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The General Election - June 8th 2017

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  • edited May 2017

    I think the problem is most of the top 5% don't realise how much society has helped them to reach the level that they have.

    Sure they 'worked hard', but no harder than anyone else in a decent 9-5 job. Anyone that truly believes you can transform yourself out of poverty into earning £70,000+ just from hard work is living in a dream world.

    The education, job opportunities, healthcare, transport services, housing all available to them for far cheaper than it is in today's world.

    Why shouldn't they pay a little extra back to the country that has helped them enjoy the comforts that they do? So that the next generation maybe can follow in their footsteps.

    My job isn't 9-5 for starters.

    I start at about 7:30 in the morning and usually get home at 10 or 11. So I don't see my kids 5 days a week.

    There are plenty of other people who are less fortunate than me - in terms of earnings and hours.

    But my sacrifice is seeing my kids less than a friend of mine who is in shared custody of his children after splitting from his wife.

    And in terms of pay a little extra back. We have had this discussion. We already have a fair and proportionate tax system. The top 5pc already pay a lot more.
    Sounds like a similar day to a teacher, who spends most evenings marking and planning and not seeing own children.
    My sister in law is a secondary school teacher. We have often had conversations where she has described my hours as "utterly ridiculous".

    She has told me that he hours come in fits and spurts. When they at bad they are bad - but then again she has about 5 times more holiday than me per year which she realises she is so lucky to get.

    It's horrible when I see my Facebook feed full of people in the summer home doing a BBQ and having a beer at seven a clock at night.

    Personally I would have more sympathy with the nurses and doctors of this world working crazy long shifts than teachers who also have an incredible pension waiting at the end of the day paid for by the taxpayer (admittedly for educating our children and the next generation).
  • I think Damo had a point, especially with the tone of that phrase, and I think it has been answered admirably. Now given that the only point that you had issue with was that one phrase Damo, I take it you agree with the rest, and as such will not be voting for the Conservatives?

    I would also like to add something I don't think has been addressed in points made since. You cite the long hours you work, which is your choice, and in your field is richly rewarded. There are many out there who have to work similar hours, who make all the familial sacrifices you do, but do not have your knowledge and life skills, and earn nowhere near what you do.

    You are fortunate to have been blessed with that skill set, mind set and drive - the idea we regularly see put forward that "anyone can do it" is disrespectful to both those that cannot, and indeed yourself and those like you. If any of us could do anything "if we put our mind to it" as I often hear/see, why are we not all Michelin starred chefs, Premier league footballers, stadium filling rock stars or best selling novelists? I for one would be grateful to have been blessed with the talent to do well and make money, and wouldn't begrudge paying a bit more into society were I earning the kind of money we are talking about.

    And of course some people make it to the top because they are utter, utter c**ts who would sh*t on anyone to make a pound (not suggesting that's you for one moment Damo!).

    I think in my mind people earning millions of pounds a year and people earning 120k per year are in completely different boats and shouldn't be put under the same banner.

    My issue with that quote was that the top 5pc were highlighted alongside corporations etc. Which is totally wrong.
    Don't disagree with that Damo.
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  • I think Damo had a point, especially with the tone of that phrase, and I think it has been answered admirably. Now given that the only point that you had issue with was that one phrase Damo, I take it you agree with the rest, and as such will not be voting for the Conservatives?

    I would also like to add something I don't think has been addressed in points made since. You cite the long hours you work, which is your choice, and in your field is richly rewarded. There are many out there who have to work similar hours, who make all the familial sacrifices you do, but do not have your knowledge and life skills, and earn nowhere near what you do.

    You are fortunate to have been blessed with that skill set, mind set and drive - the idea we regularly see put forward that "anyone can do it" is disrespectful to both those that cannot, and indeed yourself and those like you. If any of us could do anything "if we put our mind to it" as I often hear/see, why are we not all Michelin starred chefs, Premier league footballers, stadium filling rock stars or best selling novelists? I for one would be grateful to have been blessed with the talent to do well and make money, and wouldn't begrudge paying a bit more into society were I earning the kind of money we are talking about.

    And of course some people make it to the top because they are utter, utter c**ts who would sh*t on anyone to make a pound (not suggesting that's you for one moment Damo!).

    I think in my mind people earning millions of pounds a year and people earning 120k per year are in completely different boats and shouldn't be put under the same banner.

    My issue with that quote was that the top 5pc were highlighted alongside corporations etc. Which is totally wrong.
    Do you also acknowledge that someone on £11k a year feels the same way about someone earning £100k+? Can you not understand why someone reliant on benefits or charity just to make ends meet might look at yourself and question why you are not contributing even a little more in tax yet that would still allow you to have much more comfortable lifestyle than theirs?

    No one's questioning your capacity to earn what you do, your hard work or your worth to your employer btw.
  • edited May 2017


    You what? They roll up at 9am, bugger off at 3pm and all they have to do is watch over some sweet kiddies. They have 26 weeks holiday a year, get paid £40,000 per annum and retire at 35 on double those wages :wink:

    It's all about organisation then the holidays can be stress free
  • Certainly agree with Damo up to a point. I know a couple of people who run there own businesses and the taxes they have to pay can be crippling for a small business. (My wife runs one, but as it is in Spain and the system is probably different, I'll avoid that one). However, the point I took from the original post was that recent Conservative policies, especially the Dementia Tax and the removal of free meals in schools are all aimed at the less well off. But probably thanks to the blanket assault from the right wing media, the election is still being fought where possibel on whether Corbyn had links with the IRA, and is he really just a clown. This despite the amusing Boris Johnson being a possible upper echelon cabinet minister in the future. Corbyn's speeches do not bear any resemblance to what is being written about him, but there is still a sizeable group who seem keen to vote for a party who openly admit they will make them poorer, than the one who want to help them. I'm not convinced by the calculations of how Labour will pay for their election promises, but then again, the Tories have admisitered years of austerity and the national debt has ballooned.
    I think it's fairly normal to question politicians about how they plan to implement their policies, and it's a shame the Brexit vote didn't have a bit more realism about the posible outcomes, but sadly, no one really knew exactly what the outcomes would be then. But a lot of what is said about Corbyn is just media myth, and the conservatives get a very light ride in comparison.

    Precisely, Corbyn is really getting a raw deal from the media and it is entirely conservative led. They are afraid of him. Also regarding him being an IRA sympathest goes it's ridiculous, he openly condemned violence on both sides, many say he is too passive and too peace loving and then the next day are calling him a terrorist, it seems the right wing media are continually contradicting themselves. Corbyn is our best hope and voting labour is probably our only chance to get a priminister like him that truly cares about the people, he lives in a normal house, he takes buses to work, he donates all of his time to causes he cares about and is compassionate about Britain and about people we need him.
  • edited May 2017

    Certainly agree with Damo up to a point. I know a couple of people who run there own businesses and the taxes they have to pay can be crippling for a small business. (My wife runs one, but as it is in Spain and the system is probably different, I'll avoid that one). However, the point I took from the original post was that recent Conservative policies, especially the Dementia Tax and the removal of free meals in schools are all aimed at the less well off. But probably thanks to the blanket assault from the right wing media, the election is still being fought where possibel on whether Corbyn had links with the IRA, and is he really just a clown. This despite the amusing Boris Johnson being a possible upper echelon cabinet minister in the future. Corbyn's speeches do not bear any resemblance to what is being written about him, but there is still a sizeable group who seem keen to vote for a party who openly admit they will make them poorer, than the one who want to help them. I'm not convinced by the calculations of how Labour will pay for their election promises, but then again, the Tories have admisitered years of austerity and the national debt has ballooned.
    I think it's fairly normal to question politicians about how they plan to implement their policies, and it's a shame the Brexit vote didn't have a bit more realism about the posible outcomes, but sadly, no one really knew exactly what the outcomes would be then. But a lot of what is said about Corbyn is just media myth, and the conservatives get a very light ride in comparison.

    Precisely, Corbyn is really getting a raw deal from the media and it is entirely conservative led. They are afraid of him. Also regarding him being an IRA sympathest goes it's ridiculous, he openly condemned violence on both sides, many say he is too passive and too peace loving and then the next day are calling him a terrorist, it seems the right wing media are continually contradicting themselves. Corbyn is our best hope and voting labour is probably our only chance to get a priminister like him that truly cares about the people, he lives in a normal house, he takes buses to work, he donates all of his time to causes he cares about and is compassionate about Britain and about people we need him.
    I do have to say though that being Prime Minister of the U.K. requires being a Statesman. No question about that. I don't believe Corbyn has ALL the skills needed to be PM.

  • When Corbyn was elected leader the competition was not seen as different enough from Miliband.
    Personally I think Yvette Cooper might have been good, but she was associated with failure at the time of the leadership election.
    The interesting thing regarding May v Corbyn is that it is possible to tell the difference between the two.
  • Obviously for this country to move forward and become a better place money needs to be generated from somewhere.
    Yes I agree with taxing the high earners but in a pyramid style tax bracket system.
    What I can't agree with is the total animosity by some towards higher earners as a whole. I hate generalisation in all forms. Each person has had their own story their own walk in life and they are where they are for a thousand different reasons.
    It works both ways, you and I know that not all conservative voters are Eton snobs, not all labour voters are benefit fraudsters and not all ukip voters are racist.
    By all means vote for who you want but at least understand everyone will have their own perspectives are nobody is every 100% right.

    A family member was struggling to pay his mortgage 20 years ago, in and out of jobs things not looking good.
    He joined a bank at base level, worked his way up and is now reaping the rewards as a high earning scumbag banker in the city who enjoys cooperate days at Ascot and work lunches in gouchos. I have absolute admiration for the way he turned things around and believe he should enjoy his hard earned lifestyle.
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  • But seriously. The quote said "Good fuck them it's long overdue".

    Why is it long overdue to fuck the top 5pc of earners?

    Nobody has answered that.

    They haven't done anything other than earn more than 95pc of the country.

    They haven't ever been blamed for causing an economic crisis like people tried to blame the bankers

    They haven't engaged in animal cruelty

    They haven't really done anything.

    Why is it acceptable to just say fuck someone based on what they earn?

    It's not okay.


    Perhaps just as a change to "fucking" the bottom 5%, the sick and disabled who have born the brunt of the highly successful austerity measures.

    The point being that this statement would also be not on.

    It is a fine balance when times get tougher off the back of a financial crisis. There will always be more well off and less well of people in society. It's going to be that way until the end of time.

    Is the wealth gap staying the same but the bottom 10 or 15pc notice small drops in income a lot more? Because I was under the impression from this board that tax rates for lower earners haven't been raised hugely under this Tory government compared to the years of labour rule before.
  • One aspect of the debate is to suggest that indeed everybody works hard.
    However the disparity of reward for hard working people is a bit of an issue.
    I once worked on a building site where there was this strong Danish hod carrier. I have never seen anything like it, the sweat would drench him as he raced to keep the bricklayers supplied, he would put in an astonishing days work, but his pay was very modest compared to others like the site foreman, who also worked hard with his maps and drawings and overview and such like.
    The hod carrier and foreman were interdependent it seemed to me.
  • Money is being generated. But it's not going anywhere but into the back pockets of the richest people (we're talking 0.1% or less here). They don't reinvest tax cuts into their people, they don't create more jobs than is completely necessary. The extra money stays at the top.

    If they won't reinvest that extra money (they won't) then the government should be stepping in and reversing the tax cuts to invest where the people at the top won't.
  • One aspiration for some wealth chasers is that they, and all their family members, ought to be able to live on the interest from the interest for the foreseeable future.
    With that mindset enough is never going to be enough.
  • agim said:

    Obviously for this country to move forward and become a better place money needs to be generated from somewhere.
    Yes I agree with taxing the high earners but in a pyramid style tax bracket system.
    What I can't agree with is the total animosity by some towards higher earners as a whole. I hate generalisation in all forms. Each person has had their own story their own walk in life and they are where they are for a thousand different reasons.
    It works both ways, you and I know that not all conservative voters are Eton snobs, not all labour voters are benefit fraudsters and not all ukip voters are racist.
    By all means vote for who you want but at least understand everyone will have their own perspectives are nobody is every 100% right.

    A family member was struggling to pay his mortgage 20 years ago, in and out of jobs things not looking good.
    He joined a bank at base level, worked his way up and is now reaping the rewards as a high earning scumbag banker in the city who enjoys cooperate days at Ascot and work lunches in gouchos. I have absolute admiration for the way he turned things around and believe he should enjoy his hard earned lifestyle.

    Well done your relative for making the most of their opportunity but at what point are we all going to start moving forward? 7 years of austerity policies have got us where? Failing public services across the board, pathetic growth levels, rising national and household debts, stagnant wages, an explosion of exploitative employment contracts, rising homelessness and food poverty, increasing retirement ages, etc.

    The Tories are telling us these policies will continue. At what point does society decide enough's enough and we need a different direction?
    I agree. I'm not voting tory
  • Is it right that all three main party leaders have never had a job outside of politics?
    If true the, 'I don't see how any of them can relate to real people' arguments have been unusually missing.
  • seth plum said:

    One aspect of the debate is to suggest that indeed everybody works hard.
    However the disparity of reward for hard working people is a bit of an issue.
    I once worked on a building site where there was this strong Danish hod carrier. I have never seen anything like it, the sweat would drench him as he raced to keep the bricklayers supplied, he would put in an astonishing days work, but his pay was very modest compared to others like the site foreman, who also worked hard with his maps and drawings and overview and such like.
    The hod carrier and foreman were interdependent it seemed to me.

    They're definitely interdependent but the foreman gets paid more for his numerous responsibilities. He ultimately takes responsibility for that job either making or loosing money
This discussion has been closed.

Roland Out Forever!