Neville's Breakfast
Well-known member
Well then the answer is rent caps. I'd take that.
You beat me to it ! I was adding exactly that to my post when you answered.
Well then the answer is rent caps. I'd take that.
Not funny old boy, even by your own high comedic standards.
Well then the answer is rent caps. I'd take that.
Clearly there IS charity in Germany, but we give over 3 times as much as they do, per head (and 5 times as much as France).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_charitable_donation
We rely far too much on charity donations here, primarily because Conservative governments don't tend to do sensible taxation.
Well then the answer is rent caps. I'd take that.
all the more painful where there are sites, that they are resisted.
Typical nasty bollocks straight out of the neo-liberal Daily Mail reading party playbook. Food is "cheaper" based on average income, but that doesn't mean there isn't an underclass who struggles to afford it.
I'd also challenge the idea that anyone "poor" shouldn't own a mobile or access to the internet in the modern world, seriously ?
It used to be six kids, three fathers and a wide screen TV, but now you've lowered it to a telephone and a cheap data plan.
I know plenty of people who have sold phones, televisions and other kit to be able to feed their kids.
Access to the internet, even if that is just on a cheap smart phone could mean the difference between staying sane or going over the edge. Single mother of three on an estate miles from friends or family? Is it really too much to allow her to whatsapp her Mum or mates? Or is she expected to sit night after night at the kitchen table counting her food vouchers and punishing herself for not trying harder. If you want to make sure someone spends all their income on alcohol, that's quite an effective way to go about it.
How about contacting the fathers to see if they could spare a few Bob
Regards
DF
Not an unreasonable question. There’s not one cover-all answer but some reasons include the parent being authority adverse so they won’t approach a court to get maintenance, they may be incapable of filling out the forms, afraid of retribution from a violent ex-partner or afraid of facing the father in court. The father may be in prison, have no income, dead, evasive, uncooperative.
Many, many reasons.
There are undoubtedly people like that. The problem is that you are suggesting that the majority of food poverty problems are caused by people like that. They aren't. Don't take my word for it - do your own research.No, no, no , we know the types that are happy to open their legs then hold their hands out for
a government hand out and also claim how hard done by they are ,the sperm donors need to be held to account not the tax payer
Regards
DF
No, no, no , we know the types that are happy to open their legs then hold their hands out for
a government hand out and also claim how hard done by they are ,the sperm donors need to be held to account not the tax payer
Regards
DF
I’m sorry you feel that way. In any welfare system, there’ll always be some people who play it. But that is the price we pay for having a safety net that works for the majority that need it.
I’m far more concerned about already very wealthy people dodging tax and fiddling expenses than someone with barely any money diddling a bit off the state to feed themselves. And if they get a beer and a pack of smokes out of it? Give a ****. I hope it brings them a few moments enjoyment to be honest.
Yes, you are right. There is little point arguing about who owns the existing stock, except to say that perhaps those who are sympathetic to right-wing market economics would do well to admit that those policies created the problem in large part. Letting people buy council owned houses at a massive discount without replacing that stock has been a disaster.
So why doesn't more housing stock ever get built? Well the answer is simple - home owners tend to vote Tory, but building more houses in the vicinity of those people tends to upset those very same people. Therefore, the Tories do nothing for fear of upsetting their core support - they are like rabbits caught in headlights.
Why is it such a common thing nowadays to assume anyone who disagrees with their own opinion, must be stupid?The one positive to dwindling home ownership..... less tory voters in future. I am sure they will still some how manage to hood wink the poor into voting for them.
8.4m across the whole of the UK. Not sure how Worthing shapes up as a percentage as I dont know what the population is these days but it does seem very high to me, and you are right, very sad.
This... It's no coincidence that billionaire owning media tycoons are trying to get us to punch down rather than up.
Single mums, social security scammers however you define the have nots do not even scrape the barrel of the large sums of cash that the super rich avoid, but lets just continue to doff our caps and tug our forelocks to them whilst continuing to kick the poor. Humanity baffles me. Must be because they are an easy target.
In my opinion, roofs over peoples heads should never be considered an "investment" opportunity. I live in Worthing, have rented a place for the past 4 years and I've just worked out that in that time I've paid aprox £36k in rent for a one bedroom flat. I COULD afford to buy at that price (approx £750 a month), but the hurdles that are put in place to get a mortgage for low and medium income earners are such that it is impossible. And, even if you can scrape together a deposit and find a mortgage, you're constantly trying to bid against buy to letters who have deeper pockets than you and outbid you. It's a bit of a shitshow in this country and things DO need to change