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Glyn,8m people in the UK are predicted to be in fuel poverty with the coming increase in energy costs.This is at the same time as the BoE says the UK will be in recession from Q4 this year through the whole of 2023, with inflation rising to 13%.Many of those people will not be able to pay, so will choose food (itself rising in price) over heat.So the issue is whether the private profiteers will go to court to prosecute non-payers.The scale of non payment will make that very difficult, and the courts will be unable to cope.The point of the "Don't Pay" campaign is to give a voice to those unable to pay, and put political pressure on this wretched government to prevent Ofgem raising the price cap.These increases fall much more heavily on those with limited income, because they have less disposable income to spend.The IMF produced this graphic, to show the difference between countries. The UK needs to move the two points closer together, and towards the left axis.....somewhere near the position in France.
I don't know who is running the campaign, Glyn....but I do understand why they might want to preserve their privacy on this.My understanding is that they were looking for pledges to discontinue paying by direct debit, to be actioned in October.There would be no need for any of this if the Tories or Labour were looking to protect the vulnerable from predatory energy providers, but they are not looking to do more than a partial offset.If you have any proof that this is a scam, then please share it with us.I have not seen any evidence of this.
If it is organised, and they don't pay, they will have the book thrown at them and some will have their whole lives ruined, organisations like this will not be tolerated by the establishment whose existence could be threatened, and total anarchy would result if they were allowed to be successful.
Quote from: selby on August 04, 2022, 04:38:38 pm If it is organised, and they don't pay, they will have the book thrown at them and some will have their whole lives ruined, organisations like this will not be tolerated by the establishment whose existence could be threatened, and total anarchy would result if they were allowed to be successful. Whilst I somewhat agree, the picture you paint is one of only extremes and I don't think that is the case in the real world - ie not the world in the media nor in the minds/propaganda of the elite/establishment.First, anarchy has tied to it so many emotive negatives including violence. As such it is thrown out as a rhetorical threat to not toeing the line of the establishment. Almost all will buy that.In the real world, the not paying is just one focused act, not a general meltdown of all organisation in society. If it happens, it will punch a hole in the hold of the establisment. One hole, that is all. Where I agree with you is that the establishment won't allow this and will try to come down with full force on anyone involved, most significantly on the ones seen as "leading" it.So, this IS war. And this is where the Labour Party for one should be very active, offering an alternative, a very radical alternative to the coming problem. AND meanwhile they should be acknowledging the motives and reasoning of the "don't pay". Some things are deeply important if not fully dealt with, and this is one. But we know the Labour Party is part of the establishment, so won't do this.
Quote from: Bristol Red Rover on August 04, 2022, 05:38:05 pmQuote from: selby on August 04, 2022, 04:38:38 pm If it is organised, and they don't pay, they will have the book thrown at them and some will have their whole lives ruined, organisations like this will not be tolerated by the establishment whose existence could be threatened, and total anarchy would result if they were allowed to be successful. Whilst I somewhat agree, the picture you paint is one of only extremes and I don't think that is the case in the real world - ie not the world in the media nor in the minds/propaganda of the elite/establishment.First, anarchy has tied to it so many emotive negatives including violence. As such it is thrown out as a rhetorical threat to not toeing the line of the establishment. Almost all will buy that.In the real world, the not paying is just one focused act, not a general meltdown of all organisation in society. If it happens, it will punch a hole in the hold of the establisment. One hole, that is all. Where I agree with you is that the establishment won't allow this and will try to come down with full force on anyone involved, most significantly on the ones seen as "leading" it.So, this IS war. And this is where the Labour Party for one should be very active, offering an alternative, a very radical alternative to the coming problem. AND meanwhile they should be acknowledging the motives and reasoning of the "don't pay". Some things are deeply important if not fully dealt with, and this is one. But we know the Labour Party is part of the establishment, so won't do this.Regarding that last paragraph, BRR, the first thing that needs doing is for the Labour Party to get rid of that useless upper middle class prat that's supposed to be it's leader.
Quote from: scawsby steve on August 03, 2022, 07:56:16 pmI thought the rise in bills in June was meant to be 50%?My bill has just gone up from £128.36 to £260.99. That's a rise of over 100%.How much longer are we, the working class, going to put up with this?For as long as there is no credible alternative to the government we have. We need a nationalist government with the needs of the workers at heart.
I thought the rise in bills in June was meant to be 50%?My bill has just gone up from £128.36 to £260.99. That's a rise of over 100%.How much longer are we, the working class, going to put up with this?
Last night on Sky News, almost all of the pundits and journalists were predicting that millions of people throughout the UK will be cancelling their direct debits, and opting to go back to paying quarterly bills, and offering what they can afford.I doubt if the energy companies would be able to do much about that situation.
Quote from: selby on August 04, 2022, 04:38:38 pm If it is organised, and they don't pay, they will have the book thrown at them and some will have their whole lives ruined, organisations like this will not be tolerated by the establishment whose existence could be threatened, and total anarchy would result if they were allowed to be successful. Whilst I somewhat agree, the picture you paint is one of only extremes and I don't think that is the case in the real world - ie not the world in the media nor in the minds/propaganda of the elite/establishment.First, anarchy has tied to it so many emotive negatives including violence. As such it is thrown out as a rhetorical threat to not toeing the line of the establishment. Almost all will buy that.In the real world, the not paying is just one focused act, not a general meltdown of all organisation in society. If it happens, it will punch a hole in the hold of the establisment. One hole, that is all. Where I agree with you is that the establishment won't allow this and will try to come down with full force on anyone involved, most significantly on the ones seen as "leading" it.So, this IS war. And this is where the Labour Party for one should be very active, offering an alternative, a very radical alternative to the coming problem. AND meanwhile they should be acknowledging the motives and reasoning of the "don't pay". Some things are deeply important if not fully dealt with, and this is one. But we know the Labour Party is part of the establishment, so won't do this.
Looks like the unions are fed up with wetwipe Sir Keith, and started their own campaign;https://twitter.com/eiecampaign/status/1556551243765514240Missing in action, the Labour team!
On energy bills.The IMF has said today (quite correctly) that Govt subsidies to the price of energy is very much the wrong way to address this crisis.You on the Left, listen to the whole argument before you automatically switch off.The argument goes like this. The price of energy is now what it is. Nobody is fiddling it other than possibly small amounts at the margins. It is astronomically high at the moment because there is a global excess of demand over supply.Unless you run a global command economy, where some global Govt dictates who can have what, the consequence of excess demand over supply is that prices go up. That's what has happened.What we need to do is to prioritise addressing that excess demand, and a major issue there is that we all need to use less energy. Turn the thermostat down a bit. Turn lights off. Don't use the washer for a half load. Etc. Etc.Using Govt money to subsidise prices reduces the stick that should be making us use less energy.And here's the moral issue. If we do that, WE will be OK. We rich countries could afford to subsidise prices that our own people pay. But that won't reduce the cost of energy on global markets. And the poorest countries will be the ones f**ked over if global demand continues to outstrip supply. Because their Govts cannot subsidise their domestic prices.As the IMF says, the correct way for rich countries to deal with this crisis is 100% not to subsidise energy prices (which is what the TUC campaign wants). If you call for that, don't claim to be a socialist who cares about the poor of the developing world.The correct way is for rich countries to allow the price to be what the global market determines it to be. Use that as a stick to encourage people to use less. And give big benefit subsidies to help people pay the bills. Predominantly targeted at the very poorest. The richer people will just have to tighten their belts.Funny times we live in. The IMF being more internationally socialist than the TUC.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on August 08, 2022, 08:48:25 pmOn energy bills.The IMF has said today (quite correctly) that Govt subsidies to the price of energy is very much the wrong way to address this crisis.You on the Left, listen to the whole argument before you automatically switch off.The argument goes like this. The price of energy is now what it is. Nobody is fiddling it other than possibly small amounts at the margins. It is astronomically high at the moment because there is a global excess of demand over supply.Unless you run a global command economy, where some global Govt dictates who can have what, the consequence of excess demand over supply is that prices go up. That's what has happened.What we need to do is to prioritise addressing that excess demand, and a major issue there is that we all need to use less energy. Turn the thermostat down a bit. Turn lights off. Don't use the washer for a half load. Etc. Etc.Using Govt money to subsidise prices reduces the stick that should be making us use less energy.And here's the moral issue. If we do that, WE will be OK. We rich countries could afford to subsidise prices that our own people pay. But that won't reduce the cost of energy on global markets. And the poorest countries will be the ones f**ked over if global demand continues to outstrip supply. Because their Govts cannot subsidise their domestic prices.As the IMF says, the correct way for rich countries to deal with this crisis is 100% not to subsidise energy prices (which is what the TUC campaign wants). If you call for that, don't claim to be a socialist who cares about the poor of the developing world.The correct way is for rich countries to allow the price to be what the global market determines it to be. Use that as a stick to encourage people to use less. And give big benefit subsidies to help people pay the bills. Predominantly targeted at the very poorest. The richer people will just have to tighten their belts.Funny times we live in. The IMF being more internationally socialist than the TUC.Tell all that to the millions of people in THIS country who will be sat with quilts round them next Winter, and very little food in their bellies.Sunak, Truss, and Keith would love that post you've just made.
Quote from: scawsby steve on August 08, 2022, 09:06:39 pmQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on August 08, 2022, 08:48:25 pmOn energy bills.The IMF has said today (quite correctly) that Govt subsidies to the price of energy is very much the wrong way to address this crisis.You on the Left, listen to the whole argument before you automatically switch off.The argument goes like this. The price of energy is now what it is. Nobody is fiddling it other than possibly small amounts at the margins. It is astronomically high at the moment because there is a global excess of demand over supply.Unless you run a global command economy, where some global Govt dictates who can have what, the consequence of excess demand over supply is that prices go up. That's what has happened.What we need to do is to prioritise addressing that excess demand, and a major issue there is that we all need to use less energy. Turn the thermostat down a bit. Turn lights off. Don't use the washer for a half load. Etc. Etc.Using Govt money to subsidise prices reduces the stick that should be making us use less energy.And here's the moral issue. If we do that, WE will be OK. We rich countries could afford to subsidise prices that our own people pay. But that won't reduce the cost of energy on global markets. And the poorest countries will be the ones f**ked over if global demand continues to outstrip supply. Because their Govts cannot subsidise their domestic prices.As the IMF says, the correct way for rich countries to deal with this crisis is 100% not to subsidise energy prices (which is what the TUC campaign wants). If you call for that, don't claim to be a socialist who cares about the poor of the developing world.The correct way is for rich countries to allow the price to be what the global market determines it to be. Use that as a stick to encourage people to use less. And give big benefit subsidies to help people pay the bills. Predominantly targeted at the very poorest. The richer people will just have to tighten their belts.Funny times we live in. The IMF being more internationally socialist than the TUC.Tell all that to the millions of people in THIS country who will be sat with quilts round them next Winter, and very little food in their bellies.Sunak, Truss, and Keith would love that post you've just made.Why do you do this? Have you actually read what I said?
Maybe the TUC but most likely not you Steve nor Tyke aye?
Quote from: SydneyRover on August 08, 2022, 09:26:43 pmMaybe the TUC but most likely not you Steve nor Tyke aye?You missed Albie out there, another one who cares about working class people and the poor.
SS.Yes they are wrong in saying the answer is to keep fuel prices low. And you are bang out of order suggesting that I'm advocating people being put into abject poverty. Why do you do that?