Bullet
Colin Calderwood
Very vague.She seems to have taken a fair few handouts though(not talking about tax credits)
Do you mean the dresses a designer wanted her to wear, to promote the designer, or something else?
Very vague.She seems to have taken a fair few handouts though(not talking about tax credits)
Thanks for posting that. Like her or loathe her, that's a great watch.I found this interview very interesting, as I didn't know much about Angela Rayner's background at all.
She has a really working class/lower class background, lack of education, difficult upbringing.
She says MOST people don't want handouts, they just want a chance of a decent job etc.
Well worth an hour of your time
Clothes and holidays and apparently though not seen it confirmed by a reliable source she is now using tax payers money to get an official photographer.Very vague.
Do you mean the dresses a designer wanted her to wear, to promote the designer, or something else?
PS yesterday I went to an antiques fair/ car boot sale at Stonor Park near Henley.
Suddenly Boris Johnson hoved into view, buying a rug and looking at nick nacks with his partner and 3 or 4 blonde kids hanging off him.
I really wasn't sure what to do or say, what abuse could I throw his way with kids around, what could I say to sum up what an awful human he is... so I just did nothing.
What should I have done, reasonably?
Just in case I bump into him again around here.
But this is kind of my point: you say an exact figure for UBI is meaningless because it's dynamic and what's a luxury and a necessity to different people is personal. Therefore UBI won't make everyone happy and comfortable in your eyes: because, well, humans (which is precisely my point) and therefore it's failed the basic test of satisfying the very goal those that advocate for it set out to achieve.
Hmm, not sure I'm saying the vulnerable in society shouldn't have a safety net, just questioning how big that should be? The fact that you've said that you can't articulate an acceptable figure for UBI to allow for people to live the life you want them to live to me goes to the point that a lot of people that moan about the current system "not working" don't actually really have an alternative they'd be happy with in any detail.
I terms of paying nurses the equivalent of pro footballers - they already get paid around the same. The average salary for a pro footballer in the UK is £31,066 (Glassdoor).
if you mean Premier League footballers, I get the sentiment but given there are almost 750,000 registered nurses in the country, paying them the equivalent of the average PL salary of £60,000 a week is hardly realistic.
BTW, still pretty new to the site, but loving how everyone so respectful of each others opinions on such tough topics as politics and UBI.
I guess my question with this stuff is always, even if UBI was the right destination for the UK, do we have the ability to manage the journey without the implementation failing on the way? Then the rhetoric becomes that it was a flawed idea in the first place. We've seen that so may times with changes of direction in politics.
A smaller but related example is the buy-to-let market. The Tory government who are renowned for supposedly letting the rich get richer decided that it would be a good idea to change the tax system on the rental income so eventually you don't claim any relief on your mortgage payments. Additionally, if you do have your 25% deposit and want to buy another home to rent out your have to find an extra 3% stamp duty on the standard rate. What the government did was basically move us away from the "license to print money" model that had existed for so long and really stop landlords from getting other people to pay for their property portfolio. They ripped the profit out of it. However, then the interest rates went up, as did inflation, and the rental prices went up. What we're now seeing is landlords selling in a buyers market where house prices are best case flat, but mostly decline. My guess though is that is shifting the renters from private renters to social renters which plays into the UBI argument where subsidisation of tenants is already in place.
This is a very tough equation.
The obvious and huge problem for them is that they fire a nuclear weapon and they face immediate and massive retaliation. They need to be faced down - otherwise we’re back in this situation in a few years time when they attempt to invade Moldova, the Baltic states, Poland, Finland…
As @Kompakted mentioned there's already a redistribution of wealth, the top 10% of earners pay 60% of all income tax in the UK. How much more should they pay?
There's a different question I think that if you want good public services then taxes need to go up across the board, not just on high earners.
You chose to jump on a post comment where someone mentioned paying registered nurses the same annual salary as professional footballers. Rather than stick with your 'glassdoor' figures, let's take my 'glassdoor' figure as a basis. Because I believe that if we take into account the flagrant 'theft' which occurred during covid especially, you know, 45 billion quids worth of outsoucing with an auditing policy which essentially amounted to ordering a happy meal, that (in fact) paying registered nurses an average salary of 73k a year (and that's at the bottom end, again according to my 'glassdoor' figure) is highly, highly realistic...unless, of course, you're at the end of the wedge which is, errrr, making the wedge. In which case, experience tells us that you don't want to give up any percentage of your profit margin to aid the service and the people who work within it.
To be fair Steff, this book is by an author who has done research but by own admission knows next to nothing on the subject and has come up with a very dramatic version for obvious reasons (I'm not one to bury my head in the sand about the potential of a nuclear catastrophe either).Sadly, if a nuclear weapon is fired, then...well...read this if you have the stomach for it (I have to say I am not usually floored by a book on such matters, but this one was jaw-dropping)...
https://www.armscontrol.org/act/2024-06/book-reviews/nuclear-war-scenario
PS yesterday I went to an antiques fair/ car boot sale at Stonor Park near Henley.
Suddenly Boris Johnson hoved into view, buying a rug and looking at nick nacks with his partner and 3 or 4 blonde kids hanging off him.
I really wasn't sure what to do or say, what abuse could I throw his way with kids around, what could I say to sum up what an awful human he is... so I just did nothing.
What should I have done, reasonably?
Just in case I bump into him again around here.
I don't doubt that some nurses, particularly in inner city A&E departments and the like are worked hard, but there will also be hospitals in many suburban or rural areas where a nightshift may pass where there's actually very little to do.
To be fair Steff, this book is by an author who has done research but by own admission knows next to nothing on the subject and has come up with a very dramatic version for obvious reasons (I'm not one to bury my head in the sand about the potential of a nuclear catastrophe either).
Interesting points here:
I haven't, have only heard of it - but because of your reference to it on more than one occasion I will be purchasing at some point!How do you quantify the value of a profession? By the 'actual hours spent working'? How do you evaluate what 'work' is? If someone is working their shift, whether they are outting a few band aids on people or involved in a relentless stream of trauma work, they're still working their shift.
That's certainly a fine point. I would say that the angle she has chosen nonetheless contains enough hard factual data/fact that it should cause alarm. Out of interest have you read it?
I imagine the way the new government have started if the tories stop eating themselves, make a sensible leadership choice and do some sort of deal with Farage that huge labour majority could well evaporate at the next election. I'm actually quite surprised. Most business leaders were looking forward to a change of government but that good will has largely evaporated. The overly negative tone and outlook has impacted the growing economy confidence.Our leaders speech
1) fudge the pensioners
2) 14 years blah blah
3) You’re all far right thugs, unless you’re Muslim
4) 22BN hole that we can’t prove
5) Release the Sausages.
What an inspiration.
I haven't, have only heard of it - but because of your reference to it on more than one occasion I will be purchasing at some point!
Oh yes she has done her research, and not saying it could never happen - just that it seems the likelihood of that scenario playing out is low, but it's certainly an eye opening prospect....
...you can produce any 'common sense statement' you like with regards to 'hardly realistic' salaries for registered nurses, but the truth is, under Tory governance, the NHS has continued to become a magnet for private sector abuse. Large contracts given for increasingly poor services within the system. Shareholders in these companies are obviously more highly valued than the medical professionals within the NHS...
You chose to jump on a post comment where someone mentioned paying registered nurses the same annual salary as professional footballers. Rather than stick with your 'glassdoor' figures, let's take my 'glassdoor' figure as a basis. Because I believe that if we take into account the flagrant 'theft' which occurred during covid especially, you know, 45 billion quids worth of outsoucing with an auditing policy which essentially amounted to ordering a happy meal, that (in fact) paying registered nurses an average salary of 73k a year (and that's at the bottom end, again according to my 'glassdoor' figure) is highly, highly realistic...unless, of course, you're at the end of the wedge which is, errrr, making the wedge. In which case, experience tells us that you don't want to give up any percentage of your profit margin to aid the service and the people who work within it.
Regarding UBI, I believe there has to be more research done in order to make it an effective aide for those who are vulnerable as opposed as to a 'station agent' which essentially traps people in a loop.
You mentioned nobody having an 'actual' alternative to the current system. How about we start with fairer taxation of corporations, either a better and whiolly transparent auditing system when it comes to awarding private contracts for public services, or nationalizing essential utilies and services such as power, water and public transport, how about proper investment in public housing, how about proper investment in public education, how about an affordable university system with government funding, and yes, how about paying registerd nurses 73k a year? Not to mention greater investment in proactive health care versus reactive?
Doubtless the question arises as to where this money would come from. I'd counter that if we had people in charge who actually gave a brick about societies, then the extra few percent of national money such things would require could be funded with breathing space. Instead, we have been largely governed for too long by people whose main interests best serve the needs of the few and not the many. Which is a problem.
I suppose it comes down to what you believe in...
p.s. offered in the spirit of discussion.
https://www.nhsforsale.info/50-examples-of-nhs-outsourcing-failures/
https://www.glassdoor.com/Salaries/...baller-salary-SRCH_IL.0,21_IM1035_KO22,32.htm
I wasn't devaluing the nursing profession, I was just pointing out that holding the profession on a pedal stool isn't helpful, nor is devaluing the work of fund managers into the bargain - at the end of the day, the NHS and ultimately the Treasury are going to have to put an arbitrary value on the nursing profession in terms of pay award.How do you quantify the value of a profession? By the 'actual hours spent working'? How do you evaluate what 'work' is? If someone is working their shift, whether they are outting a few band aids on people or involved in a relentless stream of trauma work, they're still working their shift.
That's certainly a fine point. I would say that the angle she has chosen nonetheless contains enough hard factual data/fact that it should cause alarm. Out of interest have you read it?
The problem with this kind of aggressive taxation approach is that when you're that aggressive you'll get avoidance and it's not that difficult to avoid tax if you're wealthy and can afford good lawyers and accountants. For example to avoid wealth taxes you simply don't own assets yourself but have assets owned by companies or trusts with an underlying contractual agreement that you have use of the asset and overriding voting rights over the trust or company in question.Argh. My trusty macbook is now a feckin brick. I'm not sure I have the inclination to thumb my way through a long reply to this but in short I would tax almost everything away over a certain threshold including introducing a wealth tax. I don't think billionaires should exist. You'll have to extrapolate the rest of position from this but it is fairly extreme.