I didn't see it directly I saw it poo up on Facebook because UK Politics Facebook page posted it
By trying to link it here people might have unfortunately clicked on it and given them a page view. Just don't do it. Ignore it at all costs![]()
@Britainelects
Leaving the EU without a mutually agreed deal would be...
Good for Britain: 31%
Bad for Britain: 58%
(via @Survation, 16-17 Jun)
https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/876428393151070212
31% are fucking idiots
@Britainelects
Leaving the EU without a mutually agreed deal would be...
Good for Britain: 31%
Bad for Britain: 58%
(via @Survation, 16-17 Jun)
https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/876428393151070212
31% are fucking idiots
Suprised it's only 31% tbh.@Britainelects
Leaving the EU without a mutually agreed deal would be...
Good for Britain: 31%
Bad for Britain: 58%
(via @Survation, 16-17 Jun)
https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/876428393151070212
31% are fucking idiots
The other 11% were unavailable to answer the question through merit of laughing and crying at the other 31%
HOW IS NO DEAL GOOD FOR US YOU DENSE MOTHERFUCKERS
The main thing is we just need to build more fucking houses, and even more than every party is pledging right now.
The state needs to be involved, because it's not in the construction industry's interest to really build so many that it'd risk devaluation but we just need to invest as a nation and do it. In affordable housing, social housing, just more damn housing. It's been put off by successive governments for too long and it's not getting better.
That and renovating empty and derelict housing too. Any that have been empty for years turn into new social housing. Some places have entire streets empty. Going through some parts of Liverpool is nuts.
It's horrifying that a third of the country is still that deluded.
Havent there been schemes in Liverpool where they've had to give houses away on the condition they're done up?
Don't worry, EU hate will be turned up to 11 on Monday.
Havent there been schemes in Liverpool where they've had to give houses away on the condition they're done up?
I can understand the anger and frustration, but there's nothing wrong with using housing as an investment option.
I know doing so drives up prices and sometimes you end up with empty homes for 9+ months of the year, but idea that we should force people to sell homes because of a lack of investment by the government is ridiculous.
Focus the anger towards those who have earned it through decades of selling social housing and not doing enough to make up for the shortfall.
Damn...I thought the gov made it clear that they'd be rehoused in the borough or at the very least in other parts of London. I can't say I am surprised though. As soon as it was clear that the tower was beyond recovery, I had a feeling that the people who escaped were unlikely to be able to continue living as Londoners.https://twitter.com/danhancox/status/876389822713278464
People are being moved as far north as Preston, and if they refuse they are told they are intentionally declaring themselves homeless.
Damn...I thought the gov made it clear that they'd be rehoused in the borough or at the very least in other parts of London. I can't say I am surprised though. As soon as it was clear that the tower was beyond recovery, I had a feeling that the people who escaped were unlikely to be able to continue living as Londoners.
Wouldn't be suprised if they sanction people for refusing homes too far away.It's what Alok Sharma, the new housing minister and my local MP, promised. Looks like they're merely 'trying' to, and once it inevitably doesn't work, they go for whatever they can find cheap, no matter how far.
Wouldn't be suprised if they sanction people for refusing homes too far away.
https://twitter.com/danhancox/status/876389822713278464
People are being moved as far north as Preston, and if they refuse they are told they are intentionally declaring themselves homeless.
Remember when govt services actually helped instead of punished you? Long time ago nowOh, it's standard practice. Homeless and offered a job too far away to either be comfortable or even feasible to actually move to? Well, you refused their offer, therefore you have intentionally decided to be homeless - at which point they have no more obligation to help you.
Why yes, it's a shitty practice.
Alright. Even though we have decades of evidence that forcing residents to leave their home communities would have horrible knock-on effects on their well-being and ability to prosper in society. For example, when New Yorkers moved into new public housing after World War II, they lost connections to their old neighborhoods and neighbors, and the quality of life in these tower blocks duly declined. Even though the housing was better, their lives weren't necessarily improved, and my hometown is still ravaged by the consequences of forced resettlement.
It really feels like we need to resurrect Barbara Tuchman and ask her to write about our mistakes. I remember how she wrote about the rise of democratic socialism at the turn of the 20th century, and it hinged on a basic understanding: poverty is not the fault of the poor. I'm distressed that we have to religitate this point, both in my America and your Britain. This isn't their fault. They didn't burn down their houses to move into luxury flats or commit fraud against the state. But this reaction is punitive. It breaks a core component of the social compact: a village takes care of its own and cares for itself by extension. This punishes people for surviving a disaster made possible by the ignorance of local government. I'm sure Theresa May will eloquently discuss this horrible problem the next the the BBC interviews her, right?
Hope you enjoyed the feel-good moment between residents and emergency services, because it's about to end shortly if this becomes the common response.
Yeah, I don't​ think it [re-housing in London] is gonna happen; I mean there are people that have been waiting for years for a council home, so the idea that these people would be re-homed in London within three weeks was bs from the beginning imo. It won't go down well with the surviving residents of Grenfell though. This will be the final blow; everything that was familiar and dear to them gone within a space of a week.It's what Alok Sharma, the new housing minister and my local MP, promised. Looks like they're merely 'trying' to, and once it inevitably doesn't work, they go for whatever they can find cheap, no matter how far.
Oh, it's standard practice. Homeless and offered a job too far away to either be comfortable or even feasible to actually move to? Well, you refused their offer, therefore you have intentionally decided to be homeless - at which point they have no more obligation to help you.
Why yes, it's a shitty practice.
In before Crab talking about a Land Value Tax.
Which I support.
The homeless shelters are criminally overpriced too. It's 500 quid every two weeks here, insanity.This policy is going to backfire spectacularly.
Lots of people won't accept the offer and will remain in the temporary shelters and then we will get a scandal of people homeless for weeks/months after the incident.
Usually the council can bully people to accept or get stuffed because no one cares about a single unlucky person or family. When there are hundreds of people who have already suffered it won't stand. It will be constant news, pressure will build and polices will have to be changed.
This policy is going to backfire spectacularly.
Lots of people won't accept the offer and will remain in the temporary shelters and then we will get a scandal of people homeless for weeks/months after the incident.
Usually the council can bully people to accept or get stuffed because no one cares about a single unlucky person or family. When there are hundreds of people who have already suffered it won't stand. It will be constant news, pressure will build and polices will have to be changed.
Tuchman was incredible.
Especially when those people aren't just blind faces in the background of society. They're the victims of the worst tragedy in British history since the Hillsborough disaster, and potentially since the 1950s. A disaster brought on by the very party that is now asking them to relocate to whole other parts of the country. They will be hard to make go away.
Her The Proud Tower was revelatory for me. European history was a dry subject in school, but her training made it jump off the page. She even made Middle Age French court intrigue interesting in another book.
(I also thought she made a good point about the 'strange death of Liberal England' when she covered Parliament in the first decade of the 1900s. It wasn't so odd: the working class didn't want to vote for their bosses. But Liberal and Conservative MPs of that period were very much businessmen, much like MPs are today. When Labour became a real alternative, they responded with that in mind, I felt.)
Good I hate Swinson with a passion.Jo Swinson not running for Lib Dem leader, will be running for deputy instead. I guess Cable is a shoo-in then?
Good I hate Swinson with a passion.
@Britainelects
Leaving the EU without a mutually agreed deal would be...
Good for Britain: 31%
Bad for Britain: 58%
(via @Survation, 16-17 Jun)
https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/876428393151070212
31% are fucking idiots
Fair point, the fact orange bookers haven't been disowned following 2015 is incredible to me.I was hoping she'd get in as a necessary evil. As an Orange Booker, she might have been able to pick off the Conservative votes that Labour can't really get.
I was hoping she'd get in as a necessary evil. As an Orange Booker, she might have been able to pick off the Conservative votes that Labour can't really get.
They're itching to get back into bed with Tories. They miss their jags 😭I can't see them working with Labour though, I still don't see a majority happening.
They're itching to get back into bed with Tories. They miss their jags 😭
I guarantee part of the reason Farron went was because of his no Tory coalition pledge. Now they'll spend the next election fluffying up Tories.Oh well, we can finally wipe out what is left of the party then, I will not vote again for Davey.
I was hoping she'd get in as a necessary evil. As an Orange Booker, she might have been able to pick off the Conservative votes that Labour can't really get.
Oh well, we can finally wipe out what is left of the party then, I will not vote again for Davey.
Yes,yes shoot yourself in the foot you idiots.
The other 11% were unavailable to answer the question through merit of laughing and crying at the other 31%
HOW IS NO DEAL GOOD FOR US YOU DENSE MOTHERFUCKERS
I guarantee part of the reason Farron went was because of his no Tory coalition pledge. Now they'll spend the next election fluffying up Tories.
Some people don't understand that "No deal" is a fucking bad deal, and think "no deal is better than a bad deal" is some kind of alternative
Tory peer Lord Hayward, a boundary review expert, said Wales was in effect receiving a double hit at once in terms of its reduction.
....
"Wales is hit particularly hard because, whereas Scotland's representation at Westminster was reduced in 2005 when it got its own parliament, Wales did not have any reduction.
"So, in effect, Wales is getting two stages in one go."