Setting the haves against the have-nots. This is absolute text-book nasty party isn't it?
As always with Osborne, it's what happens when you make a wallpaper shop tea boy the Chancellor
Setting the haves against the have-nots. This is absolute text-book nasty party isn't it?
There are plenty of examples - I provided one the first page of this thread. A person I know with a family income over £60K per year and paying £138 pw rent living in a council house. There are people who need that council house far more than him. (He's off to New Zealand for 3 weeks this autumn so maybe he could let a family in temporary B&B accommodation borrow it for a bit whilst he's on holiday). Or the late Bob Crow - income of £145'000 but said he had 'no moral obligation' to move out of his council house. The system is broken all the while people hold this attitude.
Too many people feel 'entitled' - especially when other people are paying for their entitlement. Welfare should be a safety net - not a free ride.
it also answers your challenge to Bry Nylon, on page 4: "A small proportion (8%) of all social renters had a gross household income in excess of £700 a week". thats about 296,000 households in social housing with income over £36k. not alot if a couple to be fair, though more than an awful lot too (and pretty decent outside London).
so just to be clear, Dandyman would you rather the social housing goes to those with that income or those with say half that? (we'll assume that you'd prefer both to get social housing but right now that isnt an option).
Setting the haves against the have-nots. This is absolute text-book nasty party isn't it?
I rather like this: http://www.redpepper.org.uk/mythbuster-home-truths-about-housing/
Especially when compared with arrogant twaddle like this: http://www.adamsmith.org/blog/welfare-pensions/social-housing-is-too-subsidised/
it also answers your challenge to Bry Nylon, on page 4: "A small proportion (8%) of all social renters had a gross household income in excess of £700 a week". thats about 296,000 households in social housing with income over £36k. not alot if a couple to be fair, though more than an awful lot too (and pretty decent outside London).
so just to be clear, Dandyman would you rather the social housing goes to those with that income or those with say half that? (we'll assume that you'd prefer both to get social housing but right now that isnt an option).
You need to check your facts, people who earn over 60,000 should already be paying market rates in line with the private sector. Anyone can pluck out a few people to prove a point. What you need to do to provide fact based evidence, tell us how many people who live in Social housing are high earners.
8% of all social renters had a gross household income in excess of £700 a week. That's about 296,000 households in social housing with income over £36k.
This is a good summary of how housing is commonly allocated: file:///C:/Users/Andy/Downloads/rehousing_leaflet_final__2__NO_PRINT_MARKS.pdf
With a limited supply clearly it should go to those most in need but the question is based on a false premise. Both Labour and Conservative governments build thousands of council homes in the decases after 1945. Not only is it possible to do so again but to do so would make housing available to vastly more people, serve as a boost to employment and business, and decrease pressure on the private housing market currently reflected in exploitative rents.
1.2 million immigrants in social housing is also beyond a joke whilst there is a single British person on the list
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukn...-given-social-housing-in-the-last-decade.html
I don't think you're an ARSonist, more like an ARSEonist
Why don't you go and visit a single mum with 3 kids living in a single room B&B accommodation and tell her that she can't have a council-provided family home because a software engineer pulling in £52K a year (plus his wife with her own clothes shop) need it more.
afraid i cant access your local drive i'd rather your opinion of how the system is working in practice, not how some officials think it supposed to work. I agree completely on the solution you are proposing, as its clear to a blind man we need more housing built.
Hello IDSThere are plenty of examples - I provided one the first page of this thread. A person I know with a family income over £60K per year and paying £138 pw rent living in a council house. There are people who need that council house far more than him. (He's off to New Zealand for 3 weeks this autumn so maybe he could let a family in temporary B&B accommodation borrow it for a bit whilst he's on holiday). Or the late Bob Crow - income of £145'000 but said he had 'no moral obligation' to move out of his council house. The system is broken all the while people hold this attitude.
Too many people feel 'entitled' - especially when other people are paying for their entitlement. Welfare should be a safety net - not a free ride.
**** off yourself you loser, sharp end my arse, for that i read ' you work in some crap job that alllows you to feel good about yourself while coasting along doing very little' there are 1.2 million plus foreign born people in social housing, including the asylum seeker from the congo who lived below me in london, who was so in fear of his life that he went back there 3 times a fvcking year.Oh do **** off Bushy. I bet the nearest you've been to this country's immigration system is watching an episode of some fly on the wall customs programme on Dave TV or something.
I'm on the sharp end of both our immigration system and our welfare system, whilst being in full-time work may I add, and it's not the party you and you're reactionary mates are lead to believe.
Ok bean brain, tell me what Osborne's economic qualifications are ? And not made up ones like Duncan Smith's either