THIS week's latest Brexit shenanigans in parliament have led me to one, inescapable conclusion: that we are doomed.

We have a totally intransigent Prime Minister, who is so obsessed with pandering to right wing of her party that she would rather watch the country collapse than risk losing their favour, along with an opposition leader who walks out of Brexit meetings despite calling for a cross-party consensus.

Put simply, whether you are a Conservative or a Labour voter, all you have is two cults, two sides of the same coin.

One one side, you find disaster capitalism under the Tories while on the other you find disaster socialism led by Corbyn and McDonnell, both united only in the knowledge that the worse things get for the average British voter, the more likely they are to be successful in pursuing a radical agenda.

British politics has been hijacked by two groups of extremists, and most of us who occupy the ground in-between have no-where to go, and the news from Westminster just gets more and more bleak by the day. I have no more faith in British politics, there is nothing to inspire me.

Where is the centre ground? Where is the party for people who believe in progressive, consensus politics? A world in which populism and demagoguery are treated as legitimate political discourse is not the world we should be living in as a supposedly advanced, reasonable generation.

A perfect example of this is when Dominic Raab, in an interview with LBC, claimed that the 'Establishment' is dislocated from the people.

If the 'Establishment' supports remaining, what are Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson, Jacob Rees-Mogg and Nigel Farage classed as?

If Brexit really were some kind of anti-establishment crusade to save the people of Britain, these people would definitely not be the ones leading it.

One day we might return to sensible politics, I really hope so, but there is nothing this week which suggests that will happen any time soon.