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Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
Social clensing started, they moving poor people to B&B's outside of london.
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Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
Strange - when I left the RAF (through no fault of my own), and had to give up a three-bedroomed house and move into a bedsit in Leeds (because that was all I could afford), I don't remember it be called "Social Cleansing"....
Can I just state for the record that I find the use of the phrase "Social Cleansing" totally abhorrent, and Jon Cruddas should know better (and I think he does) than to use a term that most people immediately connect to "Ethnic Cleansing" - it's a very cheap emotive shot, and below the standards I thought Jon Cruddas had. |
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What else would you call policy creation knowing it will result in a near certain level of poverty driven premature death ? As for enforcement with a whip, what else do you call forcing people who are no longer comercially viable in a capitalst state to work placements who have become ill and disabled at the hands of our industrious state with the threat of removal of their benefit ? Nothing melodramatic here, past experience with various government departments tells me I should look to the worst case scenario and judging by the words of the current administration this is perhaps going to be the worst administration since Hitler. "Britain needs Leadership not Partisanship" proof we are not in this together by Mr Camerons own words by trying to set himself and his so called coalition apart from the rest of the nation, further more I put it these measures are in fact "an act of blatant political partisanship" as political leadership is nothing without a political cause to look towards, however this was to me a clear and concise message now he is in power he cares not for the interests of the general public or their support in these measures or anyone else that dares to stand against his parties policies. And when the going gets tough, lets just point our fingers at the failings of the previous government to detract from our own bad policies. |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
Calm down, calm down - you'll blow a blood vessel.
btw, I invoke Godwin's Law on this. |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
On one hand you have a type of person like Hugh, who reminds us at any opportunity to let us know just how good his life is and how well he's doing, from how big his projects are and how much they are worth right down to his lovely sounding diet of fine food, wine and single malts. Though saying that, I can't blame him one bit, he's earnt it so why not. I'd say he's smug but that's how the other half live so fair enough and I can accept that no probs.
And on that same hand those type of people really don't know how it feels it live in fear when things are already far more worse than they can already comprehend. I suppose 'those' other people (the genuine sick etc) are just collateral damage and it's okay and seemingly totally acceptable to be ignored at the same time. As long as they are okay and their lifestyles aren't too affected, the others don't stand a chance. I do have my own thoughts, and they'll probably go against those more affluent obviously, but my opinions at the end will mean less than the words from my others. That's how it feels. I don't care much about the causes, the bankers, politicians etc, I care about how I'm going to live or if I can, I don't have the luxury of the blame game to worry about. I now feel at a point where I already feel worthless, now I will have to justify that and be told that I am now fit and healthy (miraculously) because I can turn on a tap, pick up a coin, reach in my top pocket and for me to be able to that, everything else doesn't matter. And if that's the case then how I feel now is just the beginning of the end. (This is in no disrespect to Hugh I must add). |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
one thing for sure is the lib dems are dead.
they werent voted in to savage the public sector and attack the poor. |
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For many years in the 80s and 90s we as a family went without, because we ploughed everything we had into our house and family - so no holidays (except for visiting family in other parts of the country), no going out for meals, and very few "toys". Fortunately, in the last ten years or so, I have progressed up the career ladder, and have some spare money (well, up to this year I did - with two kids at University, we are eating in to our savings), so this has enabled my wife and I to enjoy life a bit more, for which I feel no shame - it's one of the reasons why I work long hours. I do not think I am better than anyone else, just slightly better off - I refuse to feel guilty because I have been able to do reasonably well for myself and family, but I do not think less of others who have not been able to. "One size fits all" condemnations are not appropriate, whichever part of the socio-economic or political scale one is; they just lead to deceptive ad hominem attacks and sweeping simplistic prejudical judgements, imho. |
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He may deny it, but an exodus will happen. |
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Just repeating it doesn't make it so.....
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This will reduce rents, supply of housing will go up as there will be less 'Palace de Welfare' in high cost areas and demand will drop as welfare won't cover them. This is entirely fair and appropriate. It is an insult to those tax payers who live in the 'burbs as they cannot afford the city that their taxes are paying welfare to cover the rents of people in precisely the areas they cannot afford. |
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Why should anyone be paid benefits so they can live in an area they could not afford if they were working? What incentive is there for these people to get back into work? As Ig says: it's an insult to the 50% of the UK population that earn less than that. Given the levels of deprivation that we have in the UK we really have worthier causes to spend this money on. |
Re: The Comprehensive Spending Review Thread
It being so late I'm feeling rather lyrical.
Welfare is a safety net, to catch people when they fall and stop them hitting the ground. It must never be a trampoline that puts people in places they wouldn't normally go. Housing Benefit is the big thing here. Some who previously made 300GBP/week couldn't have afforded 400GBP/week rent, why should they be able to live in a property of that cost when others are paying for it for them? As a disclaimer though I think that benefits such as HB and JSA for the unemployed should be paid as a sunsetting % of the previous 2 years income prior to becoming unemployed and this fund should be ringfenced, that way at least some of an individual's taxes feel more like an 'insurance' and less like throwing money into a bottomless pit and people neither gain nor lose massively from spending a brief period on welfare, with the sunsetting encouraging a return to work sooner rather than later. |
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