From a FB friends ....worth a read to counter the smears:
" I'm really fascinated by the people who say they're terrified of
Jeremy Corbyn's radical left-wing policies, often to the point of claiming that they'd think about leaving the country if he becomes Prime Minister.
It's fascinating because if you're bricking it at these policies, I'm wondering where you'd actually go.
If it's tuition-free university education you're afraid of, then Germany, France, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Iceland, Belgium, Spain, Austria, Greece, Argentina, India, Brazil, Mexico ... are out of the question.
If it's slightly increasing Corporation Tax to 26% from the all-time low rate the Tories have reduced it to since 2010, that rules out Canada, Japan, Australia, Colombia, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Pakistan, Nigeria, Costa Rica, Peru, Kenya, Sri Lanka, El Salvador, South Africa, Italy, Morocco, Chile, Monaco, Uganda, Cuba, Tunisia, Philippines, Namibia, Nepal, Jamaica, Guyana, DR Congo, Bangladesh ... (also many others already on the 'no go' list like France, Germany Belgium, Austria, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina ...)
Corbyn wants to roll out super-fast broadband, so if you're afraid of that, then Japan, South Korea, and Uruguay are out of the question too, because they've achieved almost 100% universal super-fast broadband coverage.
If it's a National Investment Bank that's making you quake in your boots in terror, then Norway is now absolutely, totally, out of the question because they've used their North Sea oil dividends to build up the wealthiest sovereign wealth fund on the planet, despite only having a population of 5 million.
Other countries with sovereign wealth funds that you'll have to add to your 'no go' list include Singapore, China, India, Hong Kong, UAE, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Angola, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Qatar, Malaysia, Iran, Trinidad and Tobago, Russia, Brunei, Azerbaijan, Vietnam, Gabon, Turkey, Oman, Bahrain, Algeria, Venezuela, Ireland, Botswana, Panama, Senegal, Iraq, Kiribati, *****lia, Equatorial Guinea, Ghana, Turkmenistan, Rwanda and Palestine (as well as many others already added to your growing 'no go' list like Germany, Mexico, Ireland, South Korea, Canada, Australia, France ...)
When it comes to Corbyn's plans to bring the railways back under public ownership, nations with public not-for-profit rail systems to avoid include the Netherlands, Poland, Lithuania, Slovenia, Slovakia, Romania, Latvia, Ukraine, Belarus, Portugal, Hungary (100% owned by Austria's state railway), Switzerland, Czech Republic, Estonia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Lithuania, Serbia (56%), Albania, Liechtenstein (100% owned by Austria's state railway), Bulgaria (many other countries with public railways are already on your 'no go' list, so make double or triple sure to avoid France, Germany, Austria, Italy, Russia, Ireland ...).
If publicly owned rail systems have you quaking in your boots, you'll also have to stay off trains in the UK, because under the Tories' crackpot rail privatisation agenda 74% of rail services are now operated by the state railways of foreign governments (Netherlands, Germany, China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Italy ...) so if nationalised trains scare the life out of you, don't dare set foot on a train in Great Britain.
You'll have noticed that I only bothered with Europe for the publicly-owned railways, and basically every country in Europe has been added to your 'no go' list, and I've not even got to publicly owned water supplies, and energy distribution grids which are absolutely commonplace across the aforementioned countries.
In some of the few countries on earth ever to have privatised their water supply (like Argentina and Bolivia) intense public resistance has resulted in eventual renationalisation. If not-for-profit drinking water upsets you, you're going to have to plan your travels very carefully indeed,
Also very few countries have ever allowed their entire electricity transmission and distribution network (about the most obvious natural monopoly it's possible to think of) to fall into private hands. One of the countries you've not had to add to your 'no go' list so far is Israel, but Israel Electric Corporation is government owned, so add them now.
You may be desperately holding out hope on one major nation I've not mentioned yet, thinking that they're definitely more right-wing than the UK, but you'd be wrong.
In the United States a lot of infrastructure and public investment is devolved to state level, where not-for-profit state operated water supplies and electricity distribution are commonplace. Also several US states have Sovereign Wealth Funds (Alaska, Texas, New Mexico, Wyoming, North Dakota, Alabama, Utah, Idaho, Louisiana, Oregon, West Virginia ...). The US colony of Puerto Rico has a government owned electricity supply too, so you can't hope to get in there on a technicality either.
I'm afraid that if Jeremy Corbyn's policies are too scary for you, you're going to have to stay away from the United States, because of their frighteningly 'communist' tendencies.
You may also have noticed that I've forgotten to mention Scotland (free education, not-for-profit water) Northern Ireland (public trains), and Wales (not-for-profit water), so add them now.
The Isle of Man is also out of question for their state owned railway too, just in case you were wondering.
So it turns out that if you're terrified of Jeremy Corbyn's policies then you'd better stay in England for the rest of your life, avoiding the rail network, hugging a picture of Margaret Thatcher, continually checking for "Reds Under the Bed!", and praying that the Tories never, ever, lose an election.
If you're afraid of Jeremy Corbyn's economic policies, I'm afraid you're pretty much the dictionary definition of a narrow-minded little Englander aren't you?"
Apols if it offends but he just about covers all the key deomsitc policies.....