1066familyman
Radio User
- Jan 15, 2008
- 15,233
i feel like you are making an argument about another issue, to try and divert away from the principle of this policy. yes, governments have woefully left this country with insufficient housing stock, but then the public would prefer not to have anything developed within a mile of them.
And I feel you are deliberately neglecting to answer the question I asked, just like the rest of the people who delight in bashing any kind of benefit claimant whilst conveniently forgetting into whose pockets huge amounts of those taxpayer payed for benefits are going in to.
With your track record I'm surprised you haven't jumped on my point about subsidising private landlords/landladies via housing benefit just like you do whenever working tax credits and subsidising big business is mentioned.
I actually answered the question by saying in principle I would agree with this policy if the proceeds went straight back into meeting social housing needs, but history has taught me to be extremely sceptical about that actually happening, and I know full well what this particular Governments agenda always is.
It's also a valid question as to what constitutes a 'fair market rent'. The current private sector rent market I feel is way out of hand because successive Governments have clearly failed a hell of a lot of people on housing whilst helping some do very nicely out of it indeed by the simple rule of supply and demand.