These jobs will always be a political football, moved around to suit the vagaries of whoever is in power at Westminster. I think it's time our jobs stopped being a political football.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
If the MOD can get work done in Malta, why not Scotland as a Commonwealth partner? Surely they are bound to get the best deal for the English taxpayer?
Classic British government - divide and rule.
View Poll Results: Should Scotland be an independent country?
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Yes
458 69.18% -
No
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Undecided
29 4.38%
Results 181 to 210 of 26549
Thread: Scottish Independence
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09-11-2013 05:47 PM #181
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09-11-2013 11:29 PM #183This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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10-11-2013 08:09 AM #184This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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10-11-2013 08:36 AM #185
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In an effort to get an agreement on this bedroom malarkey can I suggest the way this reform has been considered and implemented has been an absolute shocker?
Maybe if there was already an expectation for people in social housing to move around to better suit their own needs and that of society this current furore wouldn't have happened.
For such a thing to happen however the changes would have needed to be brought in gradually to give people time to get their heads round it and all the anomalies ironed out. Probably longer than a single term in office which is why politicians canny deal with it either humanely or effectively.
I don't really see what this has to do with independence though as its just a typical clash between political parties and I'd expect similar to happen in the future, independence or not.Space to let
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10-11-2013 11:13 AM #186
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10-11-2013 11:16 AM #187This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
As for the policy itself I agree...the principal if using public sector rented accommodation as effectively as possible is surely a sound one, the approach taken here which is effectively a stick with no carrot and for a lot of people no option but to get beaten by that stick even if they wanted to move (which they can't as the housing stock is not there to facilitate all the required movements) is surely a flawed one.
It is a classic case though that shows just how difficult benefit reform is. Once a benefit is provided it's extremely difficult to reform it without a significant number of people being impacted. Those impacted will therefore fight hard to retain that benefit. In the meantime government spending continues to substantially outstrip receipts and the national debt continues to grow.
I see recently that the rate of growth in spending is finally starting to drop under the rate of growth of tax receipts but there is such a long way to go it seems almost impossible that in the current environment any government of any colour actually has the ability or political will to sort out this mess.
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10-11-2013 05:03 PM #188This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Bringing this back on topic, presumably then you are happy that the government in London is only overwhelmingly rejected by the Scottish electorate most of the time, and not all of it?
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10-11-2013 05:37 PM #189
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10-11-2013 06:46 PM #190This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
But that's exactly my point. We never vote Tory (and barely vote LibDem (and what vote they had up to 2010 seems to have evaporated)), but more often than not, that's who we get at Westminster. A "no" vote guarantees that continues.
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10-11-2013 07:03 PM #191This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Voting yes simply because you don't like the Tories is as illogical as voting no because you don't like SalmondEvery gimmick hungry yob,
Digging gold from rock and roll
Grabs the mic to tell us,
He'll die before he's sold.
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10-11-2013 07:08 PM #192
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10-11-2013 07:09 PM #193This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I'm not saying vote yes to avoid ever having a right-wing government. I'm saying vote yes so that Scotland gets what it votes for.
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10-11-2013 07:13 PM #194
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10-11-2013 07:14 PM #195This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteEvery gimmick hungry yob,
Digging gold from rock and roll
Grabs the mic to tell us,
He'll die before he's sold.
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10-11-2013 07:18 PM #196This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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10-11-2013 07:19 PM #197This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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10-11-2013 07:20 PM #198
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10-11-2013 07:44 PM #199This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteEvery gimmick hungry yob,
Digging gold from rock and roll
Grabs the mic to tell us,
He'll die before he's sold.
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10-11-2013 07:52 PM #200This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Nice try! They're not a signatory to any union with the rest of Scotland, so I don't see a parallel at all here. As it happens, though, I do support devolution as a concept, and Shetland in particular would seem a good candidate for additional powers. That would be up to them.
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10-11-2013 07:58 PM #201This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteEvery gimmick hungry yob,
Digging gold from rock and roll
Grabs the mic to tell us,
He'll die before he's sold.
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10-11-2013 07:59 PM #202This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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10-11-2013 08:04 PM #203This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
First, not sure what you're basing your prediction on. Second, you could apply that argument to any constituency, town, street, house or bedroom that voted one way or the other. Third, you are talking about partition. Fourth, I am taking all this too seriously!
Fifth, I'm off to have a beer.
Thanks for the joust!
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11-11-2013 05:46 AM #204This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
What happens in an independent Scotland when Shetland votes for a Lib Dem MSP and never get a Lib Dem government? Presumably, they should vote for independence from Scotland so that they can get what they vote for?
Incidentally, East Lothian gets exactly what it votes for in the UK General Election - a Labour MP.Last edited by Beefster; 11-11-2013 at 05:50 AM.
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11-11-2013 01:07 PM #205
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Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath voted for a Labour MP and ended up with one of the most part time representatives there's been - even recently denying to an audience that he's a politician before someone reminded him he's a member of parliament.
He's on full time expenses though.
PS: not having a go at Labour with that, just can't stand Gordon Brown.Last edited by steakbake; 11-11-2013 at 01:11 PM.
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11-11-2013 01:51 PM #206
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11-11-2013 02:02 PM #207
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11-11-2013 02:39 PM #208This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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11-11-2013 02:42 PM #209This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Scotland cannot be compared to any other particular area of five million people. Scotland is a constituent part of the UK, a political unit. It entered as a functioning state and can leave as one. Among lots of other reasons, I think it should leave to ensure that - as a political unit - it gets the government it actually elects.
I'm a bit lost with your Shetland example (although I know why you've chosen it - happy to get in to that barney if you want). Their Lib Dem MSP has featured in half of the Holyrood governments so far. Until the coalition at Westminster, their Lib Dem/ LibSDP/ Liberal MP has been no closer to power than possibly standing beside the PM in a lobby toilet (although presumably not Mrs T).
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11-11-2013 02:51 PM #210This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Wasn't there an opt out for the Northern Isles in the 1978 Scotland act allowing them to continue being governed from Westminster in the event of a devolved Parliament? (I might have imagined that.)
Every gimmick hungry yob,
Digging gold from rock and roll
Grabs the mic to tell us,
He'll die before he's sold.
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