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Post by Jambowayoh on Oct 19, 2024 11:16:02 GMT
As was the style at the time.
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X201
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Post by X201 on Oct 19, 2024 18:30:42 GMT
It depends how it develops, but the mutual idea of the people who actually care about it, owning it makes sense Ministers explore handing Post Office to sub-postmasters www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckgvqgqw71ro
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JonFE
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Uncomfortably numb...
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Post by JonFE on Oct 19, 2024 18:44:06 GMT
40 something? Who let the kid s in? /raises hand
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Post by Bill in the rain on Oct 24, 2024 2:16:03 GMT
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hedben
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Post by hedben on Oct 24, 2024 14:18:11 GMT
In the immortal words of teenagers everywhere… this is so cringe
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Post by Vandelay on Oct 24, 2024 14:39:33 GMT
I don't really have a big issue with them opening up a place for people to submit ideas (even in the likely event of those ideas all being completely worthless, I think at least showing engagement with people is a good thing). Having those ideas visible to everybody was really dumb though.
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imamazed
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Post by imamazed on Oct 24, 2024 14:46:58 GMT
Funny though
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hedben
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Post by hedben on Oct 24, 2024 15:14:59 GMT
I meant that he’s taken one of the most popular meme-y submissions to the open forum, and sucked all of the fun out of it by doing his own AI bullshit version.
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Post by rawshark on Oct 24, 2024 23:37:37 GMT
They could at least hired Jim’ll Paint It.
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X201
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Post by X201 on Oct 25, 2024 18:04:01 GMT
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Post by Dougs on Oct 25, 2024 19:14:10 GMT
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zephro
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Post by zephro on Oct 26, 2024 10:18:45 GMT
I continue to not get why journalists find "Working people" hard to parse www.newstatesman.com/thestaggers/2024/10/nancy-mitford-keir-starmer-and-the-new-english-class-warEven the example they give of someone who got British Gas shares in the 80s/90s. You'd have to own something like 30,000 shares before the dividend bumped you over the capital gains tax limit. As it was something like 4p per share and the tax limit is £5K. I don't think many normal people have that many. It's been perfectly evident they meant people paying the 3 main taxes, Income tax, National Insurance and VAT, for fucking ages. I just think a lot of journalists either have or have family/friends with investments/weird tax arrangements.
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Post by technoish on Oct 26, 2024 10:38:26 GMT
Yeah the only income most working people, including even "middle class" will have from shares are now in ISAs and pensions, which are exempt...
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Post by Chopsen on Oct 26, 2024 10:40:53 GMT
They've not helped themselves by using the term "working people" rather than using something like "income derived from working". That's where the distinction is. A pensioner who's on a £50k/year dividend from their investment portfolio and works at the gift shop of his golf club now and again is in a sense a "working person" even if they clearly aren't a category that needs particular protection from any tax reform.
Similar to the pushback from landlords being called "not working". Lots of landlords do work, and their priority is a side issue. That doesn't mean that their income from being a landlord can be entirely passive (especially if they delegate the running of the place to an agency) and is absolutely un-erned from their labour.
The media are being a bit dogmatic with their aoprent refusal to understand what is meant, but labour aren't exactly helping with their framing of it either.
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Onny
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Post by Onny on Oct 26, 2024 11:15:32 GMT
Ohhh he refused to give up his PIN on demand - that could be a 2-5 year sentence on its own.
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Post by manfromdelmonte on Oct 26, 2024 11:33:17 GMT
I think the "Working people." thing, as well as the Labour volunteers helping The Democrats issue, are a sign of the media magnifying minutia for the sake of content. After the last 8 years in particular, News media have become accustomed to a constantly shifting narrative. While that's still the case globally, having a chaotic domestic narrative is far cheaper to cover.
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zephro
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Post by zephro on Oct 26, 2024 11:38:14 GMT
They've not helped themselves by using the term "working people" rather than using something like "income derived from working". That's where the distinction is. A pensioner who's on a £50k/year dividend from their investment portfolio and works at the gift shop of his golf club now and again is in a sense a "working person" even if they clearly aren't a category that needs particular protection from any tax reform. Similar to the pushback from landlords being called "not working". Lots of landlords do work, and their priority is a side issue. That doesn't mean that their income from being a landlord can be entirely passive (especially if they delegate the running of the place to an agency) and is absolutely un-erned from their labour. The media are being a bit dogmatic with their aoprent refusal to understand what is meant, but labour aren't exactly helping with their framing of it either. I feel like if they said "income derived from working" they'd be chided by the press for being wonkish middle class types out of touch with the common man. So it feels damned if you do damned if you don't. They did say they were not raising those specific taxes though. So anyone with half a brain can work out they're considering all the other taxes like capital gains and so forth. The press are being deliberately obtuse. Even the left wing press.
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Post by Chopsen on Oct 26, 2024 13:57:53 GMT
It reasonable that they get pressed for an answer. Everybody with half a brain, even those who work in political journalism, could see that you can't promise to improve public services, be prudent the deficit, and *not* put up taxes.
We all knowing something and them going on the record saying something are completely different things.
There's nothing stopping them, post election and pre Bridget just stonewalling all questions and saying "full details of our fiscal plan will be outlined to the house when we formally announce our budget". They're only getting this pressure because theyr choosing to engage, to extent.
Regardless of right wing bias or whatever in the press, this is the press being the press. If they expected different they're foolish. To expect the press to not try and pin them down is to expect the press to fice them the benefit of the doubt and go easy on them. That's not holding the govt accountable
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apollo
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Post by apollo on Oct 26, 2024 14:41:29 GMT
some serious compo faces there
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Post by Reviewer on Oct 26, 2024 15:59:41 GMT
Working people is a stupid phrase for them to have ever tried to use. They either needed to refer to income or use examples of jobs, like shop workers and factory workers as they clearly indicates what income they mean.
Low income workers as a phrase seems to upset a lot of the right wing.
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apollo
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Post by apollo on Oct 27, 2024 7:11:48 GMT
Went for quick walk this morning and over heard this:
Some OAP walking their dog: took all day to get my doctor appointment last week, had to get a call back then go in at 3pm! BLOODY STARMER!, BLOODY LABOUR!
Other OAP: yeah, not wrong there
FFS these people but there is not point in saying anything to them about 14 years of tories draining the tax payers money and running the country into the ground. My parents are pretty much the same
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Post by rawshark on Oct 28, 2024 12:42:18 GMT
Tommy Robinson jailed for 18 months for cuntempt of cunt.
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X201
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Post by X201 on Oct 28, 2024 12:42:41 GMT
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Post by Whizzo on Oct 28, 2024 12:45:30 GMT
Nelsonmuntz.gif
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Ulythium
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Lily-livered
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Post by Ulythium on Oct 28, 2024 13:40:16 GMT
The spirit of John 'Two Jabs' Prescott is alive and well in today's Labour Party: www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c6244gk9d4poIn all seriousness, Prescott's indiscretion was much less egregious than this seems to be on the face of it.
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rftp
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Post by rftp on Oct 28, 2024 14:54:55 GMT
I can understand giving someone a smack in the heat of the moment, especially if you feel threatened.
To then punch someone on the ground isn't reasonable. To do it five times rather puts any mitigation you may later want to bring up to be pointless.
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rftp
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Post by rftp on Oct 28, 2024 15:00:24 GMT
Crowdfunded £87k for his defence, then plead guilty. Grifters gonna grift, idiots gonna pay.
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Bongo Heracles
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Technically illegal to ride on public land
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Post by Bongo Heracles on Oct 28, 2024 15:11:18 GMT
I’m finding more and more that I kind of wish these people fleeced their audience out of even more money. Like the people who sank their life savings into Truth Social stock, it’s got to the point that I actually want to see them homeless.
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Rich
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Post by Rich on Oct 28, 2024 15:42:50 GMT
Can't say I'm a fan of Starmer raising the bus fare price cap. We should be doing everything we can to encourage public transport use.
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Post by simple on Oct 28, 2024 16:12:28 GMT
As someone who used to pay £6.40 for a day ticket (or £4.40 for a single) the fare cap has saved me an absolute packet (well, £2.40 but thats a third journey and some Space Raiders y’know).
Plus there’s the environmental argument for trying to keep cars off the road and get more people onto public transport.
Its undoubtably one of those tinkering around the edge changes that manages to generate peanuts in the grand scheme of things while making life more expensive for people who already have the least.
Just tax dead rich people subsidise the cheaper fares.
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