W
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worsleyweb
Guest
Yep, I stopped reading at that point.
See my post above. I await your comments.
Yep, I stopped reading at that point.
You have to pay in Trafford now. Come and check it, it varies from week to week.
Used to play golf at Heaton park as a kid, god it's a tough course.
It'll mostly never be paid back. As I said in an earlier post, maybe we should just put 9% on earnings over £21000 for everyone who ever graduated from university? Now that would realise quite a lot of cash (much more than Corbin was after).
Fuck Sinn Fein.
Why is it people in NI continually act like spoilt children?
You live on a different planet if you believe any of that you have just wrote.
"there have been no cuts"
Rubbish!
See my post above. I await your comments.
Can I have an apology?
The IFS thinks your facebook link is total bollox!
See my post above. I await your comments.
It'll mostly never be paid back. As I said in an earlier post, maybe we should just put 9% on earnings over £21000 for everyone who ever graduated from university? Now that would realise quite a lot of cash (much more than Corbin was after).
I think irrespective of who is bringing up concerns re the GFA that hardly equates to them acting like children.
Many of those numbers are actually reductions if taking inflation into account. Even if NHS funding was up 10% in 7 years (it isn't) demand is growing by over 4% per year. That's always assuming you don't want to count drugs inflation. That has gone up by about 25% and is rising exponentially year on year. Total drugs bill currently is about £16B, likely to be £21B by 2022.Apologies for the Facebook link but wanted to be quick.
https://m.facebook.com/photo.php?fb...=a.2916888440154.2127322.1199013810&source=48
But that's what we are doing to graduates, so why not?so 39% of my hard-earned money being taken off me without spending a penny, sounds so appealing.
Does it have mention of cranes on the skyline of cities throughout the UK? And how that makes everything hunky dory?
I'll read it later ww.
At the moment I'm just sickened by the seeming rush to defend to use our 'booming' economy as an argument that everything is great.
It isn't. It's all smoke and mirrors.
Tell those who died excruciating deaths in the Grenfell Tower they were living the dream.
I admit that I've never given those people, or anyone else living in similar, a thought before. They got on with their lives and I got on with mine, 250 miles apart in this particular instance.
However, I know (and always have) that this economy shite never filters down.
Rant over.
I'll read it later ww.
Many of those numbers are actually reductions if taking inflation into account. Even if NHS funding was up 10% in 7 years (it isn't) demand is growing by over 4% per year. That's always assuming you don't want to count drugs inflation. That has gone up by about 25% and is rising exponentially year on year. Total drugs bill currently is about £16B, likely to be £21B by 2022.
Also, you forgot to include debt in that list.
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I paid mine back as I am sure others do.
may be a bit harsh and inequitable as we only want them to pay back their loans and notional interest.
I am all for free education at uni but it's doesn't seem to be the biggest priority at the moment in society, unless of course you needed a lot of people to vote for you in an election then I can understand why you might want to prioritise it,
taxing hard work and entrepreneurship?
Current students face 4% interest.
Not my idea of notional.
But that's what we are doing to graduates, so why not?
They went from being the government to being a minority government because, suddenly, people realised these tough choices you describe have actually been making it worse, not better.
As for bribing students, if indeed that's what happened, how is that any different to you voting for a party because they offer you tax cuts or offer pensioners a triple lock, free tv licences, free travel and winter fuel payments?
As for student loans, 9% they pay back, on all earnings over £21000. Maybe the government should just say everyone who ever went to university will pay 9% on everything they earn over £21000 (that pre not post tax)?