somerset
New member
Yawn.....post code snobbery, fishing, to be near other torys etc etc.
Yawn.....post code snobbery, fishing, to be near other torys etc etc.
Historically, the human race chose places to live based on how suitable they were. And they didn't live in flood plains, unless they were prepared to move away at time of flooding. The human race has lost its common sense, don't blame the government. But I agree 100% about the foreign aid, stop it for now till we've sorted out our own country, then we'll be in a better position to help the rest of the world.
interesting but far out debate that claims the floods are deliberate to kill off farm land so they sell it off for fracking.
http://www.ishtarsgate.com/forum/sh...ding-of-the-Somerset-Levels&p=27845#post27845
Have to agree with those saying if you don't want to be flooded then don't buy a house in an area liable to flooding. Those buying a property should always pay for a decent solicitor who will complete all the due diligence for getting this sort of information. From that point it is your choice ( and the mortgage lenders ) whether to proceed and take the risk. If you do proceed I fail to see why the state should assist when you are, unsurprisingly, flooded.
Yawn.....
According to local farmers the rivers haven't been dredged properly for 30 years. Yet we give £1 billion to India over 5 years, and their Finance Minister turns round and says they don't need it, describing it as "peanuts". Bad choices in government.
Yes, it get's quite tiresome all these middle class types in their massive houses in the country moaning because all of a sudden the flood planes they live on......err.....have become flooded.
Don't worry, there are plenty of lower class types in their two up two down terrace houses who are also underwater on the levels.....does that help you take your bigoted head out of the sands of inverted snobbery?....does it?...... I suspect not.
I see no bigotry in my post.....just an objective observation. Direct your anger at the authorities like most others are doing.
All well and good, and this is often a reasonable angle to take. But it typifies what I see as the "I'm all right jack" type view from the cosy South East. We live in a house which is at least 200 metres from a river and, I would guess, about 50 metres above the level of the river. We are not in any danger of flooding from the river. However, down here in Somerset it has rained virtually non-stop for two months. The fields are sodden - any rainfall just washes off into the roads. The ditches are no longer maintained, the drains around here can't cope (some are cracked, a lot are blocked). In our case, a new development added around 50 houses to the village about 10 years ago, and the developer failed to install soak-aways. The local council has been powerless to take any action, it seems. On the Saturday of the Reading game I spent 5 hours frantically keeping flood water away from our front door (hence missing the match!). There are LOADS of people in our position.....we're not on the Somerset Levels, but many parts of the county, and elsewhere in the South West, are really badly affected. It won't get on the news, but it's a huge issue for lots of people. I don't think we're asking for much....just for the various local authorities to do their job. The consequences of NOT doing so are massive insurance claims, and higher insurance bills for hundreds of thousands (if not millions).
Sure we did historically but surely in modern times we don't have to limit ourselves to the high ground because we now possess the ability to engineer solutions.
There are many places around the world where unsuitable land has been made habitable or suitable for agriculture, parts of Holland, New Orleans and Boston being a good examples. I accept not everywhere can be engineered too, but the fact remains that this part of Somerset was fine when it was managed and over the last 15 years or so the arrangements required to keep the levels dry have not been maintained.
Sort this out and we can stop using it as an example of climate change.
Because it is a completely irrelevant point to make in this context.You've ignored my point about giving £1 billion pounds to an ungrateful country.
You are the one bringing class bigotry into it you effin fool.......I suggest you do something constructive, take your blinkers off for once....stop bringing politics and class into every post you make.....you and that other self styled activist DIP,....two peas in a pod.....just donate a few quid into the relief fund.....it goes to help everyone, yes even poor people believe it or not.
Because it is a completely irrelevant point to make in this context.
But you can say the same thing about any spend - why pick on India, why not cut defence spending (after all they only kill people and don't actually produce anything), or services to old people (again a completely unproductive sector of society), or anything else......