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All I know is, I wont be voting for Brown/ Labour even if Brown personally knocked on my door and handed me a tax free cheque for £50 grand.
Have you been reading Viz again, mate? You know what the nice doctor said about that!
Thinwhiteduke wrote:QuoteAll I know is, I wont be voting for Brown/ Labour even if Brown personally knocked on my door and handed me a tax free cheque for £50 grand.Thus meaning you have too much money already, undoubtedly made from the boom years under Labour and are probably looking at the tax breaks for the wealthy under Tory Rule. This while the rest of the country falls back into the Thatcherite bleakness of the Early 80's, thus proporgating the demise of what is left of traditional northern industry and condemning us all to lower standard of living and increased poverty.Fantastic.....
Front page spread with Simon fcuking Cowell saying \"Vote Tory\".
My vote is and always has been for Labour, through and through.
RTID75 wrote:QuoteMy vote is and always has been for Labour, through and through. Sorry. Cant vote for a man who sold most of our gold reserves off at a budget price which has cost us approx 7-8 billion pounds. Cut Military budgets and fails to deal with workshy benefkit fraudsters so they have a better life than I have without lifting a finger.Having said that I cant say Im too impressed with the Tories either, but, and its a long time ago, my parents will always vouch that they would NEVER have got on the property ladder without the Tories introduction of the 'right to buy' scheme.My parents and family, and some of them were miners, had done well out of a Tory government, all of my education/ working class upbringing was during a Tory Government and I did fine out of it. I aint decided who to vote for yet, Ill be doing so this evening, but I have no fear of the Tories - Im just to be convinced. As per previous though, no way is it a cross in the Labour box for me.
Actually RTID, I'm hoping like mad that we do end up with a hung parliament. It will undoubtedly be confusing and mysterious at first, but I suspect it could open a whole new chapter in British politics. We have confrontational politics bred into us as bairns. That leads on to confrontational behaviour in all sorts of walks of life - Courts, police, you name it. But when opposing parties actually have to sit down, together, to work out what and how to do a few things, well, the spirit of co-operation, of compromise, might begin to stalk the land. It works well enough in plenty of other countries. Why can't it work here? Lack of practice of course - but that would come in time. So, hung parliament for me!And it'd be one in the eye for that ancient crone the arch witch of dogma politics too.CheersBobG
Hate to get involved in the election chat but under labour this time-1 Created false econemy by allowing people to think the were richer than they are, by borrowing on over inflated house prices, then blame every1 else when prices re-balance2 Me and my misses work full time, and can sometimes afford to 'treat' ouirselves to a night out twice a month. Some families on my street dont have a wage coming in the house, but can go out when they want due to having more disposable income than me. Fair??? yeah cause it is.3 Joined Europe despite promising a refferendem and it cost us over £50 million a day. Oh well, at least we bail everyone else out again. Cheers4 Lost control on immigration by being soft as F**k and let anyone and there dog in, bringing in further crime, and illnesses.5 Brown sold off the uk gold supplies when gold hit rock bottom when in charge of the the tresuery. Now its worth 4 times that value, and guess what, we havent got any left! Good call.6 My gran is currently in a care home, seeing all the values of her estate that my grandad spent 60 years building up, being taken by the cost of caring, yet the person in the very next room, has had it for free for 14 years. Fair??? Yeah whatever.I will not be voting for this man. All I know is labour dont repect the values the once did, and im looking elsewhere.
awsworth_rover wrote:QuoteHate to get involved in the election chat but under labour this time-1 Created false econemy by allowing people to think the were richer than they are, by borrowing on over inflated house prices, then blame every1 else when prices re-balance2 Me and my misses work full time, and can sometimes afford to 'treat' ouirselves to a night out twice a month. Some families on my street dont have a wage coming in the house, but can go out when they want due to having more disposable income than me. Fair??? yeah cause it is.3 Joined Europe despite promising a refferendem and it cost us over £50 million a day. Oh well, at least we bail everyone else out again. Cheers4 Lost control on immigration by being soft as F**k and let anyone and there dog in, bringing in further crime, and illnesses.5 Brown sold off the uk gold supplies when gold hit rock bottom when in charge of the the tresuery. Now its worth 4 times that value, and guess what, we havent got any left! Good call.6 My gran is currently in a care home, seeing all the values of her estate that my grandad spent 60 years building up, being taken by the cost of caring, yet the person in the very next room, has had it for free for 14 years. Fair??? Yeah whatever.I will not be voting for this man. All I know is labour dont repect the values the once did, and im looking elsewhere.All very good points IMO mate, and partly the reason for the growing distrust of many ppl who have probably voted Labour their entire lives. But I still don't trust the tories.Which ever way you look at it, the country's definately in a pickle. Maybe a hung pariliament will force a better government? More likely it will just mean another election in 12 months though I fear?
What's your opinions of the LibDems then TWD? From the sounds of your distaste with cutting Military budgets, I'm guessing you're against the idea of removing the cold war Trident system?
Labour care no more or less about the Working Classes than the Tories, they certainly dont care about the old and frail (sell your home to pay for your care), free prescriptions in England whilst Labour are in charge? - not a chance.To be honest, the three mainstreams are all broadly similar and as bad as each other as far as Im concerned, I dont hold 20-30 year old grudges against parties, I judge on the hear and now the best I can.
1] Yes, but many of those jobs are in the public sector. We have one of the biggest public sectors in Europe bigger than Greece. We couldn't afford it and now there are going to have to be severe cuts. Whoever gets in.2] True but athere will be cuts in education3] The schools turn kids out with qualifications so high no one believes them and employers constantly complain about low standards. The UK is slipping down the international education league table all the time.4] Expect cuts5] Europe won't be able to afford regional development aid anymore, it's all going to go on bailing the crippled economies6] Expect cuts in health too.The problem it turns out is New Labour spent all they could get their hands on to deliver this stuff and now the money has run out and we're in a proper mess.
RTID75 wrote:QuoteHaving said that I cant say Im too impressed with the Tories either, but, and its a long time ago, my parents will always vouch that they would NEVER have got on the property ladder without the Tories introduction of the 'right to buy' scheme.A Tory master-stroke, giving council tenants the right to buy at discount rates, it saddled folk with debt and responsibility thus making it harder for them to take industrial action when necessary. Become unemployed with a mortgage you can`t pay and repossession looms, live in the same house as a council tenant and become unemployed and your rent gets paid, thats the fear factor right to buy created
Having said that I cant say Im too impressed with the Tories either, but, and its a long time ago, my parents will always vouch that they would NEVER have got on the property ladder without the Tories introduction of the 'right to buy' scheme.
Thinwhiteduke wrote:QuoteRTID75 wrote:QuoteHaving said that I cant say Im too impressed with the Tories either, but, and its a long time ago, my parents will always vouch that they would NEVER have got on the property ladder without the Tories introduction of the 'right to buy' scheme.A Tory master-stroke, giving council tenants the right to buy at discount rates, it saddled folk with debt and responsibility thus making it harder for them to take industrial action when necessary. Become unemployed with a mortgage you can`t pay and repossession looms, live in the same house as a council tenant and become unemployed and your rent gets paid, thats the fear factor right to buy createdOr on the other hand, own a property outright, and have something to pass onto your family. Have no rent to pay into retirement because you own a property outright. Pros and cons my friend. I read some many positives stories from the right to buy schemes, and a few negative ones. Wisdh i could have bought my house for 40% discount 3 years ago!!!!
Isn't alot of this debt down to the recession though? Brown stuck with spending through the recession (rightly IMO) to avoid cuts in public services and prevent further unemployment.What I am saying is, if the global recession hadn't have happened (which no-one can say they foresaw), would we be in this mess still under the current government? I'm not sure we would be...
bobjimwilly wrote:QuoteIsn't alot of this debt down to the recession though? Brown stuck with spending through the recession (rightly IMO) to avoid cuts in public services and prevent further unemployment.What I am saying is, if the global recession hadn't have happened (which no-one can say they foresaw), would we be in this mess still under the current government? I'm not sure we would be... Brown did engineer an unsustainable property boom though. Northern Rock was a sub-prime crisis, most of the banks were involved in crazy lending here too it wasn't just in the US. And we were in massive debt before the recession, not the best position to be in. The low interest rates crippling savers, the massive spending and printing money since is just holding off the evil day of reckoning, which is due very soon.I don't believe a Conservative government wouldn't have handled the economy much better either. In general they backed most Labour policies and would have gone further with deregulation of banks.Vince Cable on the other hand was warning of a coming crisis and wanted to see action to limit its effects, though I don't think he foresaw just how bad it would be. He was regularly brushed aside and laughed at in the house.