TheChair - // Funny how some people on here think that harsh rhetoric demonstrates nastiness, but taking from the sick and poor to give tax cuts to the rich is perfectly acceptable.//
You are guilty of a common trick in responding – you are acting as though someone has said something, in order to disagree with it.
On-one has debated the rights and wrongs of the policy which is the background to the OP; it is not relevant, so let’s park that there.
This gentleman is using the age-old defence of the nasty loudmouth – ‘I believe in plain speaking …’ which translates as – ‘”I’ll be as rude as I like and say what I like and I don’t care.”
He would have been censured in The House for ‘unparliamentary language’ – which his comments most certainly are.
Disagreeing vehemently with a political opponent does not entitle you to use such inflammatory expressions, and then to defend them by saying you are entitled to be righteously angry.
There is no place in a free society for elected representatives to be using such phrase as ‘lynching’ and ‘stain on humanity’ – it is utterly inappropriate, and no time should be wasted arguing the minutia of what is meant by saying such things.
Free speech does not entitle you falsely to shout ‘Fire!’ in a crowded theatre – similarly, it does not entitle an MP to make such appalling comments about another MP. John McDonnell should be thoroughly ashamed of himself – but of course, as a ‘plan speaker’, that notion will be totally alien to him.