Blue_Mike
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Post by Blue_Mike on Nov 15, 2024 0:24:05 GMT
Not being a home owner I'm annoyed at the lower interest rates, fucking over my LISA. You should have married her when you had the chance.
I have to admit, I initially read this exchange as being something to do with an 80s style robot codenamed L.I.S.A. proving to be too expensive to keep in rented accomodation any longer
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Tomo
Junior Member
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Post by Tomo on Nov 15, 2024 0:24:28 GMT
The execs failing upwards is definitely a thing. It's literally going on in my Trust at the moment. Like a rigged deck of cards being shuffled.
But, I'm not sure this is an NHS specific problem. Execs across all industries gon' exec. The moment you put someone in charge somewhere, they're gunna favour their pals and yes(wo)men.
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Tomo
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Post by Tomo on Nov 15, 2024 0:27:45 GMT
Also - the link Nick provided says "persistently failing" managers will be dealt with. What the hell is the definition of "persistently" here. Presumably more than two? So you're gunna have to prove an exec is failing on more than two occasions. Good luck with that, when the execs have access to all of the stats at their Trusts which they can be ahead of should they need to present the data favourably... And lest we not forget, in an institution that famously fires next to nobody.
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Post by Chopsen on Nov 15, 2024 0:32:40 GMT
Yeah, this is more of an employment law thing than a specific NHS thing. Performance management is actually hard work and difficult: needing diligence, time and knowledge of employment law. You can't just sack people. We're not the US.
The idea of a Pointy Haired Boss did not come from a satire of the NHS. Neither did the Peter Principle. They're widely observed phenomena. And that in the US, where it's a lot easier to get rid of people.
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Post by Bill in the rain on Nov 15, 2024 1:40:58 GMT
NHS League Tables seems like such a Tory idea.
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Post by Dougs on Nov 15, 2024 6:32:30 GMT
I've spent the last 5 years trying to convince the powers that be from avoiding league tables for local authorities. It's such a nonsense with so many variables.
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Tomo
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Post by Tomo on Nov 15, 2024 8:46:17 GMT
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Post by Whizzo on Nov 15, 2024 11:09:22 GMT
The new reality has certainly been positive in one respect, the insanity in the US has made even people who would normally be quiet about Brexit being a clusterfuck and we need to be closer to Europe are now making noises.
Reeves can blather about not rejoining the single market or customs union and we'll still be able to do our own thing is certainly looking incredibly naive with a mad fucker about to cause a global trade war.
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Post by Bill in the rain on Nov 15, 2024 11:42:50 GMT
If Trump actually does start massive tariffs on UK goods it might actually be the thing that enables Labour to go after some kind of closer alignment with the EU (be it the customs union, or rejoining or something similar).
They might have said they wouldn't, but Trump sticking 20% tariffs on UK goods would give them a pretty convincing excuse to change their position.
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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 Nov 15, 2024 11:57:10 GMT
Ive quite enjoyed the charlatans trying to insist that Brexit leaves us in a great position actually as we can perform our own negotiations. Like a hedgehog negotiates with a lorry tyre.
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Post by manfromdelmonte on Nov 15, 2024 12:16:07 GMT
We performed our own negotiations with Australia and New Zealand, and came out so well that Canada withdrew from our rolled over deal because they want the same advantageous terms as the antipodeans.
Negotiations with the US will go along the lines of "One NHS please." "How high?"
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Post by Saul1138 on Nov 16, 2024 12:28:51 GMT
Ive quite enjoyed the charlatans trying to insist that Brexit leaves us in a great position actually as we can perform our own negotiations. Like a hedgehog negotiates with a lorry tyre. You should have watched Vine on Five* on Friday morning. One scrote claimed that since coming out of the EU, the NHS had been receiving the £350 million a week that it was promised. The fact that the prick went unchallenged on this claim means that I will never watch it again. I already turn it off most days once I see who is on. * You really should never take my advice on what to watch.
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Post by Jambowayoh on Nov 16, 2024 13:05:15 GMT
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Post by simple on Nov 17, 2024 22:49:07 GMT
A question for anyone who has paid more attention than me:
Is this farm inheritance row really the very rich landowners at the top of the NFU convincing smaller regular members to go to war against a tax change that will really only actually effect those very rich landowners and not most regular farmers?
(like how the papers always scare people that their nanna’s flat on the outskirts of Doncaster will be impacted by a potential mansion tax which is only really targeted at about six specific oligarchs?)
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Post by stuz359 on Nov 17, 2024 23:30:14 GMT
A question for anyone who has paid more attention than me: Is this farm inheritance row really the very rich landowners at the top of the NFU convincing smaller regular members to go to war against a tax change that will really only actually effect those very rich landowners and not most regular farmers? (like how the papers always scare people that their nanna’s flat on the outskirts of Doncaster will be impacted by a potential mansion tax which is only really targeted at about six specific oligarchs?) Yes. It affects a tiny number of larger farms. It's the top 1% trying to convince the bottom 80% that their interests are yours.
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minimatt
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Post by minimatt on Nov 18, 2024 3:49:28 GMT
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Post by Bill in the rain on Nov 18, 2024 5:02:10 GMT
I read an article somewhere that implied it was mainly targeted at a recent trend of investors buying up agricultural land because it's recommended as a tax break. They then don't actually farm that land. I forget the exact figures, but it mentioned something like over 50% of recent agricultural land purchases not actually for farming, so the amount of farmed land is going down. If true, the NFU should be supporting this plan. .. ah, here: www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/nov/17/keir-starmer-defends-inheritance-tax-change-amid-farmers-outrage
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Post by Wizzard_Ook on Nov 18, 2024 7:50:15 GMT
A question for anyone who has paid more attention than me: Is this farm inheritance row really the very rich landowners at the top of the NFU convincing smaller regular members to go to war against a tax change that will really only actually effect those very rich landowners and not most regular farmers? (like how the papers always scare people that their nanna’s flat on the outskirts of Doncaster will be impacted by a potential mansion tax which is only really targeted at about six specific oligarchs?) I was wondering whether this could be the case. Unwillingly to protest against supermarkets buying and selling their products at the lowest price possible, brexit’s effect on farming or potential Aussie trade deals but jump up in their tractors at the first opportunity when inheritance tax is involved. Living in a rural area I do have sympathy for farmers, they get screwed over plenty but it does feel the NFU doesn’t have farming best interest at heart.
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Bongo Heracles
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Post by Bongo Heracles on Nov 18, 2024 7:52:09 GMT
All you really need to know is that Sir James Dyson, one of the biggest cunts in the country, now owns 36k acres of farmland
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Tomo
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Post by Tomo on Nov 18, 2024 8:16:29 GMT
I am finding it exasperating how every taxation policy Labour tries to implement currently is met with a voluminous outrage. I know (most) people don't want to be taxed more, but given the binfire state the country is in and the fact that Labour was voted in about 6 months ago, the immediacy of the backlash to absolutely everything surprises me.
I can't remember what it was like when Blair started - was it a similar vibe? Or is this just an inevitable consequence of everything being hyper polarised nowadays?
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Post by Reviewer on Nov 18, 2024 8:25:35 GMT
Even those with land worth more, if they really care about the inheritance issues then the farms can be passed over to their kids well before it becomes an issue.
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Post by Reviewer on Nov 18, 2024 8:28:46 GMT
I am finding it exasperating how every taxation policy Labour tries to implement currently is met with a voluminous outrage. I know (most) people don't want to be taxed more, but given the binfire state the country is in and the fact that Labour was voted in about 6 months ago, the immediacy of the backlash to absolutely everything surprises me. I can't remember what it was like when Blair started - was it a similar vibe? Or is this just an inevitable consequence of everything being hyper polarised nowadays? Completely agree. Those can can afford to pay more without a noticeable impact on their lives should pay more. It would be nice to not pay any tax but if it’s fair and used well then I don’t have an issue. I’m not one who is ever going to struggle as a result of tax increases but I want education, health and infrastructure to all be world leading and I want to pay for that. All of that is possible with sensible tax increases on the right people. I don’t remember it being this bad for the complaining under Blair, but then he had most of the press on his side and social media didn’t exist (the good old days).
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Post by Chopsen on Nov 18, 2024 9:32:53 GMT
There was a lot of bitching about Brown increased NI contributions after running on a manifesto of no increased income tax. There was also a lot of bitching about some very technical tax reform on how pensions work behind the scenes, which nobody would have really noticed in reality but even to this day gets described as a "raid" on pensions. Also he sold "our" gold. So yeah this tax drama has form.
(He was wrong about NI not being considered an income tax imho, and he gets rightly pasted for that. I think Reeves would have not been unaware of that drama when she pulled her stealth version of that by upping employers NI)
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Post by Chopsen on Nov 18, 2024 9:42:35 GMT
I have some sympathy for the NFU on the inheritance thing.
They're arguing that the HMRC valuation is skewed by the fact that its based on land value claims for agricultural use only, and those farms with valuations of agricultural land of less than £1m are mostly financially unviable from agricultural use alone. Most of the financially viable ones, which are editing actual farming and contributing to our food security, are ones which are now going to be caught up in the new band. To pay for the inheritance, they may well have to broken up, which then jeopardises their financial viability. This will in turn push farmers away from farming and turn to holiday lets or alternative sources of income from the land. Which is fine and all, but the whole point of counting it differently was to protect our food security.
On the other hand though Dyson is a cunt, so there is that
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Post by stixxuk on Nov 18, 2024 9:58:44 GMT
Generally the same people that think everyone on benefits is fleecing them that think they shouldn't have to pay any tax.
It's largely projection "if I don't protect my own money I'm a mug and will get fucked over by everyone else" There's a deeply ingrained cultural thing here that needs addressing.
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Post by Whizzo on Nov 18, 2024 10:12:49 GMT
If a farm is worth millions but somehow only generates a profit of about 30 thousand, it's not really worth millions is it?
The apparent value of land has been a massive way of dodging tax for decades, most farmers aren't even going to be affected by the change as they're not hitting the limits but they're useful idiots for people like Dyson and Clarkson to exploit for their tax dodging.
As for the UK's food security, as I saw someone bring up on Bluesky earlier, historically meant keeping open shipping lanes, the UK hasn't fed itself alone in centuries.
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Vandelay
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Post by Vandelay on Nov 18, 2024 10:18:33 GMT
I understand Clarkson doesn't even hide the fact that he bought the land primarily as a tax dodge. The fact he has also likely made tens of millions off of the farm shop, pub and Amazon deal was just a nice side effect. I don't imagine him and his family will have too much difficulty paying for the still discounted inheritance tax fees (if they ever pay it, as it isn't like it is particularly hard to dodge most of it).
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Post by Chopsen on Nov 18, 2024 10:36:12 GMT
Valuations of agricultural land is weird. It's done differently to residential or general commercial, and is usually a lot *lower* than it would be those means. Large valuations usually just means "lots of land". If you sold it off for residential use you'd make a killing and could retire at any age on the proceeds. Which is exactly what a lot of farmers round my end have done and are doing.
The slim margins are and industry wide thing, and the implications of "well if you can't make it work" is in reality we would no farming a t all.
Ofc food security is not dependent on just these farms. Any sensible approach would not have a single point of failure, and the point that we haven't been able to feed ourselves was made during the Brexit debate repeatedly.
I am not a farmer and don't have a horse (or any farmyard animal) in this race. It does feel like we are ready to throw an entire industry that benefits us under a bus just to teach Clarkson a lesson.
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Post by gamingdave on Nov 18, 2024 10:44:48 GMT
I read Dan's thread, and (as I often do) found it full of useful insight. But have also seen this number used quite a bit to show how few it affects, and I think a lot of people just read this as the number of wealthy land owners who will pay - but it's the number of farms affected each year, so in reality it's quite a lot. Assuming a farm is held for a generation before being passed on, and that 21-22 was an average, then even at the low end of a 20year generation it's over 2000 farms affected (4x the 500 the govt has suggested). I completely understand the desire to close a loophole - where wealthy people (like Clarkson/Dyson) have bought farms to try and avoid inheritance tax they should be paying - it shouldn't be allowed. And this protest is clearly being highjacked/encouraged by those mega-wealth land owners (and those trying to score points with Labour) who have done nothing to help farmers with supermarket pricing tactics, or Brexit, or shoddy deals with NZ (and possibly soon the US). But there are a lot of farms which on paper are worth a lot, but in reality don't generate a lot of income. Land and property are valuable assets, but hill farming makes a pittance compared to industrial farming, and those farming responsibly and looking after the land make less than those abusing it for maximum profit. There is a real worry that this will affect considerable numbers of farms which will have to be sold, and the only potential buyers with deep enough pockets to buy them will be conglomerates who already own huge tracts of land and are only in it for profit (at the cost of animal welfare or the environment). Tim Farron has been very vocal about this. I'm sure there is a bit of political point scoring going on but having represented a rural constituency for nearly 20 years (and held positions on food and rural affairs), I'm also inclined to listen to his position with interest and there is more to this than simply greedy farmers hoarding wealth.
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Post by Bill in the rain on Nov 18, 2024 12:50:35 GMT
It seems like the problems with farming profitability aren't really related to inheritance tax for the top few farms though. Especially if 56% of farmland purchases are already for non-farming. So this hardly seems like throwing the whole industry under the bus. If there's something they can do that would actually benefit all farmers, then that would be worth doing. But I doubt that's related to inheritance tax.
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