This is one of these posts that would be greatly enhanced by the .net poster saying if the link is to illustrate a point, and if so, what that point is.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I’ve only had a cursory look but the two things that jumped out were:
Cheap and abundant housing would be ‘great’. Also cheap and abundant energy would be ‘great’. Am I missing something more significant here?
And Nissan doesn’t like one of its inputs being expensive. As a private sector business with a core mission to deliver profit for its owners/shareholders, that hardly comes as a surprise?
Results 181 to 210 of 1125
Thread: Housing
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12-05-2023 09:15 PM #181
There's only one thing better than a Hibs calendar and that's two Hibs calendars
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12-05-2023 09:23 PM #182This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I was pointing out that the lack of housing affects the rest of our economy as well, as alluded to in the tweet.
You say that cheap and abundant energy and housing would be ‘great’ as if it’s unachievable? As if we have no control over these things?
Our electricity is the worlds most expensive. That’s a problem if we want industry in this country. And that goes for housing too. It will deter talented people from coming here.
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12-05-2023 11:42 PM #183
The bit I didn't really get was the writer saying that cheap, abundant housing and energy was a strategy. That's not a strategy. It might be an outcome or it might be an enabler ot it might be contextual circumstances. It's not a strategy though.
Putting 'great' in inverted commas wasn't so much about it being unachievable - though there are countless examples of governments failing to achieve it, especially with housing. Failing to even define how they would try to achieve it.
We could have cheap, abundant housing if we diverted money from other priorities and built loads of multi-storey concrete tower blocks, like the ones that mark some of the fringes of Edinburgh, but I suspect that's not what most people have in mind. I think it is easy to make banal sweeping statements such as the writer saying they are for something no one would say they were against - is anyone calling for less houses that are more expensive to boot? In reality, there are a multitude of factors that impact on housing, as have been highlighted on this thread - whether infrastructure or lenders' appetite for risk or whatever.
To some extent you could argue whether cheap and abundant are 'good' things. Does 'abundant' mean urban spread into rural land, more development on greenfield or on flood plains etc etc. We have very high population density yet are fairly low on average household size - should we be challenging the narratives that exist around what is public good and private good and which we value more?There's only one thing better than a Hibs calendar and that's two Hibs calendars
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13-05-2023 01:14 AM #184This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
https://citymonitor.ai/environment/t...s-europe-3625#
I do think we should be redirecting some of our resources in this country towards building more housing. It’s not popular and no political party wants to do it but IMO it needs done.
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13-05-2023 02:43 PM #185This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-05-2023 04:22 PM #186This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-05-2023 07:47 PM #187This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
25 of the 32 council areas in Scotland have a population density higher than the European average. Glasgow's is 100 times bigger, even Clackmannanshire is nearly ten times as high.
As for England, population density is very high. There's the odd outlier like the Netherlands but otherwise the UK as a whole is right up there, with only false comparisons like Monaco or the Vatican ahead.
But in terms of your last paragraph, that highlights the point I was trying to make. If we 'need' housing then how do we increase supply? Do we build up, with concrete tower blocks? Will people want to live there? Do we build out, into green field and flood plains? Scotland's density is lowered by the fact we have an area the size of Belgium with a population density in single figures. Is there any real demand to build thousands of houses around Tain and Helmsdale? How do you pay for the infrastructure to make new settlements viable?Last edited by Mibbes Aye; 13-05-2023 at 08:17 PM.
There's only one thing better than a Hibs calendar and that's two Hibs calendars
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13-05-2023 09:10 PM #188This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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16-05-2023 12:58 PM #189
https://twitter.com/jburnmurdoch/sta...dxJXScFNwz8V4A
Good thread on our housing problems.
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16-05-2023 05:45 PM #190
My father in law sent me a link to his old house on Right Move earlier today. Nice rural English location, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms and a small garden. Nice enough but nothing that special. Offers over £395K and it will got for a lot more than thay. He sold it in 1999 for £99K. In line with inflation the price should have been about £185K.
A house value increasing by that much whilst wages have risen at nowhere close to the same level is at least part of the reason we have a fully blown housing crisis.PM Awards General Poster of The Year 2015, 2016, 2017. Probably robbed in other years
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17-05-2023 08:02 AM #191
https://twitter.com/bbcbreakfast/sta...dxJXScFNwz8V4A
Promising? Who knows with Starmer. Backing the ‘builders not the blockers’ has to be up there with the worst political slogans ever though. Makes me doubt his sincerity.
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17-05-2023 03:38 PM #192This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
On a more serious note, the alliterative start to his answer needs a bit of work, for sure.
What is interesting for those who are interested in discourse analysis, the use of language, which nouns, adjectives and verbs are chosen is we saw two there that will be deployed more frequently as the election starts to come closer.
First up is reference to fixing a broken system. This will be used across a bunch of topics, not just housing. When Labour presents its manifesto and talks to it, expect to hear the phrase in relation to lots of areas, from asylum to GP provision to housing to the justice system.
Second up is ‘security’. Used there in relation to housing but will also be deployed when talking about energy, foreign policy, environment, affordable child care etc etc
Those two themes, and others, will be used to hammer home the message about 13 years of the Tories. Have they made us feel more secure, have they made the system better?
Of course the other part of the equation is what is Labour for, as opposed to just not being the Tories. As the manifesto takes shape that’s where that question will be road tested.There's only one thing better than a Hibs calendar and that's two Hibs calendars
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17-05-2023 04:44 PM #193
Maybe should be in the Tory thread
Tory peer’s family used no-fault eviction against mould complaint tenant
https://www.theguardian.com/money/20...share_btn_link
The family of a billionaire Tory landlord used a no-fault eviction to throw out a tenant after he refused a £1,680 annual rent increase having reported mould, damp and cold, the Guardian can reveal........
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17-05-2023 04:50 PM #194This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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17-05-2023 07:13 PM #195
https://www.theguardian.com/politics...box=1684347522
Wow, fair play to Starmer. It’s not an easy thing for a politician to say but it absolutely needs said. Let’s see if they have actual plans to deliver on the rhetoric.
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17-05-2023 07:25 PM #196
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substantially
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17-05-2023 11:20 PM #197This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Serious question, have you got this weeks lottery numbers?
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18-05-2023 08:56 AM #198This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
You just need to read the Conservatives 5 key priorities. Not one of them is aspirational or likely to get Joe public talking positively or enthusiastically about them.
Halving inflation? Who cares. It may be a sensible thing to strive for but it's in no way a vote winner. It's never been a subject to motivate people to get out and vote and isn't one that gets discussed round the dinner table.
Reducing national debt? Ditto.
I've noticed Labour talk more and more about preparing to govern. It's a good strategy and they should stick with it. They need to be the party offering hope and positivity to the country, something the Conservatives have failed to do for a while.
Just realised I put this in the wrong thread!
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18-05-2023 02:32 PM #199
https://twitter.com/channel4news/sta...dxJXScFNwz8V4A
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18-05-2023 02:39 PM #200
plans for 7,000 new homes between ingliston park and ride and the Gogar roundabout gets a step closer New Edinburgh town with 7,000 homes set for outskirts of the city (msn.com)
a 20-minute neighbourhood, i've never heard that saying before
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18-05-2023 02:44 PM #201This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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18-05-2023 04:21 PM #202This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
On the face of it it's an idea to promote local amenities that meet the needs of the local populace and allow the basic needs of society to be withing walking distance of said population. The conspiracy goes it's a plan to trap us all in local ghettoes with permission needed to leave your own sector.PM Awards General Poster of The Year 2015, 2016, 2017. Probably robbed in other years
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18-05-2023 04:59 PM #203This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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18-05-2023 05:20 PM #204This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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29-05-2023 07:15 PM #205
https://www.theguardian.com/politics...box=1685386957
Promising. The value from the granting of planning permission should be given to the public who grant the planning permission.
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30-05-2023 07:29 AM #206This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteThere is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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30-05-2023 08:11 AM #207This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
So I’m Edinburgh that could allow the council to buy the land owned by Murray at Ratho for the price of farmland. It can then give it the appropriate planning permission and build the houses. The council would bank the profit from their actions, we all get new houses and Murray gets no windfall from planning permission that we gift. I think this will result in more planning applications being granted rather than less if the council coffers were being swelled by doing it.
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30-05-2023 10:41 AM #208
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Refuse the developer, buy it from the the developer, gain planning? That would be scandalous.
A right to buy over certain plots or farmland would be fine.
For example, a landowner who could gain planning for 100-200 houses in a desirable area, but chooses not too. That would be a reasonable use of such powers.
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30-05-2023 11:00 AM #209This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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30-05-2023 11:41 AM #210This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteThere is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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