mikeyjh
Well-known member
So just blame the middle classes for this problem then ?
Not what I'm saying in any way, I'm simply pointing out that it isn't the poor that have the great sense of entitlement.
So just blame the middle classes for this problem then ?
Indeed it would, I cannot argue with your statement.... but that strategy and outcome, I feel, is based on a stable internal workforce, not the largely new transient workforce we are trying to accommodate aswell.
That's a silly statement - We're talking about people struggling to eat, not about those in the middle classes whingeing about being able to get on the 'property ladder'. I suspect that, to the people using food banks, the idea of home ownership is not something they can even dream of right now.
These people have no cloth to cut.
I have to say that I didn't realise the scale of the problem. I just googled "food banks near me", and there are four in a 10 mile radius - Farnham and Fleet being the nearest to me and these are affluent areas. I shall be donating food from now on, now that I know where they are.
More than a million have used UK food banks in the past year
Yep, because the Tory government is systematically removing money from 97% of the population and placing it in the coffers of 3% of the population. I hope we all wake up to this theft and get shot of them before too long.
How about them cutting this cloth
1 Smoking
2 Sky TV
3 Mobile phones
4 Sophisticated computers
5 Big screen TVs
6 Alcohol
7 New (not second hand) furniture
8 Designer clothes
9 Foreign holidays
10 Cars
Fair bit to work on there.
Aaaahhh,... the old 'chicken and egg' scenario,..... not easy to answer either way.But as an economy grows it can, and will actually need, a "new transient workforce."
It isnt the middle classes that head for Wonga in their tens of thousands to fund a new 50 inch TV or an all inclusive holiday to the Med, ... is it?
More than a million have used UK food banks in the past year
Yep, because the Tory government is systematically removing money from 97% of the population and placing it in the coffers of 3% of the population. I hope we all wake up to this deliberate theft and get shot of them before too long.
Aaaahhh,... the old 'chicken and egg' scenario,..... not easy to answer either way.
It isnt the middle classes that head for Wonga in their tens of thousands to fund a new 50 inch TV or an all inclusive holiday to the Med, ... is it?
How about them cutting this cloth
1 Smoking
2 Sky TV
3 Mobile phones
4 Sophisticated computers
5 Big screen TVs
6 Alcohol
7 New (not second hand) furniture
8 Designer clothes
9 Foreign holidays
10 Cars
11 Play stations and games
Fair bit to work on there.
Very easy for someone from Bishop Stortford to say. Maybe you should take a look around the rest of the country.
Of course I dont know for certain, but I wouldnt mind betting that many of these food banks were in existence before May 2010.
There's not much to say to any of that, simply that you really do not understand the reality of the UK today. To have such ill informed prejudices against poor people? I think it's a sad reflection on us all....
Of course I dont know for certain, but I wouldnt mind betting that many of these food banks were in existence before May 2010.
I came from a poor family of 8 kids, but my dad worked everyday of his life as a hospital porter, so probably on or near the lowest of wage earners. We did this by managing the income against the outgoings. Food and heat were top of the list - after that EVERYTHING was a luxury.
I dont think any of us kids had the sense of entitlement that exist today.
I came from a poor family of 8 kids, but my dad worked everyday of his life as a hospital porter, so probably on or near the lowest of wage earners. We did this by managing the income against the outgoings. Food and heat were top of the list - after that EVERYTHING was a luxury.
I dont think any of us kids had the sense of entitlement that exist today.