Well, so surprising…..the mythical black hole strikes again. Got to rinse the workers a bit more to cover that Ł15 billion needed to house them skilled foreigners we love letting in…
| + Visit Cardiff FC for Latest News, Transfer Gossip, Fixtures and Match Results |
Well, so surprising…..the mythical black hole strikes again. Got to rinse the workers a bit more to cover that Ł15 billion needed to house them skilled foreigners we love letting in…
Another day another load of budget conjecture.
I think they are probably praying for some kind of multi billion pound rounding error that stops them having to do anything to income tax or NI.
The reality is when the Tories cut NI, they absolutely weren't acting responsibly and Labour could have just avoided this by running on a platform to raise it back to where it was, but that would have taken more balls.
There's 650 people in the HOC (minus those that don't sit) who know that triple lock a) can end and b) needs to end for the country to have any future at all, and none of them have the guts to say it.
Ultimately, that isn't really relevant but here goes..
They must have found the magic money tree OR maybe it's a combination of them a) having higher mandatory contributions into a ringfenced scheme b) higher average taxation for the average worker OR potentially they are just as ****ed as we are.
The UK pursued a system whereby the intent was for people to contribute to their own retirement via a private scheme and for the state pension to supplement that and now because people didn't, we are trying to shapeshift it into a system whereby the state pension provides a baseline/minimum retirement income. The generation we decided to run this dodgy experiment on? The same one who benefited from skyrocketing asset prices.
People absolutely have not and do not pay enough NI to deal with this and it will bring the whole system down. If triple lock is turned into something more reasonable in the next few years then it will survive as a defacto universal benefit (masking it's failings probably). If it isn't then it will end up being means tested, creating a massive sense of injustice and crucially lessening the incentive for people to save for their own retirement (and providing future governments with yet another lever to **** people over without them noticing).
You’re forgetting the billions we pay in foreign aid. If you looked at the breakdown of what we pay yearly, who we pay it to and why, it’s mind boggling! We are 2.8 trillion pounds in debt, but hey, that’s not much, let’s help everyone else, and also let’s let 1’000’s and 1,000’s of immigrants to enter the UK illegally and molly coddle them.
Be careful though. If you have the audacity to question any of this on here, you are instantly branded as a right wing racist!!
Objecting to foreign aid is obnoxious. The same people who donÂ’t like it donÂ’t like any public expenditure on helping ANY people out letÂ’s face it.
Labour should have been up front before the election instead of putting themselves in a straight jacket. Taxes had to rise as the public services were on its knees. There was no need for the ming vase approach.
Who’s pulling their hair out? You look yourself. You have more time than me. I’m busy working to my taxes to the government you voted in to waste.
I dont think Carol likes CCMB's favorite son
PS i edited the hurty words
Decker.jpg
Stop being a pussy, if you feel so uncomfortable saying what you think because people might call you something then all it says is you aren't confident enough in what you think and why.
Obviously the immigration system has to change, no government can deliver anything on housing, NHS or anything else without a certain level of predictability but there have to be red lines you won't cross as a country.
The issue I have with the rights approach to immigration is
a)that they aren't confident enough in what they think and why so it inevitably moves away from pragmatism and towards dirty personal stuff around culture and motives (fighting age males etc.) trying to stoke tension and create fear.
and b) they are completely sold by simple answers to complex questions, to the point of being taken for a bunch of idiots time and time again by the same people.
The conversation has to start from the point of acceptance that most of these people are doing exactly what you would be doing if you had their lives, that doesn't have to mean they are all wonderful people and it doesn't have to mean you don't look to change the system/status quo when it isn't working for Britain.
I had a curious google. For anyone who cares, the UK spends 0.5% of its gross national income on foreign aid, dropping to 0.3% by 2027 to cover an uplift in defence spending to 2.6%
https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk...ome-from-2027/