A few good noble thoughts there Beef. The only thing I would take issue with is that you say that people vote for what helps them the most. That's a generalisation. There are significant numbers of people who vote for what they perceive as 'the good of the country'. That might mean voting against their own primary interests. There are also people who think they are voting for their own interests, but are entirely misguided by which financial category they believe they fall into, and are actually voting against themselves through ignorance. That happens a lot. The British are an odd breed. We're still a bit too quick to the forelock tug [good for the country [our betters] mentality] forgetting that they are the most important individuals in their lives.
I'm not quite sure if I'm ashamed or proud of voting for all 3 major parties in my life. I think I may've met Beef's description of most tories when I voted for them back in the 70s. I just voted for the bloke (and they were all blokes) who seemed most reasonable. In pre-internet days information available was a little basic. Since then I've voted Lib/Lib-dem/Labour in that order, based mainly on party issues.
Of course ironically apart from my first vote it's all seemed rather pointless as I've chosen to live in areas where the outcome was never in doubt, roll on proportional representation.
I think most people like to think they're not 'bad'. Those that vote Conservative at present have convinced themselves that the guff that party spouts is true. As do Labour supporters. The difference is Labour seem to want more fairness in society, and they've not yet been tested on this. People will always vote for change eventually.

