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Never go full Corbyn 2019 – politicalbetting.com

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  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038

    The private school group Greg Hands posted in, has this amazing reply.

    "Can we stop assuming everyone is a Tory in this group. A return to more morality, less corruption and more social conscience in British politics is not something to oppose necessarily. I appreciate this will be widely derided as a comment but I do think this group needs some balance."

    https://x.com/Gabriel_Pogrund/status/1794787580212391981/photo/3

    In the privacy of the polling group though I suspect most of the parents will vote for Hands and the fact the LDs were second in Chelsea and Fulham in 2019 will split the opposition vote. It is also one of the seats which will prefer Rishi to Boris
  • To me instinctively, it feels like Labour have the most impressive social media campaign they've ever had.

    That probably doesn't mean an awful lot - but the Tories were very good in 2019 so I find it odd they seem to have left the field. Cummings to his credit, understood this. Something they did very intelligently, was to run lots of ads for most of the campaign, check their response and then run the best ones in the last week.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    megasaur said:

    They are not, on average. Nothing stopping them being, but the ones I went to and sent my children to (5 in all) were in all cases not for profit trusts. So unlike a business you can't hike profitability to deal with VAT shocks.
    And how would a business 'hike profitability' - would that be by reducing costs and/or raising prices?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,383

    By that logic we should abolish VAT on fuel.

    That we charge VAT on top of fuel duty is absurd.

    I agree that making state education better first would be a better policy and I've suggested how earlier.
    We charge fuel duty and VAT on petrol because we're trying to mimimize imports of something that is mostly produced by people who hate us, whether its crazies in the Middle East, Russians or Scotsmen.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729
    megasaur said:

    They are not, on average. Nothing stopping them being, but the ones I went to and sent my children to (5 in all) were in all cases not for profit trusts. So unlike a business you can't hike profitability to deal with VAT shocks.
    Lots of businesses are not for profit. A charity shop's a business. If you charge service users a fee for your offer, you are a business.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,359
    Scott_xP said:

    @WhoTargetsMe

    Labour seems to already be buying search ads against the keywords "Tory Manifesto" to direct searches to this site:

    https://torymanifesto.org.uk

    That's funny, but wrong imo. Others will differ...
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559

    I can answer all those questions.

    Parents and staff were told on Monday (6 days ago). This followed the failed sale of the school to another education establishment, discussions upon which were ongoing until the previous Friday afternoon (17th May). This was necessary because projected pupil numbers for the next academic year had dropped below the level to support the school’s activities, infrastructure and the number of staff required to deliver the curriculum. It needed a rescue.

    Unfortunately, the transaction was not able to be concluded. So, they were obliged to make the announcement the following Monday by the legal requirements of the collective consultations process with the staff.

    This was before Rishi Sunak announced his intention to hold an election on Wednesday, which came as a surprise to everyone - not least myself - and the two were entirely unconnected.

    The weekend papers then picked the story up.
    Thank you for your reply, and again all the best to you personally in dealing with this.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,307
    EPG said:

    Lots of businesses are not for profit. A charity shop's a business. If you charge service users a fee for your offer, you are a business.
    So, you favour charging VAT on charity shops then?
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,356

    That's funny, but wrong imo. Others will differ...
    Just sums up our un-serious juvenile politics. And the Tories are no better, with their fake fact check website last time around.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,482
    edited May 2024

    I'd like to get the thoughts of other school parents. I'll ask some friends who have friends or siblings at Marlborough and Wellington.
    Not that we can easily look, but I would suspect that the elite end of private schools is much more mixed between right and left types. Lots and lots of successful creatives, journalists, even some Labour (ex)politicians are exceedingly wealthy and send their kids to these schools (often because they went there).

    My thought would that the pushy parents that send their kids to the lesser private schools are probably more traditional conservative leaning e.g. the small business owner. The sharp edge elbowed types desperately wanting to give their kids a better future and also keeping up with / bettering the Jones.
  • BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 4,786
    edited May 2024
    RobD said:

    Just sums up our un-serious juvenile politics. And the Tories are no better, with their fake fact check website last time around.
    They sort of set the precedent (a bad one IMHO) with their antics last time around. I believe @CorrectHorseBattery said this.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    edited May 2024
    At last, a ray of hope from Andrea Jenkins:

    @andreajenkyns
    Not all change is good change! Starmer's ideology is just like the SNP. He will push identity politics & amnesty on illegal migrants. This ideology will be perpetuated by 16 year olds having the vote as he confirmed today. We will never have another Conservative government again
    https://x.com/andreajenkyns/status/1794410557896114242
  • So, you favour charging VAT on charity shops then?
    Yes.

    They should be charged NNDR the same as other businesses too.

    If taxes are too high for them to cope, then cut everyone's taxes equitably.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,837
    edited May 2024
    https://x.com/mij_europe/status/1794816694109491269

    And so it finally lands.. "On the eve of next week’s EU election, Marine Le Pen is inviting Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni to team up and form a right-wing super-grouping that would be the second-biggest party block in the European Parliament."

    Meloni: “My main objective is to build an alternative majority to the one that has governed in recent years. A centre-right majority — in other words — which will send the left into opposition in Europe... For everything else, we’ll see.”
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,307
    RobD said:

    Just sums up our un-serious juvenile politics. And the Tories are no better, with their fake fact check website last time around.
    I agree with you, and if we're honest it's partly because the electorate itself is unserious and juvenile.

    I blame social media and smartphones for accelerating this, but it started with the soundbites for the news stuff under Blair.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,356

    I agree with you, and if we're honest it's partly because the electorate itself is unserious and juvenile.

    I blame social media and smartphones for accelerating this, but it started with the soundbites for the news stuff under Blair.
    If you want to see how far it's fallen just check out some of the interviews of politicians from the 70s and 80s.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,307
    Anyway, think that's enough for one day.

    Night all.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,240
    eristdoof said:

    Private schools are businesses.
    So is private medicine, but that isn't VATable (apart from cosmetic and medicolegal work).
  • AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 1,522
    Ratters said:

    I actually think that would be sensible.

    Build new train infrastructure and receive 20% of revenue raised as a result.

    Apply the tax base widely and subsidise for those who need it should be the principle. There's lots of people commuting into London on well paid jobs paying thousands a year in train tickets. I don't think that should be VAT exempt either.
    Internal flights would be a better place to start if we wanted to expand VAT.

    Train ticket prices are so highly regulated that adding VAT would be largely pointless - it'd be easier to just raise prices by 20% directly, and avoid having to filter the money through HMRC.
  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586

    And how would a business 'hike profitability' - would that be by reducing costs and/or raising prices?
    Those things are usually tightly constrained by market forces. Expand or diversify would probably be a more realistic plan, and borrow the money to do it with. Loans are serviced and paid off out of profits.
  • The railways I predict, will in a lot of cases return the keys to the Government and they will take over most of them soon after the election.

    I think we may well have GBR running most of the network by the end of 2024.

    So, what does that mean in practice?
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    HYUFD said:

    In the privacy of the polling group though I suspect most of the parents will vote for Hands and the fact the LDs were second in Chelsea and Fulham in 2019 will split the opposition vote. It is also one of the seats which will prefer Rishi to Boris
    Electoral Calculus has it switching to Labour.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,011
    edited May 2024
    It's not a question of whether a Starmer Govt might become unpopular v quickly.. that's exactly what is going to happen.
    Whitevanman better remember about the devil you know.... but I will enjoy the media falling out of love with Starmer and Co v quickly..... by Xmas 2024 ?
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    megasaur said:

    Those things are usually tightly constrained by market forces. Expand or diversify would probably be a more realistic plan, and borrow the money to do it with. Loans are serviced and paid off out of profits.
    All of which are open to private schools to try.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933

    Actually Bart, I've already posted on VAT exemptions. They should in my view really only exist for vital services. Private education is not vital, I would argue transport is.

    But actually I don't really care much for the VAT on school fees, I'd rather Labour made state education better first.
    VAT exemptions and lower rates generally are too prevalent. Businesses just bag the profit.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,714
    Farooq said:

    Is "low-born" the kind of insult that gets traded around in fee-paying schools?
    It's just never those things you come up with when you caste around for a handy phrase.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,664
    Farooq said:

    Is "low-born" the kind of insult that gets traded around in fee-paying schools?
    As a speaker of both Punjabi and Urdu the snobbery about lower orders is quite something.

    But I am happy to educate PBers on these insults/swearing

    Mah-chowd

    Behn-chowd

    Pyoh-chowd

    Pra-chowd

    Mah = Mother

    Behn = Sister

    Pyoh = Father

    Pra = Brother

    Chowd = Fucker
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,482
    edited May 2024

    It's not a question of whether a Starner Govt might become unpopular v quickly.. that's exactly whst is going to happen.
    Whitevanman better remember about the devil you know.... but I will enjoy the media falling out of love with Starmer and Co v quickly..... by Xmas 2024 ?

    I don't think the media do, New Labour type approaches seems very much the sweet spot for the media groupthink. BBC to the Times to the Mail struggle to get super outraged with centrist Dad policies. Hence Blair and Cameron got fairly easy rides for a long time and why Corbyn got terrible press (even the Guardian didn't like him).

    That is unless Labour crack down on freelancing, putting up NI on solo services businesses or other things that directly effect them...see how they went mental en-masse when Brown hit 100k+ earners and when Hammond announced increased NI on solo businesses.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,664
    I may introduce you to the word flanna-tingera/flanni-tingery.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729

    So, you favour charging VAT on charity shops then?
    They do have to pay VAT for goods they buy in. They pay no VAT for donated goods because those are treated like donations for the aims of the charity but are not subject to Gift Aid. In principle, I would have no problem with VAT on donated goods if Gift Aid were then permitted.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173

    Cutting the IHT threshold just means more people put their property in trust etc.

    Cutting the ISA limits seems clever - it’s well known that excessive savings are the weak point of the British economy.
    It'd be a pretty rotten thing to do to people with modest savings if they tried. Would be a less bitter pill to swallow if the wealthy were also given a good whack though. We could really do with much heavier property taxes, but failing that the abolition of higher rate tax relief on pension contributions would raise a lot of money - somewhere in the ballpark of £15bn, That'd be sufficient to raise defence spending from 2.3% to 2.5% (£4bn), abolish the two child benefit cap (£2bn), double the rate of Carer's Allowance (£3.5bn), double subsidies for bus travel in England (£2.5bn, allowing for Barnett consequentials), and still leave £3bn to spend on other goodies.

    The idea that there's no money left for anything is bollocks. The main hope for meaningful change post-election is that Labour will stick to its excessively meek and cautious plans for only so long as it takes to persuade the Tory core to switch sides or sit on their hands come July 4th - and then grab them by the ankles and give them a bloody good shake as soon as the election is out of the way.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,664
    Latin and French are the best languages to swear in, it is like wiping your arse with silk.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,240

    To me instinctively, it feels like Labour have the most impressive social media campaign they've ever had.

    That probably doesn't mean an awful lot - but the Tories were very good in 2019 so I find it odd they seem to have left the field. Cummings to his credit, understood this. Something they did very intelligently, was to run lots of ads for most of the campaign, check their response and then run the best ones in the last week.

    I think the other parties had prepped for a May election as a precaution so had stuff ready to go.

    I think this is further evidence that the Tory campaign is not ready, ant Sunak caught his own party on the hop.
  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586
    EPG said:

    Lots of businesses are not for profit. A charity shop's a business. If you charge service users a fee for your offer, you are a business.
    Charity shops are of course for profit: they get stock for free, sell it for money, pay the rent and utilities and wages for non volunteers, and bank the difference. What is non profit about that?
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,655

    Latin and French are the best languages to swear in, it is like wiping your arse with silk.

    "Why can't you speak English??" - Gary Busey in "Under Siege".
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,688

    I went to both. Public primary, state primary, state middle, then private from 13+

    Oddly enough, the only 'famous' person I was at school with (a film director) was at the state middle school. I can't remember him though, but can remember his situation.
    Someone I was at school with was in the second episode of Dr Who.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,655

    It's not a question of whether a Starmer Govt might become unpopular v quickly.. that's exactly what is going to happen.
    Whitevanman better remember about the devil you know.... but I will enjoy the media falling out of love with Starmer and Co v quickly..... by Xmas 2024 ?

    How about AsianVanMan?
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,356
    pigeon said:

    It'd be a pretty rotten thing to do to people with modest savings if they tried. Would be a less bitter pill to swallow if the wealthy were also given a good whack though. We could really do with much heavier property taxes, but failing that the abolition of higher rate tax relief on pension contributions would raise a lot of money - somewhere in the ballpark of £15bn, That'd be sufficient to raise defence spending from 2.3% to 2.5% (£4bn), abolish the two child benefit cap (£2bn), double the rate of Carer's Allowance (£3.5bn), double subsidies for bus travel in England (£2.5bn, allowing for Barnett consequentials), and still leave £3bn to spend on other goodies.

    The idea that there's no money left for anything is bollocks. The main hope for meaningful change post-election is that Labour will stick to its excessively meek and cautious plans for only so long as it takes to persuade the Tory core to switch sides or sit on their hands come July 4th - and then grab them by the ankles and give them a bloody good shake as soon as the election is out of the way.
    Don't forget reducing the deficit, paying down the debt. We pay £116bn a year just to service borrowing.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729
    megasaur said:

    Charity shops are of course for profit: they get stock for free, sell it for money, pay the rent and utilities and wages for non volunteers, and bank the difference. What is non profit about that?
    The technical detail that a profit does not exist, in the sense that ultimately there is no shareholder (except, in some technical sense, the corporate entity of the charity which itself doesn't distribute profits to shareholders).
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,286

    Fight an election on protecting private schools and you will lose.

    Nothing to do with arguments or morality it is simply a case of numbers.

    I know that. But morality should play a part. I am no fan of private schools either in concept or execution but they are merely an expression of the urge of the wealthy to give their children the best education they can pay for, and for the life of me I don't feel the need to stop them. Wealth redistribution should be done via redistributive taxation, not thru actions like this.
  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586

    Latin and French are the best languages to swear in, it is like wiping your arse with silk.

    Rabelais, no slouch at swearing in french, has a whole chapter in Gargantua about what makes the best torche-cul and concludes that it is the neck of a live goose.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,240

    It's not a question of whether a Starmer Govt might become unpopular v quickly.. that's exactly what is going to happen.
    Whitevanman better remember about the devil you know.... but I will enjoy the media falling out of love with Starmer and Co v quickly..... by Xmas 2024 ?

    I agree that unhappiness will develop quickly with Labour for the austerity that will come.

    A craving for more spending is not likely to benefit the Tories though, they will be blamed for getting us into the mess.

  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    A headline you didn't expect to read a matter of 72 hours ago.

    "Refusing mandatory National Service won't lead to prison, home secretary says after Tory policy launch"

    https://news.sky.com/story/refusing-mandatory-national-service-wont-lead-to-prison-home-secretary-says-after-tory-policy-launch-13143272
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,482
    edited May 2024

    To me instinctively, it feels like Labour have the most impressive social media campaign they've ever had.

    That probably doesn't mean an awful lot - but the Tories were very good in 2019 so I find it odd they seem to have left the field. Cummings to his credit, understood this. Something they did very intelligently, was to run lots of ads for most of the campaign, check their response and then run the best ones in the last week.

    "Labour spent nearly double the amount on Meta ads compared to the Tories in the first 36 hours of the campaign"

    That was the supposed the secret behind Tory win in 2015 all the targeted Facebook adverts they were quietly running.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,697
    viewcode said:

    I know that. But morality should play a part. I am no fan of private schools either in concept or execution but they are merely an expression of the urge of the wealthy to give their children the best education they can pay for, and for the life of me I don't feel the need to stop them. Wealth redistribution should be done via redistributive taxation, not thru actions like this.
    Remembered earlier about the Assisted Places Scheme, which New Labour also canned:

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assisted_Places_Scheme

    Too many working class people getting ideas above their station, no doubt.
  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586

    All of which are open to private schools to try.
    Except without the borrowing money bit which rather underpins all the rest.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    edited May 2024
    Farooq said:

    Somewhere a little down"river" of TSE's house, there's a sewage worker constantly having to unplug monstrous fatbergs from the system, caused by very expensive and completely non biodegradable hygiene products.
    TBF silk is biodegradable - but not, I believe, quickly enough for the unfortunate scaffie in question.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Jezza best price 2/5
    SKS Party Best price 7/4
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564

    At last, a ray of hope from Andrea Jenkins:

    @andreajenkyns
    Not all change is good change! Starmer's ideology is just like the SNP. He will push identity politics & amnesty on illegal migrants. This ideology will be perpetuated by 16 year olds having the vote as he confirmed today. We will never have another Conservative government again
    https://x.com/andreajenkyns/status/1794410557896114242

    She's a bit pessimistic - there aren't that many 16-17 year olds, and Tories have been the most popular nationwide political party every election since 2010 so I doubt if they'd been included that would have changed.
  • No_Offence_AlanNo_Offence_Alan Posts: 4,984

    Latin and French are the best languages to swear in, it is like wiping your arse with silk.

    One of the very few pleasures of A-level French was learning the swear words by reading Maigret novels.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729
    viewcode said:

    I know that. But morality should play a part. I am no fan of private schools either in concept or execution but they are merely an expression of the urge of the wealthy to give their children the best education they can pay for, and for the life of me I don't feel the need to stop them. Wealth redistribution should be done via redistributive taxation, not thru actions like this.
    I don't want to stop them, I am happy for them to operate like other elitist clubs which do pay VAT.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    RobD said:

    Don't forget reducing the deficit, paying down the debt. We pay £116bn a year just to service borrowing.
    I'll grant you that's a large and still growing problem, and therefore a good use of the remaining £3bn. Cover existing spending with that instead of borrowing - nice things and a dash of boring fiscal responsibility thrown in. Result.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    edited May 2024
    EPG said:

    They do have to pay VAT for goods they buy in. They pay no VAT for donated goods because those are treated like donations for the aims of the charity but are not subject to Gift Aid. In principle, I would have no problem with VAT on donated goods if Gift Aid were then permitted.
    Eh, Gift Aid *is* permitted on donated goods, the value being determined by the actual sale. However, this needs a recording system with sticky labels and numbers and all, so not all charities are organised enough for that.

    PS Obviously this depends if the donor is a taxpayer with enough tax, and so on. I get a periodic return from one such charity for my records.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,688
    rcs1000 said:

    We charge fuel duty and VAT on petrol because we're trying to mimimize imports of something that is mostly produced by people who hate us, whether its crazies in the Middle East, Russians or Scotsmen.
    UK imports of oil are overwhelmingly from Norway and the US, neither of whom particularly hate us: https://www.statista.com/statistics/381963/crude-oil-and-natural-gas-import-origin-countries-to-united-kingdom-uk/
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Maybe it's time for the Tories to start talking about the dementia tax again, since that went so well for them in 2017. 😊
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,626

    Someone I was at school with was in the second episode of Dr Who.
    In 1963? How old are you?!?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,482
    Andy_JS said:

    Maybe it's time for the Tories to start talking about the dementia tax again, since that went so well for them in 2017. 😊

    Another issue that got kicked into the long grass and still no politician will actually tackle.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Sixth form attendance?
    It deoends. Some English friends sent their daughter to a private school for secondary education but shifted to 6FC for later, cos of the relative merits of the local options.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045

    The 'centre' is a complete fantasy though. Our political 'centre' demands that we spend £4.5 TRILLION (Civitas report) on Net Zero. In the full knowledge that it will just drive all emission-creating businesses to dirty coal burning India and China. There is no objective assessment whereby that can be seen as a moderate idea. It is a profoundly radical and unprecedented idea. The centrist agenda demands conformity simply because the ideas are weak and if a big party decides to go seriously off the reservation, it is likely to bring the whole thing down.
    You know that Civitas report was retracted because their numbers were incredibly way off (eg accidentally multiplying costs for wind power by a factor of 10,000)?

    Although a moments use of arithmetic would indicate that if, say, we were targeting net zero in 20 years, we’d be spending 4,500 bn / 20 per year on average. And we’d probably notice expenditure on the order of £225 billion per year.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038

    This is a terrible poll for the Tories, reducing the lead Labour needs for a majority.

    I would not have predicted Labour taking back most of Scotland under SKS - but it may well happen.
    That poll also has a 1% swing from SNP to Conservative
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    edited May 2024

    That's funny, but wrong imo. Others will differ...
    RobD said:

    Just sums up our un-serious juvenile politics. And the Tories are no better, with their fake fact check website last time around.
    Yup. They all deserve what they get now. No whinging allowed.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295

    Greatest privileges probably are: loving family, being fit and healthy, being good-looking, tall(ish) and good with people.
    2 out of 5, being brutally honest.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    Latin and French are the best languages to swear in, it is like wiping your arse with silk.

    Izal was like wiping your arse with greaseproof paper.

    I remember being I'm York and being so desperate for a shit that I knocked on a random house door and asking if I could use there toilet.

    What we're the odds of them having f***ing Izal!
  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586
    EPG said:

    The technical detail that a profit does not exist, in the sense that ultimately there is no shareholder (except, in some technical sense, the corporate entity of the charity which itself doesn't distribute profits to shareholders).
    There's no technicality about it. Profit is buying for x, selling for x plus y and spending the y on the cost of living or cocaine and hookers or curing cancer. Charity shops are doing that. Schools are not.

    Here's a compromise suggestion. State school places obviously cost money just as private ones do. Let's quantify the cost, add 20% vat to it and request the parents of the state educated to pay the vat. In cash. What could be fairer and more equitable than that?
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,655
    kyf_100 said:

    Waiting for them to announce that only those who perform national service get to vote.

    Service guarantees citizenship! Would you like to know more?
    RISHI's ROUGH-NECKS!
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,848
    Indy 500. A 4 hour rain delay. And we get half a lap before the yellow flags come out
  • maxhmaxh Posts: 1,581
    ...

    You're an idiot, and a fuckwit.

    It's sort of anonymous and it sort of isn't.

    I've made good friends through this site, and it's worth remembering that there's always a real human at the other end of the keyboard.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    rcs1000 said:

    1. No parent should feel that they need to go private, because their local state school isn't good enough
    2. The government should not, as much as possible, be in the business of artificially restricting peoples' choices

    3. (And this is a slightly different point, but is an important one): Most private schools are "not for profit" entities, in that they are not setup to make and distribute profits to shareholders. Now we can argue about whether they are charities in the same way that - say - the NSPCC is, but they are definitely not setup with a board of director's whose legal and moral obligation is to maximize the returns to owners. (There are, of course, for profit private schools, who are setup for exactly that purpose.)

    Where does this get us?

    Well, VAT has historically not been charged on educational products. Books, for example, are zero rated from a VAT perspective. I struggle with the idea that VAT should not be charged on a Jilly Cooper novel, but should be charged on someone doing teaching. I struggle to see a case for putting VAT on school fees.

    I'm also not sure that there should be corporation tax payable on the "surpluses" that are generated by private schools. The whole point about those surpluses is that they are there to pay for things when a big charge comes along (like a new roof) and knocks the school into deficit for a year or two. Obviously, for profit educational establishments do pay corporation tax on their profits.

    On the other hand, I wouldn't be upset if demand for private schools dried up completely and they were all forced to close due to lack of demand. But the way that should be achieved is to properly manage and fund the state education sector. I realize that that is a much harder ask than simply slapping 20% on private school fees.

    A lot of "public schools" started off as private companies, especially in the post-Arnoldian flush of foundations in the 1860s on, as I found recently when reading up some history. Cheltenham and so on. You bought a share - you could nominate your brat, or some other young relative. Not everyone had a convenien brat to hand all the time, so if you didn't pick one, the governors or the head or whoever would find someone else. Fees had to be paid as well.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    Foxy said:

    I agree that unhappiness will develop quickly with Labour for the austerity that will come.

    A craving for more spending is not likely to benefit the Tories though, they will be blamed for getting us into the mess.

    The danger for Labour isn’t that, to my mind. The danger is a left wing block splitting over what is fiscally sensible, making precious Tory voters think “we better get the pros in” just at the moment Labour also leaks votes on its left.

    That all assumes a likeable, half competent Tory leader of course.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746

    At last, a ray of hope from Andrea Jenkins:

    @andreajenkyns
    Not all change is good change! Starmer's ideology is just like the SNP. He will push identity politics & amnesty on illegal migrants. This ideology will be perpetuated by 16 year olds having the vote as he confirmed today. We will never have another Conservative government again
    https://x.com/andreajenkyns/status/1794410557896114242

    Oh dear. Nevermind…
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Izal was like wiping your arse with greaseproof paper.

    I remember being I'm York and being so desperate for a shit that I knocked on a random house door and asking if I could use there toilet.

    What we're the odds of them having f***ing Izal!
    *Disinfectant-scented* greaseproof paper.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,482
    biggles said:

    The danger for Labour isn’t that, to my mind. The danger is a left wing block splitting over what is fiscally sensible, making precious Tory voters think “we better get the pros in” just at the moment Labour also leaks votes on its left.

    That all assumes a likeable, half competent Tory leader of course.
    I see a flaw in your argument there....
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    Izal was like wiping your arse with greaseproof paper.

    I remember being I'm York and being so desperate for a shit that I knocked on a random house door and asking if I could use there toilet.

    What we're the odds of them having f***ing Izal!
    5 hrs earlier I had proposed to Mrs BJ in a romantic gesture in an Italian Restaurant.

    She wasn't impressed that 5 hrs later after 2 closed public toilets I was shuffling up to houses clenched cheek style and asking random strangers for use of their facilities.

    She said I deserved Izal!
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    maxh said:

    ...

    Well played.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933

    You know that Civitas report was retracted because their numbers were incredibly way off (eg accidentally multiplying costs for wind power by a factor of 10,000)?

    Although a moments use of arithmetic would indicate that if, say, we were targeting net zero in 20 years, we’d be spending 4,500 bn / 20 per year on average. And we’d probably notice expenditure on the order of £225 billion per year.
    Here in Saône et Loire they’ve responded to the central government edict on renewable energy mix by electing to focus on PV solar and hydro, with no “aeolian”. They consulted local communities and got a consensus view.

    First step is a 16mw solar plant in the Saône valley but within 5 years they plan a further 180nw of solar, with batteries. Quite ambitious considering most electricity around here is already nuclear.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    megasaur said:

    There's no technicality about it. Profit is buying for x, selling for x plus y and spending the y on the cost of living or cocaine and hookers or curing cancer. Charity shops are doing that. Schools are not.

    Here's a compromise suggestion. State school places obviously cost money just as private ones do. Let's quantify the cost, add 20% vat to it and request the parents of the state educated to pay the vat. In cash. What could be fairer and more equitable than that?
    Indeed. State school parents are receiving a benefit in kind, without paying tax on it.

    The evil tax dodgers, eh?
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,688

    In 1963? How old are you?!?
    LOL

    Second episode of this season.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    kle4 said:

    She's a bit pessimistic - there aren't that many 16-17 year olds, and Tories have been the most popular nationwide political party every election since 2010 so I doubt if they'd been included that would have changed.
    And irrespective of the scale of the impending defeat, the Tories could be back surprisingly quickly. I can't remember who said it, but the current mindset of the UK electorate was recently described succinctly as "volatile and pissed off." Labour needs to make a good job of the next five years, or chances are they'll be thrown straight back out.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Carnyx said:

    *Disinfectant-scented* greaseproof paper.
    Never been an effective toilet paper.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    edited May 2024

    Never been an effective toilet paper.
    I remember only too well. Especially if one had the runs. My school had it ...

    PS Just to maintain the relevance to earlier discussion of national service - the Army compo rations given to us cadets in the 1970s also issued niggardly amounts of shiny toilet paper (unscented) in the tins with sweets and matches etc. As a friend said, one sheet up, one down, and one to polish. No fun at all in the rain in the hills.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,664
    Farooq said:

    I stand corrected. I actually google it before my post and misread "untreated silk is completely biodegradable" as "silk is completely unbiodegradable".
    My point, though, like TSE's silk-bound extrusions, remains.
    I seldom swear.

    It give me more impact when I do swear.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    5 hrs earlier I had proposed to Mrs BJ in a romantic gesture in an Italian Restaurant.

    She wasn't impressed that 5 hrs later after 2 closed public toilets I was shuffling up to houses clenched cheek style and asking random strangers for use of their facilities.

    She said I deserved Izal!
    She didn't revoke her acceptance of my proposal mind.
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,213

    Latin and French are the best languages to swear in, it is like wiping your arse with silk.

    I didn't know you were in the Matrix sequels

    https://youtu.be/FNZJneLEsGM?si=9bpY9fwHnFISByFN
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Weren't we supposed to be getting an avalanche of stand downs this weekend? Has anyone since Leadsom?
    Todays family reactions to the Draft was fairly positive but 'not gonna happen is it?'
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    edited May 2024
    Farooq said:

    No wildfowl on the fell? A duck on the bluff? A swan on the muir?
    Hadn't got as far as Rabelais! And, in any case, feather lice and ticks ...

  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729
    Carnyx said:

    Eh, Gift Aid *is* permitted on donated goods, the value being determined by the actual sale. However, this needs a recording system with sticky labels and numbers and all, so not all charities are organised enough for that.

    PS Obviously this depends if the donor is a taxpayer with enough tax, and so on. I get a periodic return from one such charity for my records.
    As you say, for your typical charity shop donation of second-hand books or clothes, it will not be the case that gift aid is available. At present, the current system is a fairly low-cost substitute that is probably simpler overall to administer.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    RobD said:

    Don't forget reducing the deficit, paying down the debt. We pay £116bn a year just to service borrowing.
    I like the idea of a, "paying off Tory debt," tax. 0.5% annual charge on all property sort of thing.

    But I understand that the Treasury doesn't like hypothecated taxes.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,528
    Labour park tanks on Tory lawns on day four:


    Liz Kendall
    @leicesterliz
    ·
    2h
    A message to the pensioners of Britain from the Labour Party

    https://x.com/leicesterliz/status/1794801009786834961
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,664
    edited May 2024
    Fuck me, the policy gets worse, I mean the NHS is buggered.

    Exclusive: Rishi Sunak is considering requiring future applicants for public sector jobs to have completed National Service

    It’s one of the enforcement options that would go to the Royal Commission for consideration if he gets to enact the policy


    https://x.com/alexwickham/status/1794837181657493854?s=46
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    @alexwickham
    Exclusive: Rishi Sunak is considering requiring future applicants for public sector jobs to have completed National Service

    It’s one of the enforcement options that would go to the Royal Commission for consideration if he gets to enact the policy
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    EPG said:

    As you say, for your typical charity shop donation of second-hand books or clothes, it will not be the case that gift aid is available. At present, the current system is a fairly low-cost substitute that is probably simpler overall to administer.
    Actually, the charity in question does seal with that sort of thing, albeit with a little mroe organization. It gives me is a printout of sticky labels with "my" number on it - every time I drop off a bagof stuff I put one of the labels on it, and the volunteers prepare the price labels accordingly.

    But for me it's as much about recycling unwanted goods as far as possible.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,482
    edited May 2024

    Fuck me, the policy gets worse, I mean the NHS is buggered.

    Exclusive: Rishi Sunak is considering requiring future applicants for public sector jobs to have completed National Service

    It’s one of the enforcement options that would go to the Royal Commission for consideration if he gets to enact the policy


    https://x.com/alexwickham/status/1794837181657493854?s=46

    I joked down thread about Sunak proposing reintroducing corporal punishment....I am not sure it is pie in the sky.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    @AllieHBNews

    Monday’s GUARDIAN: “Sunak’s national service plan is ‘bonkers,’ says ex-military chief” #TomorrowsPapersToday
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    edited May 2024

    Fuck me, the policy gets worse, I mean the NHS is buggered.

    Exclusive: Rishi Sunak is considering requiring future applicants for public sector jobs to have completed National Service

    It’s one of the enforcement options that would go to the Royal Commission for consideration if he gets to enact the policy


    https://x.com/alexwickham/status/1794837181657493854?s=46

    Wouldn't it make more logical sense to require those with private sector jobs to complete national service?

    I'm really not sure that brainstorming enforcement mechanisms is the angle they want to focus on here.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    Farooq said:

    So that's indirect age discrimination right there
    But all right for the Tories' chums in the private sector.

    And what about anyone who wants to be an apprentice at 16 in the public sector?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,482
    edited May 2024
    Scott_xP said:

    @AllieHBNews

    Monday’s GUARDIAN: “Sunak’s national service plan is ‘bonkers,’ says ex-military chief” #TomorrowsPapersToday

    It is bonkers, but the ex-military chief is former Labour minister Lord West (which the Guardian forgets to mention).
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,955

    I joked down thread about Sunak proposing reintroducing corporal punishment....I am not sure it is pie in the sky.
    About 10 minutes ago I joked about them making national service a requirement to vote... I'm not laughing now. This latest development makes me think they would, if they could.

    The Conservative Party is beyond parody at this point.
  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586
    Carnyx said:

    Actually, the charity in question does seal with that sort of thing, albeit with a little mroe organization. It gives me is a printout of sticky labels with "my" number on it - every time I drop off a bagof stuff I put one of the labels on it, and the volunteers prepare the price labels accordingly.

    But for me it's as much about recycling unwanted goods as far as possible.
    "Dead white man’s clothes
    It’s the dirty secret behind the world’s fashion addiction. Many of the clothes we donate to charity end up dumped in landfill, creating an environmental catastrophe on the other side of the world."

    Troubling stuff

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-08-12/fast-fashion-turning-parts-ghana-into-toxic-landfill/100358702
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    The Telegraph has the splash that National Service would also include Royals

    I wonder when Richi will notice that every Royal serves already...
This discussion has been closed.