Advice is what we seek when we already know the answer - but wish we didn't
I'd rather have a full bottle in front of me than a full-frontal lobotomy ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ kirkstaller wrote: "All DNA shows is that we have a common creator."
cod'ead wrote: "I have just snotted weissbier all over my keyboard & screen"
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ "No amount of cajolery, and no attempts at ethical or social seduction, can eradicate from my heart a deep burning hatred for the Tory Party. So far as I am concerned they are lower than vermin." - Aneurin Bevan
So in a time of acute, going on chronic, shortage of affordable homes, Eric Pickles's answer is to increase the discount on Right to Buy from 60% to 70%. But it's OK, the money raised will be used to build more affordable homes. Now I'm no mathematician but if you've only got one third of ther money to build homes with then surely you can only build one third the number of homes to replace those sold. Wouldn't that then exacerbate the shortage of affordable homes?
More evidence of the lunacy of this bunch of sociopaths:
So in a time of acute, going on chronic, shortage of affordable homes, Eric Pickles's answer is to increase the discount on Right to Buy from 60% to 70%. But it's OK, the money raised will be used to build more affordable homes. Now I'm no mathematician but if you've only got one third of ther money to build homes with then surely you can only build one third the number of homes to replace those sold. Wouldn't that then exacerbate the shortage of affordable homes?
So in a time of acute, going on chronic, shortage of affordable homes, Eric Pickles's answer is to increase the discount on Right to Buy from 60% to 70%. But it's OK, the money raised will be used to build more affordable homes. Now I'm no mathematician but if you've only got one third of ther money to build homes with then surely you can only build one third the number of homes to replace those sold. Wouldn't that then exacerbate the shortage of affordable homes?
I've no problems at all with Right to Buy. It was a great policy when Maggie introduced it, and helped many people get onto the property ladder. In my parents case, I was delighted to give them the money to buy their council house. It was in a nice street, in a good area, and they were surrounded by neighbours they had known for over 30 years. It also gave them security in their retirement years, and a few quid extra in the weekly budget. And their first investment as homeowners, was to replace the bog standard front door.....as did everyone else in the street who bought theirs!
The only disappointment I have is that Cameron has not followed up on his pledge to build a new one, for every one sold.
cod'ead wrote:
More evidence of the lunacy of this bunch of sociopaths:
So in a time of acute, going on chronic, shortage of affordable homes, Eric Pickles's answer is to increase the discount on Right to Buy from 60% to 70%. But it's OK, the money raised will be used to build more affordable homes. Now I'm no mathematician but if you've only got one third of ther money to build homes with then surely you can only build one third the number of homes to replace those sold. Wouldn't that then exacerbate the shortage of affordable homes?
I've no problems at all with Right to Buy. It was a great policy when Maggie introduced it, and helped many people get onto the property ladder. In my parents case, I was delighted to give them the money to buy their council house. It was in a nice street, in a good area, and they were surrounded by neighbours they had known for over 30 years. It also gave them security in their retirement years, and a few quid extra in the weekly budget. And their first investment as homeowners, was to replace the bog standard front door.....as did everyone else in the street who bought theirs!
The only disappointment I have is that Cameron has not followed up on his pledge to build a new one, for every one sold.
Someday everything is gonna be different, when I paint my masterpiece ---------------------------------------------------------- Online art gallery, selling original landscape artwork ---------------------------------------------------------- JerryChicken - The Blog ----------------------------------------------------------
On the same subject its all very well speaking of "top-up"insurance (private) at a fee of £20 a month but in reality that is utter bollax and a figure plucked out of thin air.
Does anyone REALLY know how much a top-up health insurance policy would cost them, the actual cost I mean not a guestimate ?
Because most of my normal insurance is now with Aviva they send me a sales email every month to try and get me to sign up to their own brand of private health insurance which of course is nothing more than a top-up to the NHS (as is ALL private health insurance in the UK and across Europe for that matter).
I'd write to them and ask them to stop quoting me other than the fact that I'm interested to see what the REAL cost of top-up health insurance actually is, one day I'll ask them to provide details of what they do and more importantly don't cover, but thats only when I can be arsed then fielding all their follow-up calls.
For now, for the record, for me alone (not family cover), a 57 year old normal fit male (health check last year, christ I sound like a vet describing a horse) with no pre-existing conditions and no visits of any importance to his GP in the past 30 years, my monthly Aviva private top-up health cover (its so much more convenient when you need an operation you know) is currently standing at £99.15 per month and it increases by approx £1 each birthday.
THIS is the reason why sometimes I get a bit annoyed when fekkwits start hammering the NHS.
I've no problems at all with Right to Buy. It was a great policy when Maggie introduced it, and helped many people get onto the property ladder. In my parents case, I was delighted to give them the money to buy their council house. It was in a nice street, in a good area, and they were surrounded by neighbours they had known for over 30 years. It also gave them security in their retirement years, and a few quid extra in the weekly budget. And their first investment as homeowners, was to replace the bog standard front door.....as did everyone else in the street who bought theirs!
The only disappointment I have is that Cameron has not followed up on his pledge to build a new one, for every one sold.
So they didn't live in a large council estate in Westminster Council, London under the lovely Lady Porter. And when people bought with the right to buy were hit with very large bills when they spent millions doing the estate up cosmetically and removing the central heating that was part of the rent and made you have to pay for that yourself. Something that wasn't really told to the people who chose to buy.
Though the front door thing brings a smile to me as people did that. It was almost like a display of difference. "We're not council anymore!"
Someday everything is gonna be different, when I paint my masterpiece ---------------------------------------------------------- Online art gallery, selling original landscape artwork ---------------------------------------------------------- JerryChicken - The Blog ----------------------------------------------------------
I've no problems at all with Right to Buy. It was a great policy when Maggie introduced it, and helped many people get onto the property ladder. In my parents case, I was delighted to give them the money to buy their council house. It was in a nice street, in a good area, and they were surrounded by neighbours they had known for over 30 years. It also gave them security in their retirement years, and a few quid extra in the weekly budget. And their first investment as homeowners, was to replace the bog standard front door.....as did everyone else in the street who bought theirs!
The only disappointment I have is that Cameron has not followed up on his pledge to build a new one, for every one sold.
And of course you'll inherit it
But you're right, there would have been no problem at all if the money raised had been used to replace the housing stock which it could have done almost on a one-to-one basis as the rebuild cost is far, far less than the market price especially for social housing which can often be done on cheap brownfield or useless agricultural land - or land which the bloody council own already.
Marys Place, near the River, in Nebraska, Waitin' on A Sunny Day
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A dog is the only thing on earth that loves you more than he loves himself.
When you rescue a dog, you gain a heart for life.
Handle every situation like a dog. If you can't Eat it or Chew it. Pee on it and Walk Away.
"No amount of cajolery, and no attempts at ethical or social seduction, can eradicate from my heart a deep burning hatred for the Tory Party. So far as I am concerned they are lower than vermin. " Anuerin Bevan
Hull White Star's response....So just how disabled do you have to be to get the pittance we get? would at least suggest that she at least is not happy with the amount of help she receives. And I doubt it would be too much of a surprise to find that she is not alone in feeling this, and as I have already said, with some justification at times.
And aren't all benefits dependent on the Government fiscal Policies?
I'm perfectly happy thank you because all I wanted above all else, including the benefit (which I have paid my taxes and thats the way this country works) was for the government to acknowledge my illness and disability. I am more than happy with the amount I receive because I am just glad we live in a country that helps the most vunerable of its society. And it is a pittance compared to what I was earning before I had to give up work.
Marys Place, near the River, in Nebraska, Waitin' on A Sunny Day
Signature
A dog is the only thing on earth that loves you more than he loves himself.
When you rescue a dog, you gain a heart for life.
Handle every situation like a dog. If you can't Eat it or Chew it. Pee on it and Walk Away.
"No amount of cajolery, and no attempts at ethical or social seduction, can eradicate from my heart a deep burning hatred for the Tory Party. So far as I am concerned they are lower than vermin. " Anuerin Bevan
So they didn't live in a large council estate in Westminster Council, London under the lovely Lady Porter. And when people bought with the right to buy were hit with very large bills when they spent millions doing the estate up cosmetically and removing the central heating that was part of the rent and made you have to pay for that yourself. Something that wasn't really told to the people who chose to buy"
It will have been in the terms of their lease agreement, their own fault for not getting sound advice.
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