Don't disagree.
But at the same time - I think it's possible to care and think 4.5m Britons in poverty is avoidable and think that Jeremy Corbyn's Labour is not the solution to this.
Because I read Labour's manifesto, and I see him interviewed, and what I see is a political idealist that is presenting a set of policies that collectively are simply not economically viable for a country such as Britain in the modern era. Vast amounts of money going out, and insufficient sources of funding coming in - which are both nowhere near enough, and likely to hurt people other than those intended. There's at least half a dozen independent ideas that may sound fair and egalitarian on first glance, but in practice (I believe) are just plain impractical. And which collectively lead to a major economic risk to the country.
It's a set of policies that might have worked in the 60s or 70s, but won't work in today's global economy. Yes, there are some great examples of socialist countries that have done a far better job of achieving income equality and eradicating poverty than we have in Britain - I'm particularly thinking of the Nordic countries - but they have done so by taking a much more pragmatic and (dare I say it) business/entrepreneur-friendly approach than Corbyn is proposing.
None of which is to say that I will be voting Conservative. I won't, for all the reasons discussed in detail on this thread.
I'll be going Lib Dem.....albeit with a complete lack of enthusiasm given how much Swinson has bombed this campaign.