to massacre “little children” and millions of others, while, albeit on a far smaller scale, Mussolini’s forces had made extensive use of gas attacks during the invasion of Abyssinia. History, indeed, provides one way to consider today Corbyn and the Left in America and Britain, not least in their failure to act firmly in 2013 against that modern employer of gas attacks on civilians, Bashar al-Assad, as well as his predecessor in gas attacks, Saddam Hussein.
“They do it funny out there.” We do, yes, but developments abroad can offer a reality check on what might happen at home. And so with the election in September 2015 of Jeremy Corbyn, the hard-Left candidate to lead Britain’s Labour Party, an election that tells us about the threats posed in the United States by changes in the Democratic Party, including the way it has lurched to the Left. Barack Obama would have been considered an