![]() |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
But it can turn out that we can keep having 'cuts' and it will all be in the guise of saving money and fixing what's broke.
it'll be like the first ever government that can do what they want. and people will suffer as a result, but it's all for the best? they won't have to look after the old and vunurable anymore. the old and vulnurable will understand that they have to go without for the sake of the country. I think at the moment people are ok about it as it's not actually affecting them. but give it time and who knows what will happen. |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
|
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
Quote:
These policies have a lot in them to try and mitigate their impact on many of the most vulnerable. Again also note my comments on the scale of these cuts, for all the comments about how massive they are the only reason they are massive is because of the amount of extra people and money added to the public sector. They are only rolling the state back to where it was in 2006-7 which, again, was hardly doom and gloom time. |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
I have to say whats more amusing than being proved right is how easy it apears to have been for the government to pass the buck of the failings in particular with reference to poor econimics of past governance from all parties onto the general populous and in turn, turn that populous against each other, absolutely remarkable, however it has always been said, never underestimate the stupidity of the general public, I guess on that point I have failed too.
As a disabled couple with 2 teenage children on approximately 19k a year including housing plus low level dla where child benefit is deducted from our suplemetary benefits to be forced to live in fear like we are now is abhorent, if this is a modern civil society then I would hate to meet its less civil counterparts. I thought we won the second world war, must have read that wrong aswell. |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
my very cut down thoughts are.
this is an agenda against the poor, particurly the unemployed poor. benefit cuts during a recession is not common sense as people cant be forced into jobs that dont exist, and in particular attacking those who cannot work due to ill circumstances. cameron has outright lied claiming the richest are taking the biggest hit as % of income when published figures disagree. clearly he is assuming people will just take his word for it. What he means is richest workers pay more as a % than the poorest workers so basically the tories are discounting welfare claimants as people. Similiar to that they disregard the welfare buget a sa budget as the chancellor claimed the budget cuts were reduced by adding more to welfare cuts, he forgot welfare is a budget. if we were in true financial crisis then things like the nhs we wouldnt be able to afford to ringfence. The fact we can shows they have overhyped the situation to push their agenda. We have an elitist government now. one has to wonder how thatcher can get admitted for a week with flu, yet anyone else off the street would be laughed at for wanted a bed for flu. in my hospital people dont get admitted even after surgery. |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
Quote:
---------- Post added at 14:55 ---------- Previous post was at 14:44 ---------- Quote:
Re the NHS, it is all about balance - what will affect/benefit most people; it's not binary, it's fuzzy. Re Thatcher - two things; 1) when my mum-in-law had flu (she's 82), she was admitted to hospital, and 2) You will probably find that Mrs T has Private Health, so she is not being a drain on your taxes/the NHS ;) |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
if they are including benefit claimants then cameron lied or is misinformed.
|
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
Or you have misread/misinterpreted what was said.....
|
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
Quote:
the way I understood it cameron said the highest earners pay the biggest % of income towards the deficit. Have I misunderstood that? |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
2 Attachment(s)
If you could point out to me where you read it, I am happy to discuss.....
Update - found the link - BBC, and there's an explanation on BBC's Stephanie Flander's blog why the Government and the Treasury think that way (it's disputed by others). Quote:
http://www.cableforum.co.uk/board/at...1&d=1287948116 and on page 100 http://www.cableforum.co.uk/board/at...2&d=1287948267 |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
Quote:
The corporations, the politicians and the bankers, the countrys tax money bailed them out of bankrupcy and now its the population being penalised, hundreds of thousands thrown onto to the dole que through redundancies and other job loss methods whilst those putting people out of work are then pointing their fingers at the people who have suffered at the hands of corporate industry and political failure, blatantly accusing them of scrounging and whipping up a frenzy of deflected contempt that should with very good reason be directed at those who played their part in this and benefited. The bankers in essence committed fraud on an unprecedented scale of which house prices have still yet to fall to an affordable level for the majority of regular working couples as stated by Mr Osbourne himself on an appproxiamte average of 29k net per year and 10k in thier pocket would struggle and rightly so to obtain a responsible mortgage above 91k so even with approximately 10% deposit under normal mortgage criteria the vast majority of proffessional couples could not afford a house above £105k, it is the bankers who should be writing off with full impunity any debts arising as a direct result of their folly especially where secured lending went beyond normal mortgage lending criteria, it is the bankers who should be investing responsibly into the countries future to ensure the people who can work will have sufficient placements of suitable employment and it is the politicians who should be ensuring the bankers fulfil their obligations, otherwise all the past decade has proved is the bankers and largest corporations can and will commit fraud any time they like as they are beyond reproach due to their sheer size and our politicians will do nothing but benefit from continued insider trading whilst patting their good buddy corporates on the back. We're in this together ? Like hell we are, I dont see those in power taking a paycut, I dont see those in power scrounging a second house of the tax payer handing it back to the country, I dont see those earning money on false pretences being threatened with job loss. Looks to me like they are after deflecting the blame away from themselves and hoping for a wider multicultural civil unrest whilst they sit pretty with their ammassed wealth. Hug a hoody ? Thats got to be the biggest joke of all because Mr Osbourne is round the corner waiting to shank them in the back, (This is just a variation on the phrase to be stabbed in the back and should not be taken litterally). Tough on crime tough on the causes of crime, another joke as we are about to see such an increased level of poverty it will without doubt raise crime levels exponentially. The impending increase in poverty is a direct result of the current governments policies, previous governments blunders, failings within the banking sector and overall general corporate greed. These are the people who should be footing the bill of their past discrssions, not the middle working classes or lower who can barely afford their home and regular billsand a general mediocre lifestyle. Any working family below a sultry income of say £50k or less simply should not be affected by any cutbacks, and those who have fallen foul to a wide variety of unfortunate circumstances as a direct result of our often abusive society, in particular the corporate sector and other workplaces should not ever be scapegoated, the general public should never allow themselves to be motivated to persecute those who have already had significant misfortunate brought upon them at no fault of their own, otherwise the government may aswell start supplying tickets to Switzerland instead (hence the reference to the second world war) as the drastic measures currently being implemented by the new government will almost certainly mount to some level of involuntary euthenasia. Its one thing to see if anything can be done to aid the more vulnerable people into a more fulfilling and contributary lifestyle, its something else to enforce it with a whip. |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
PLease note the final paragraph in the above post is incorrect and should begin:
"These are the people who should be footing the bill of their past indiscretions" Apologies for the error it was late at time of posting and I was unable to edit the post later. |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
Quote:
I actually agree with some of your points re the Bankers and House Price inflation, but when you descend into emotive harangues using terms like "involuntary euthanisia" and "enforce it with a whip", you are drifting off the beaches of reality and dabbling your feet in the shallow waters of fantasy (imho). What's your next proposition - that the Government are setting up "death panels" and "internment camps"? You may wish to contact Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh - they have said it all before...... btw, as I said before, I agree with some of your points re Bankers, but you seem to have missed out the flagrant over-spending by the previous Government of monies they (and the country) didn't have - or doesn't that fit in with your world-picture? |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
Hugh, you watched that dispatches that ignition linked to in the other thread? Shows the true face of the tories, not enforcing taxation on tax havens as a requirement for loans.
The "we all in this together" is a load of nonsense. |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
No, I haven't - I will try to watch it on Catch-Up or On Demand this week. Can I point you in the direction of the C4 comments page where one repondent states
Quote:
Can I point out that "The Tories" are not one amorphous mass - there are lots of differing viewpoints, just like in any large movement/organisation; I am a Tory, but I am a One-Nation lefty Wet fiscally conservative socially liberal Tory, who is poles apart for the Bone-Dry extreme monetarist Libertarians, who are poles apart from.... you get my drift. |
| All times are GMT. The time now is 21:01. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
All Posts and Content are © Cable Forum