Foolish boy every word was made up at some point.
Yes that was the joke which I was making.
Foolish boy every word was made up at some point.
Spot on, the right don't make political points with it, they simply ignore it, and if you do hold their feet to fire, they argue about the terms of reference in order to belittle it, not unlike you're doing now.
Yes that was the joke which I was making.
Unlike you I don't see it as a competition between left and right. It's a shit term and the fact we are arguing that simple point only enforces my view.
Only on the right does the terms of reference rubbish the argument. Can you not see that is deliberate?
It's not deliberate the term poverty gets used even without the relative part a lot on here, and even if it's used a lot of people will make the wrong conclusion. Even honest balaclava man himself throws the word poverty around like confetti. You know and so do I that the word throws up images for people so two things tend to happen.
Some get all worked up about kids living in what they understand as poverty or people laugh at it. Either one is not very constructive.
But this confusion is quite deliberate, it is generated by the right to muddy the waters. We could talk all day about absolute poverty, relative poverty, a deprivation index, income inequality, life chances, happiness index, social mobility, or whether poverty exists at all.
But it's noises off deliberately generated in order to ensure that nothing gets done.
No need to be a drama queen mate. Despite Jezza running a good campaign and May being shown to be weak and inept, Corbyn won't win ( two years chaotic opposition and his past have seen to that).It's probably been the worst Tory campaign in history to be honest but the though of Corbyn as PM has made me rethink my position on Swiss citizenship which until now I have staunchly refused to entertain.
The labour manifesto is just a fantasy wish list which is completely unaffordable and he's an IRA sympathiser no matter how much he lies about it. Diane Abbott shouldn't be anywhere near government and John McDonnell can honour the fucking IRA by blowing himself up as far as I'm concerned.
Both my kids are voting and were both leaning towards Tory but are both now wondering what to do with their vote and frankly I've advised them to vote for none of the above.
Unlike you I don't see it as a competition between left and right.
Relative poverty is a nonsense but it does give the left something to moan about.
A term made up in social science that the left use for political gain. Utter horseshit.
The way it has been used in this thread shows it isn't a great term but that won't stop a couple of lefties trying to make a political point out of it.
Whatever your political persuasion, Michael Fallon on channel 4 highlights nicely how far removed political narrative/campaigning is from objective reality.
It's to your eternal credit that you manage to rise above that.
Because in this instance poverty is being spouted by the left on here.
It's to your eternal credit that you manage to rise above that.
With the greatest respect, it's hardly likely to be spouted by the right on here.
It is hardly likely to be spouted by any sitting government left or right. As we all know a manifesto by any opposition party is pretty easy. Take the 10 quid minimum wage. Fabulous idea on paper but doomed to failure like tax credits. As an ideal the labour manifesto is hard to disagree with but too many think it's not realistic.
So true.
To his credit he's held back from talking about the deserving and undeserving poor, so there may be hope for him yet.
True mate, but personally I'm willing to take a gamble on an idealistic manifesto as opposed to the harsh realities of the current regime.
We have a policy from the Tories on social care which is a labour type policy all day long