I am not involved in the Labour Party leadership election except as an interested  observer. However I think this Facebook posting by Javier Farje, which the Labour Party Forum decided not to publish,  deserves a wider audience. (Javier has explained that he meant no offence in his reference to troskyists and apologises to anyone who took offence.)
What was supposed to be a debate among candidates and different 
positions within the Labour Party has become a war against Jeremy 
Corbyn. The insults, the threats, the intimidation.
I joined the LP 
because, for the first time since I moved to the UK 27 years ago and 
became a British citizen in 1996, I felt that I could become a member of
 a party that, despite the different approaches to
 the issues that most concern our society: unemployment, poverty, the 
neglect of the manufacturing sector, among other things, at least agrees
 in the need to discuss the best way to make Britain a fairer place. 
I 
am neither a socially inadequate trotskyist entryist nor am I a 
disguised tory determined to wreck the LP. Like thousands of new 
members, young and old, native and, like me, adopted British citizens, I
 am a person who feels invigorated by the speech of a politician who, 
after many years of hearing other LP politicians, speaks his mind, 
without gimmicks or focus groups. 
As a journalist with almost 40 years 
of experience, 14 of them working for a major British and international 
broadcasting organisation, I know when I see a bad economic programme or
 an illegal war. So when Jeremy Corbyn challenges the current post-Cold 
War 'consensus' or the levels of poverty that can be easily be avoided 
if we increased taxes by a mere 0.5% to the richest people in the 
country, then I have to agree.
What is the response of the other 
candidates and their informal spokespeople? The Alan Johnsons, the 
Alistair Campbells, the Tony Blairs, the Peter Mandelsons of this world?
 A better programme, a valid alternative? No. The threat. The insult. 
To
 suggest that the election of a new party leader should be postponed 
because some people do not like one candidate is dishonest and 
undemocratic. The threat of an internal coup if Jeremy Corbyn wins 
reminds me Latin America, the continent where I was born, with its dirty
 tricks and its sometimes sleazy political system. It is shameful. I 
didn't join the LP for this. 
Burnham, Cooper, Kendal, convince me that 
what you have to offer is better than what Jeremy Corbyn offers. Don't 
patronise me with the idea that we would be going back to the 80s. And 
do not insult my intelligence suggesting that people like me do not know
 what we are doing. If any of you convinces me, I am happy to change my 
mind and vote for one of you. You have not done that so far. 
And that is
 not Jeremy Corbyn's fault.