I’m very disappointed that the bill to increase tuition fees has been successful. The Lib Dems should be ashamed of themselves. They signed a pre-election pledge to vote against any increase. In the end only 21 of them had the balls to vote against the bill with 8 of them abstaining.
Nick Clegg has spent the last few days insulting the public and the students by saying the policy isn’t bad it’s just that people don’t understand it. We do understand the policy Nick and it’s disgraceful. He keeps trying to tell us that it’s not that bad because students won’t have to pay anything back until they are reaping the benefits of their education and earning £21,000 or more. Well let me tell you Nick, £21,000 isn’t very much these days. A great deal of non-graduate jobs (including mine) pay that much.
Imagine a student who has to pay £9,000 on tuition fess and takes out a £4,000 student loan each year of a 3 year course. Total debt £21,000. If the student marries another student or graduate with a similar debt they are staring adult life with a combined debt of £42,000. If they want to buy a small house in the town where I live (one of the cheapest places in the country for property prices) they are going to need a mortgage of at least £75,000.
That means before they have even considered having any children and raising a family they have a combined debt of over £117,000.
This whole episode is going to be very damaging for the Lib Dems:
How are they going to campaign at the next election?
Nobody will believe a word they say.
How will they be able to campaign against the Tory party on the doorsteps?
They can’t as they are the Tories partners in crime.
Well done Nick! You and Vince have destroyed the Lib Dems as a political force. I would be amazed if the party gets more 10% – 12% of the vote at the next election.
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Welcome to my Blog. I hope you enjoy reading my rants about Music, politics, football and life in general. Please feel free to leave comments about anything other than spilling and grammer.
Showing posts with label ConDem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ConDem. Show all posts
Friday, 10 December 2010
Friday, 26 November 2010
New Job
I’ve managed to get a new roll at work and it’s on my current grade. I’m pleased even though it’s not exactly the sort of roll I wanted. I must confess that I’m a little bit nervous. It’s always a bit frightening starting a new job with new people.
After what the banks have done to the economy I’m just happy to have a job. The thought of being unemployed, even with a redundancy payment, was terrifying. Cameron and Osborne have announced cuts which are so severe that an estimated 1.5m people across both the public and private sector are going to lose their jobs. My heart goes out to all those people facing a very uncertain future.
After what the banks have done to the economy I’m just happy to have a job. The thought of being unemployed, even with a redundancy payment, was terrifying. Cameron and Osborne have announced cuts which are so severe that an estimated 1.5m people across both the public and private sector are going to lose their jobs. My heart goes out to all those people facing a very uncertain future.
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Sunday, 21 November 2010
Never had it so good
It’s been a difficult month for me. The team I was on at work was disbanded and we were offered voluntary redundancy. The redundancy package wasn’t as much as I had hoped for so I have decided to stay and I’m looking for a new role. The company have protected my wages for 6 months but if I can’t find anything on my current pay grade I’m facing a massive pay cut. I’m keeping my fingers crossed because I’ve got a mortgage to pay.
During his spending review speech in Parliament George Osborne stood at the dispatch box and accused people of getting into more debt than they can afford. He thinks people should learn to live within their means. Well I did borrow within my needs and got a mortgage based my current wages. I now face a 20% pay cut so, like thousands of others, I’m in danger of having my ‘means’ taken away from me.
The banks have spent the last 15 years lending vast amounts of money to businesses which had virtually no chance of ever making enough money to repay the loans. They have lent money to people looking to buy homes in a vastly overpriced property market. Overpriced due to the 100%+ mortgages the banks were offering people in the first place.
I would just like to say to Mr Osborne that the banks must take some responsibility. Many of the people who have taken these huge mortgages are young couples who did so because they needed a home. A large number of them now face losing their job due to the cuts and the economic disaster caused by the very same banks that landed them in unmanageable debt.
During the same period the credit card companies (owned by the same banks) were constantly increasing card credit limits. Many people will say that just because the credit is available you aren’t forced to use it. If the fridge stops working, the car breaks down, the kids need new clothes etc. but you’ve no money it’s very difficult not to use a credit card.
Most of us live in the real world not the wealthy Tory bubble. We haven’t all got rich parents to bail us out when times are hard. Unlike Mr Osborne most of us aren’t the heir to a baronetcy or have a personal fortune of at least £4m. Unlike David and Samantha Cameron most of us don’t have a combined wealth of over £30m and parents that own half of Yorkshire. These people don’t know what it’s like to make ends meet, to live on minimum wage or to face losing their home when made redundant. Even Nick Clegg comes from a rich family of Bankers (his father is chairman of United Trust Bank, and is a trustee of The Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation).
When they tell us we are all in this together they are lying. They have not introduced any huge changes to the banking system, they haven’t forced corporations to pay the £40billion owed in unpaid taxes, they haven’t dealt with the ‘non-dom’ tax status of people like Lord Ashcroft and they are still hitting the poorest people hardest.
The new Tory party is just as bad as the old Tory party. They steal from the poor and look after their own kind.
“Never had it so good”, don’t make me laugh!!
During his spending review speech in Parliament George Osborne stood at the dispatch box and accused people of getting into more debt than they can afford. He thinks people should learn to live within their means. Well I did borrow within my needs and got a mortgage based my current wages. I now face a 20% pay cut so, like thousands of others, I’m in danger of having my ‘means’ taken away from me.
The banks have spent the last 15 years lending vast amounts of money to businesses which had virtually no chance of ever making enough money to repay the loans. They have lent money to people looking to buy homes in a vastly overpriced property market. Overpriced due to the 100%+ mortgages the banks were offering people in the first place.
I would just like to say to Mr Osborne that the banks must take some responsibility. Many of the people who have taken these huge mortgages are young couples who did so because they needed a home. A large number of them now face losing their job due to the cuts and the economic disaster caused by the very same banks that landed them in unmanageable debt.
During the same period the credit card companies (owned by the same banks) were constantly increasing card credit limits. Many people will say that just because the credit is available you aren’t forced to use it. If the fridge stops working, the car breaks down, the kids need new clothes etc. but you’ve no money it’s very difficult not to use a credit card.
Most of us live in the real world not the wealthy Tory bubble. We haven’t all got rich parents to bail us out when times are hard. Unlike Mr Osborne most of us aren’t the heir to a baronetcy or have a personal fortune of at least £4m. Unlike David and Samantha Cameron most of us don’t have a combined wealth of over £30m and parents that own half of Yorkshire. These people don’t know what it’s like to make ends meet, to live on minimum wage or to face losing their home when made redundant. Even Nick Clegg comes from a rich family of Bankers (his father is chairman of United Trust Bank, and is a trustee of The Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation).
When they tell us we are all in this together they are lying. They have not introduced any huge changes to the banking system, they haven’t forced corporations to pay the £40billion owed in unpaid taxes, they haven’t dealt with the ‘non-dom’ tax status of people like Lord Ashcroft and they are still hitting the poorest people hardest.
The new Tory party is just as bad as the old Tory party. They steal from the poor and look after their own kind.
“Never had it so good”, don’t make me laugh!!
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