BiggestNizzy wrote:neil wrote:What I'd like to know is what's the cutoff between rich and poor? IE which category do I fit into
That's an easy one have you ever had to choose between feeding your kids and heating them ? If not your doing ok. If you have your poor.
PhilA wrote:
Does mean a complete mental shift in working - e.g. get a 15k job and you only get 7.5k take home.
but with the state wage, you have well over 20k income.
We are back to giving people who don't make a lot of money massive pay cuts so that it's harder for them to feed their children. Or Do you take their kids off them because they can't get a better job? With a standard rate of tax everyone who makes less than £50k will be hit hard, the less you make the harder you get hit. You will end up making working for anything less than £30k+ pointless as you will get more on the dole.
PhilA wrote:
Maybe it involves council type jobs that everyone has to spend x hours per year doing - from street sweepers, to community care.
What about the people who do this job for a living do you make them all unemployed as they have been replaced by people who don't have a job?
PhilA wrote:
There is ZERO chance it will ever come about - and likely majority of "hardly working" people wouldnt care about even trying to work. Meh.
Unemployment benefit is a safety net that I have been lucky never to have used, It doesn't cost that much and overall it's probably a good thing yes there are people who take advantage of the system in the same way as Joey jakebag skams a couple of quid and spends it on fags compared to corporate planning it's a drop in the ocean.
PhilA wrote:
Tory are a good bet just now - low TAX, same as UK, Unions based approach, may even lower corporation TAX to help folk make more jobs. If only they were interested in renewables - thats not only needed for health of our planet Earth, its also going to be the major boom industry, the next industrial revolution.
Or screwing the disabled, Attacking the opposition's finances, selling assets at a loss, increasing the deficit., HS2
all my points were in relation to everyone having a basic income no matter their wage so we all can do life things. thats what the greens want.
so no, there wont be the case there of pointless to work - working gives extra, full stop.
other extreme is as now - get benefits, very very basic, and if u have a job you are either taxes more(lab) or taxed less (tory) - but either way, the poor are poorer than under green, and the rich are richer.
no government will ever be able to please everyone. politicing certain cuts as attacks on female/young/disabled etc - in the main its opposition beating the governement in the media.
There will always be people worse off than others in cuts.
In SNPLand, they have been all give, except for collage places, and council jobs, and EU Funding for farmers, and EU funding for school capital projects.
But in terms of TAX, the have got off Scot free
Now they have started to wind up middle earners with not passing on the 40p tax limit rise.
But watch an indy Scotland with SNP in charge - they would never get back in as they would ahve to cut everything significantly.
Tory took on a mucked up economy - a labour welfare system that the economy (us workers) could not support.
Real life bites.
Yes, I agree that the cuts on disabled has gone too far, if it was as protrayed in the media by labour - but up to then they were doing ok.
Everything in moderation - including cutbacks in welfare. I am glad that IDS was the catalyst to modify their policy there.
Elections etc generally keep us in the middle ground - extremes are not well liked.
Green are extreme, but some of their more practical policies are taken up in government over time - the ideas are drawn to the centre ground.
SNP council tax free has gone on too long, people and councils wanted their services and now they have abandoned it - its been moderated.