Stevie Boy
Well-known member
at the moment id love to have £53 a week to live on, after all my bills have been paid, and the ex wife sucking me dry i have a total of less than £10 a week to fed me and my kids when i have them
Having now read an article in The Guardian about this interview, I see that the claimant had £53 a week available AFTER rent and other bills were paid. That is £53 per week for food, or bus fares maybe if job hunting etc..
Friend of my wife claims to spend £30 per week to feed her AND her partner, granted she buys 'value' products, and shops post 8pm to get the best special offers, and actually home cooks rather than but ready made products. £53 a week is starting to sound quite achievable.
I think the government have caused a divide within the UK population. Middle class workers look down on non workers. I have seen it myself. When I was on the dole. People would call me a Jeremy Kyle Scrounger.
I'd like to know where 25K+ comes from. When I was out of work for about a year. There was no way i was getting that kinda money.
If he or his tory cronies lived on a council estate they would hang. Themseves after a week.
May be. But I'm now spending £25+ a week on electric and another £25 on gas.
As I stated in my earlier post, £53 after rent and other bills (gas, leccy, water etc) were paid.
Petition | Iain Duncan Smith: Iain Duncan Smith to live on £53 a week. | Change.org
Put your money where your mouth Is an lead by example you pompous git. If he thinks It's so easy to live on It he should prove It.
Many do, and receive other benefits too.
I have been in receipt of benefits back in the 80's, pretty soon the mortgage was covered, access to free dental care etc and although I didnt take the free school dinners and free school trips etc it was there.
Was it easy, yeah to a point compared with trying to turn a profit in business at that time, I acknowledged this was only a stop gap and I was pleasantly surprised at how supportive the benefit system was.
But I found work, not a great job and worked very hard and soon found permanent employment at a level that fulfilled my needs.
I wasnt expecting a thriving career within the benefit system, it is not meant for that.
Good, hope they starve if they can't survive. Under Labour people on benefits was living a better life than tax payers.
Sounds like how it should work to me. You have a sticky patch, the govt gives you a hand to make sure things don't go to shit for you then when things pick up you get back in the game and off the support.
I suppose what I dislike is that 'they' can find the one in a million person who has never worked a day in their life but claims £6 million a year in benefits or the one go has caviar topped pizzas delivered every night AT THE TAXPAYER'S EXPENSE and present hat as the norm. I don't think it's like that - people I know who have been in that situation have had a horrible time and I wouldn't swap places with them for all the caviar topped pizza in Britain.
The fundamental question must be why? Are we really looking to save money or are we just looking to teach these 'oiks' a bit of a lesson?
I do think that IDS was ill-advised to say that (understatement), but a line has to be drawn somewhere.
However, they are chasing after the wrong people to plug the deficit.
I'd like to know where 25K+ comes from. When I was out of work for about a year. There was no way i was getting that kinda money.
We have all been conned here, You should only get benefits if you can't work, people who work shouldn't get benefits - they shouldn't need them!
Mixing up the two allows the issue to be clouded, it allows big corporations to avoid paying liveable wage rates whilst also destroying competition from small businesses and it allows governments to avoid their responsibility to provide jobs and a welfare system.