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I respect your commitment to voting Bob and understand how deeply personal and significant it feels, especially given your strong views against the current government. It's clear that your vote is not just a civic duty, but also a reflection of your hopes for change and a better future.
What's your problem with the WEF? Surely we need joined up thinking between the nations if we are to tackle environmental issues, deforestation and defuse global conflict? I was dubious about the WEF on the surface but are they that bad? I have delved deep into it like you seem to have. Interested in your views
Call it arrogance if you want but it's a fact, younger generations are far more educated than older generations.
Whether that equates to being more intelligent is a completely different story but generally every new generation is smarter than the one that preceeded it.
It's just a talking shop, it doesn't have any tangible power.
Most of the biggest problems we face as a planet cannot be solved by countries acting alone, so this is a forum to allow nations and companies to discuss things and hear speakers on these subjects.
It IS funded by a large number of multi billion dollar companies, so you have to expect that there will be an element of furthering their own interests involved, and the events are lavish (as you would expect) and fairly secretive, so it is easy to see why they get such attention from the tinfoil hat brigade.
I can understand the secrecy tbh, if you make everything public then all the politicians would inevitably revert to their public non-committal face-saving type of statements and you wouldn't be able to have any meaningful discussion about anything.
It's soft power at best and all of the attendees can and probably do completely disregard everything they've heard as soon as the last canapé has slithered down their throat.
It's good that something like this exists, it would be nice if it was funded in another way perhaps.
It will be no different than last time - promise everything, think throwing money at a problem will fix it, over spend, under deliver, start an illegal war, maybe promise the school rebuilding program and then spend 60% of the budget without laying a brick. Roll over for the unions, get caught out in a few scandals and have policy driven by a bunch of p1ssheads putting their collective hands up to move a motion at conference.
Add in some Corbynistas stinking out the house - and that is roughly what you will get.
Raynor all she left school with was a baby. Dawn Butler, Dianne Abbott et al it'll be like watching a Carry on film - the promo is available now if you follow the Senedd.
It'll be a right laugh
I didn't support it / understand the need for it at all, but its really strange the amount of flack that the Labour party still gets from the invasion of Iraq.
Yes criticism is absolutely valid, and SHOULD be done, but I don't recall the conservatives opposing it at the time, yet they are not ever criticised for it in the same way.
Also the UK only provided a small percentage of the troops to the conflict and were mostly not active in the most hostile areas and accounted for a far smaller proportion of the casualties compared to the Americans, yet as far as I can tell it isn't really a talking point in US politics any longer (although perhaps they have bigger fish to fry) but I guess that's the way things go in politics, once something is accepted in the public consciousness then that's the way it is.
The americans still seem to be roping us into their strikes in the middle east, it makes you wonder what dirt they have on us
Here's an example which I think will be an eye opener to many older folk on here - https://old.reddit.com/r/LeopardsAte...ies_that_left/
There's much we disagree on and much we agree on, one of which is the severe crisis in housing which disproportionately impacts younger people, although is a major issue for all.
My sister's ex rents a three bed house which he shares with my niece and nephew when they stay with him. The landlord is raising his rent from £750 to £1350. It's an absolute scandal and appalling for him, and by definition anyone connected.
But what policies have the older generation voted for to make people poorer? Perhaps they are more prone to nimbyism, but we also see lots of fresh faced young environmentalists opposing new housing.
The biggest issue is immigration and that's something younger generations seem to support yo the hilt, seemingly unaware of the impact it has on housing. The link to housing and wages was far more stable before immigration soared in the early 2000s. There are though, many many factors. I don't see any of them particularly driven by the older generation though. That argument strikes me as a convenient but unhelpful and divisive sideshow.
The housing crisis ....
Makes me ****ing 😆 when tory voters and the tory government try to bat that one away
Thatcher sold off the council houses
Thatcher abolished the protected rent acts which if in place today would stop landlords pushing up rents and say its what the market will pay
Ff sake you ignorant idiots ....its the tories who pushed the scrapping of fair rents
No long term tenancies these days ......6 months assured shorthold then feck you out you go if we want to get someone else in , up the rent or flog the place for a holiday
Tories looking to blame immigration for the housing crisis load of crap
Loss of council houses , loss of housing to rent more and more expensive to rent due to tory government and failure to build replacements for council houses sold .....another lie from the tories
And a failure to build more houses for the increasing population which is at the core of UK housing policy since 1979
Who has been in power for all but 13 of those years ?
The conservatives
No amount of yeah but no nonsense will save your arses
Does he vote tory like you ?
Tell him to wise up because if he does he's the harvester of his own sorrow
It's tory voters like you who have caused the housing mess and those before you
No sympathy at all for those that continue to back the conservatives
This rent increase story has been going on for years since the abolition of the fair rent and protected rent system
Ripped up by Thatcher and successive tory governments .....and avoided by Blair too
While I don't disagree 700,000 people a year coming to the UK is unsustainable it's also true that we are building far less social housing per year than we used to. I think we have 2 million less council houses than we did 20 years ago.
I don't know if the table shown in this article is true or not, if it is its shocking how few are being built now.
https://m.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/key-events-in-history-of-uk-council-housing/37332881.html
While you may dislike him, Corbyn would have at least tried to build more social housing, the UK voted against him, twice and it was older people who were more likely to vote against him.