Fair enough. I'll take your word for it and look forward to your defence of the comments @Simster and @Bold Seagull raised. Over to you.Not at all.
Fair enough. I'll take your word for it and look forward to your defence of the comments @Simster and @Bold Seagull raised. Over to you.Not at all.
You say tomatoes, I say tomatoes.And I will wager you that I would trust this government to make more sensible tax changes for the good of the population than the last lot.
And I don't believe for one minute that SKS and Reeves (who achieved a 2:1 at Oxford reading PPE!) aren't aware of the elasticity of CGT, however much you continue to snipe and moan about it.
I just have.Fair enough. I'll take your word for it and look forward to your defence of the comments @Simster and @Bold Seagull raised. Over to you.
Or more accurately, you post a load of crap, it gets picked apart, and you don't bother defending your position and instead choose to deflect and move on to your next inaccurate whinge.You say tomatoes, I say tomatoes.
Let's face it you can't judge the Tories fairly since COVID as there are no metrics to compare fairly against. The 14 years of failure on washes with the left wing.This is ridiculous. He's been in power less than 2 months after 14 years of unmitigated disaster where the national debt tripled, they divided the country after the hardest form of Brexit was implemented - TERRIBLY - and Tory donors were allowed to waste billions of tax payers money.
If you look at yesterday, people are understandably concerned at the winter fuel allowance bungle and now eyebrows are being raised over this potential smoking outdoors ban. But on the other hand, we've seen policies on taking back national rail firmed up, VAT on private education is being implemented and IS popular with the vast majority and they are clearly trying to build bridges with the EU, our closest trading partner.
This idea that after two months Kier Starmer is somehow a proven disaster is for the birds. Oh and for particularly ignorant right wingers, and their chums in the right wing press. He might prove to be a disaster, but we're miles from that.
We will never agree, so you resort to insult.Or more accurately, you post a load of crap, it gets picked apart, and you don't bother defending your position and instead choose to deflect and move on to your next inaccurate whinge.
The answer is that banning heroin, cocaine etc hasn't stopped idiots using it. It is a bit silly thinking that banning it will stop it. You are just giving another business stream to OCGs with the associated criminality and violence that goes with it.the question is why not simply ban smoking altogether? the puritans want to push it away, hide it, then dont have the courage to go for a full ban.
You can easily judge the Tories and I do. Yes, COVID was a curve ball - but:Let's face it you can't judge the Tories fairly since COVID as there are no metrics to compare fairly against. The 14 years of failure on washes with the left wing.
The facts are Starmer isn't popular and got in by the back door because the Tories left it wide open with a sign saying welcome on it. Reform are still surging forward and will take a good few of labours voters if Starmer remains in place.
I wouldn't resort to insult if you had the stones to back up your tedious trolling with considered argument. There are plenty of people on here I don't agree with who I respect. You're not one of them for that reason.We will never agree, so you resort to insult.
This policy will not raise the predicted amount, whether you like it or not.
I cannot be arsed to pick apart you posts because you'll just lay silent then pop up a day later with you next load of drivel...the NatWest share price being yet another example.I just have.
Not only will the Government not raise the money it wants to, it will also impose huge costs on the wider economy. Landlords may be widely maligned, but the blunt truth is that Britain needs a large number of rented properties, given the very high levels of immigration, and needs lots of foreign students to keep our failing universities afloat. When they leave the market, it will drive astronomical rents even higher, and make the housing crisis even worse, as well as pushing up inflation.
Let's see where we are in 6 months time on this one.
wont someone think of the landlords is an odd hill to fight on.I just have.
Not only will the Government not raise the money it wants to, it will also impose huge costs on the wider economy. Landlords may be widely maligned, but the blunt truth is that Britain needs a large number of rented properties, given the very high levels of immigration, and needs lots of foreign students to keep our failing universities afloat. When they leave the market, it will drive astronomical rents even higher, and make the housing crisis even worse, as well as pushing up inflation.
Let's see where we are in 6 months time on this one.
Please do, as I said the projected income will be less than boasted about and the numbers paying will be less.I cannot be arsed to pick apart you posts because you'll just lay silent then pop up a day later with you next load of drivel...the NatWest share price being yet another example.
Maybe I'll simply make a note of this post and bounce it in 6 months time.
What’s a fact, a single poll in the Spectator?But it's fact.
How do you feel about him now you seen him on the other side of the house.
How many out of 10?
good Lord. One day it’s a disaster, the next banks are resilient enough to recover. Please decide what your position on the RR comments impacting the stock markets is. Is it a disaster or not? And by your I mean you.Please do, as I said the projected income will be less than boasted about and the numbers paying will be less.
Can't be much clearer really, can it?
Regarding your bugbear, Nat West shares.
After the major kicking, banks prove they have broad shoulders and recover.
Nowt new there, and good for everyone with an interest.
I don't like this argument. It is the job of a Government to protect its people. A good Government should be preparing for, and absolutely be expecting a pandemic / war / natural disaster etc to happen at any time. Because they have happened consistently throughout human history, and will continue to do so.COVID was a curve ball - but:
COVID was unexpected
So why did you parade it as a failing of the Government then?? Some posters pointed out at the time that ups and downs were nothing new - and you just made some other glib comment in response.Please do, as I said the projected income will be less than boasted about and the numbers paying will be less.
Can't be much clearer really, can it?
Regarding your bugbear, Nat West shares.
After the major kicking, banks prove they have broad shoulders and recover.
Nowt new there, and good for everyone with an interest.
Another Brexit BenefitI don't like this argument. It is the job of a Government to protect its people. A good Government should be preparing for, and absolutely be expecting a pandemic / war / natural disaster etc to happen at any time. Because they have happened consistently throughout human history, and will continue to do so.
I'm not suggesting Labour would necessarily have done a better job with it, who knows, but saying "we weren't expecting it" is a failure of government- it is their job to expect it.
After the training operation — named "Exercise Cygnus" — in 2016, 22 recommendations were made to improve the U.K.'s response to a pandemic. Just eight of these were completed by June 2020, six months after the pandemic began — and the inquiry cites the competing demands of no-deal Brexit planning as a reason for this "inaction."
Other avenues of preparation for potential pandemics were also paused due to "Operation Yellowhammer," the codename for Whitehall's contingency planning for a no-deal Brexit.
You cut a very strange version jolly person.Bitter?
Not a chance. Just got a letter of great health news, and my hat is on the side of my head. Whistling a ditty and taking it all in.
Especially as we know now there was the trial run and report from a few years earlier which showed how ill-prepared the UK Government was for a "flu-like pandemic", and the Government simply decided to ignore it.I don't like this argument. It is the job of a Government to protect its people. A good Government should be preparing for, and absolutely be expecting a pandemic / war / natural disaster etc to happen at any time. Because they have happened consistently throughout human history, and will continue to do so.
I'm not suggesting Labour would necessarily have done a better job with it, who knows, but saying "we weren't expecting it" is a failure of government- it is their job to expect it.
1. Foodbanks and PovertyYou can easily judge the Tories and I do. Yes, COVID was a curve ball - but:
* In 2010 we had 65 foodbanks in this country. By 2013 there were 650. Now there are thousands, and are even needed by those in employment
* Under the Tories, billions were wasted on PPE, track and trace and "fast-tracking" so that Tory donors got to by-pass tendering processes. Then there was the failure to look after care homes and any sort of plan. COVID was unexpected but the Tories handled it about as badly as humanly possible, from a "leader" who didn't like doing detail.
* Brexit - a vote purely designed to resolve an internal party issue. When it was implemented, it was done as badly as humanly possible. And has damagingly divided the country.
* Populism culminated in the election of a load of thick MPs who then elected Liz Truss to spite anyone who queried Johnson. The result was her crashing the economy and unnecessarily adding hundreds of pounds to mortgage payments.
There are other things. But mmm yeah, "two tier Kier iS reeLy unPopULar", after two months in power - so let's cut him no slack at all.
As for Reform - unlike the Tories, they are a populist party of absolute cretins. Their popularity will bottom out as everybody who doesn't support them absolutely HATES them. And if they ever got close to power, they really would be an utter disaster.