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Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
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Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
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The benefit cap does not apply to those who are working, so this has had the effect of many claimants moving into work (even if part time) or them moving out of expensive places like London. I broadly support the benefit cap in principle, but on the one hand, as Boris Johnson said, it's like Ethnic Cleansing of the poor. On the other hand, many, many working people would love to live in London, but simply cannot afford it. Quote:
Up until the introduction of Supplementary Benefit, there was an a condition that all claimants had to meet in addition to all the usual rules. A person had to be a fit and proper person of good character who was suitable to be given assistance from public funds. This dealt with those who satisfied all the rules, but were taking advantage. For example, a woman and her partner have children. Her partner gets killed in an industrial accident at work. Another woman has had ten children, all to different fathers and has never worked. As it stands, both would be entitled to state assistance. The reintroduction of this rule would deal with those taking the urine, cut costs in the long term and help to eradicate the wasters in society. This, however, would not be without it's problems. The children of underclass lifestyle families could not be left to starve on the street, as it wouldn't be their fault. They would have to be taken into care, which would cost more in the long run. However, once word got out that this was new policy, i'm certain that there would be a massive reduction of these types of claimant. This would help to restore public confidence in the welfare benefit system and stop decent people being tarred with the same brush. Quote:
The restrictions on people getting it in the higher tax band is start, as we had the ludicrous position where poor families effectively lost their Child Benefit entitlement because it is taken into account in the calculation of means tested benefits, whilst a millionaire could keep theirs in full! Abolishing it would save money and allow extra money to be targetted at (responsible) poor families. Quote:
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Even if they work to pay for them, they are still getting a good deal. By this I mean that they will be entitled to free healthcare, education etc. |
Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
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Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
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*around two million.... |
Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
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At the same time, council houses were being sold and building new homes was halted, meaning less affordable housing was available to rehouse them. Having said that, it was nowhere near as bad as it is today! ---------- Post added at 18:29 ---------- Previous post was at 18:27 ---------- Quote:
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Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
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What to do about these people ultimately has to be decided by govt. but we have to face up to the reality that unless something is done the situation will get worse and children will suffer. Education has to be part of the solution but that's obviously a long term process and whatever else has to be done will have to balance the need to be tough on the parents with trying to protect their unfortunate offspring. |
Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
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and Dave is doing it all over again. nobody has security in their jobs at all now. you could be out of work tomorrow or next week. they're shutting down faster than what the pubs were. and it's all going to happen all over again. one second we're booming (when it suits Dave) the next we're not (when it suits Dave) |
Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
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- Child Benefit was introduced to increase the birthrate after WWII. - Thatcher cut benefits for the under 25's to encourage young people to stay at home until they got a job. - MIRAS and the Right To Buy scheme were introduced to encourage home ownership as this was viewed as a way to make people more than responsible and take a pride in their environment (as well as buy working class votes). - The present Government believe that marriage is a desirable situation, so have reintroduced the Married Persons Tax Allowance. And so the list goes on. It really is time that the freeloaders were dealt with as it's getting out of hand. There are some families where the Grandparents, Parents and their adult offspring have NEVER worked. I personally know of one woman who has many different children to various different fathers. When she proudly referred to the DWP as her "free bank", I told her that she had reduced her genetalia to nothing more than a urinal for mens sperm. |
Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
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Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
2 Attachment(s)
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Attachment 25802 Attachment 25803 http://www.cableforum.co.uk/board/da...AASUVORK5CYII= link to source - excel spreadsheet from the ONS website The numbers seem pretty clear to me (despite the size of the attachments!). Cheers Grim |
Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
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You cannot assume that everyone is in the same boat as you describe above, I know more people who have been in a job for a long time than those who have not? |
Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
"Right to buy" in the news again.
"Council houses are being sold off on the cheap to people who immediately rent them back to housing benefit tenants, according to an Independent investigation that exposes a new “Right to Buy” scandal. In echoes of Margaret Thatcher’s drive to force local authorities in the 1980s to sell their properties at a cut price, the Government’s new initiative to encourage councils to sell their houses is having a disastrous effect in allowing social housing to be exploited for personal profit." Cardigan. |
Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
Told you.
Dave's getting it all in before he gets evicted. it's all going to end in tears. Quote:
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Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
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The DPS of the venue then ordered her to leave (apparently she had already had a warning for threatening another woman in the toilets). Quote:
Many of these ex council houses are now being let out in the private rented sector, at a much higher cost to the Housing Benefit bill. Also, when no social housing is available for those that the council has a legal duty to rehouse, they get put into bed & breakfast accomodation. This costs hundreds of pounds a week. Total madness due to political ideology. |
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So there are swings and roundabouts - those ex-council houses are available to be rented, which they weren't before.... |
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