Thursday 24th August 2017

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Tubby Isaacs
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Tubby Isaacs »

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rail_subsidies#Europe" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Swiss taxpayers pay more in cash than UK taxpayers for rail "subsidies" (not quite the right word, as it'll include investment in every case). France was over triple the UK's cash level, Germany over 4 times.

That's likely been replicated across many years too. That's where the difference is. We collective are the ones who don't want to pay more tax, so collectively we get what we deserve really.
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citizenJA
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by citizenJA »

Some public services are most efficient and best single-payer, paid through general taxation
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citizenJA
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by citizenJA »

would you look at that, Tubby Isaacs?
posted essentially the same thought!
howsillyofme1
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by howsillyofme1 »

Tubby Isaacs wrote:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rail_subsidies#Europe

Swiss taxpayers pay more in cash than UK taxpayers for rail "subsidies" (not quite the right word, as it'll include investment in every case). France was over triple the UK's cash level, Germany over 4 times.

That's likely been replicated across many years too. That's where the difference is. We collective are the ones who don't want to pay more tax, so collectively we get what we deserve really.

I don't disagree and that goes more wider than train services as well to be honest

I also get the impression that there is still a stigma in the UK in using public transport, especially buses......buses that are even more a scandal than trains to be honest. On the continent that seems to be less evident.
Tubby Isaacs
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Tubby Isaacs »

citizenJA wrote:
Tubby Isaacs wrote:
None of the interesting transport issues are about nationalisation as Labour seems to think. Rail is already largely nationalised. The profit margins of the franchises are tiny. The issues are difficult and require evidence, judgement and thought. But I don't think most people are interested in that. They're more comfortable thinking nationalisation is the "left" solution, and so plumping for that. Lazy.
I agree with this, it is comfortable thinking, based on a misconception of why train tickets are generally expensive. Nationalisation is also (wrongly) thought to be cost free, when you'd have to buy the rolling stock companies.

The biggest advantage I see to the privatization of train companies is that they can be much more aggressive in raising business and peak time and first class fares, bringing much more investment to the railway than would otherwise be the case. There's no reason that a state railway couldn't be priced like this, if so desired.
Completely disagree with you here
I don't think I even agree with Labour's position, let me see if I can explain
Think about transportation differently
Government is responsible for the health, safety, protection and integrity of a nation and people
National investment in a comprehensive, integrated, reliable, frequent, easy-to-use and safe national public transportation infrastructure project helps protect our degraded environment due to inefficient motor vehicle usage. Less pollution, people healthier, less stress, public thoroughfares open up to children and other people. Rural areas served by a functional system just like any other area of the UK makes that area competitive for businesses, tourism rises, genuinely greater mobility for all, for everyone. Free at point of use. Lots of high-quality jobs keeping the national public transportation system operational.
Automotive industry ain't going to dig it. In strictly monetary terms, the amount of revenue government and businesses make out of selling everyone at least one car might be more than the revenue generated from...not.
I'd love more taxpayer money on rail. And as you say, investment all across the board has been too low, though with some improvements by the Labour government in later years.

I'm just saying how the system works now. Since 2007, ticket prices have been allowed to rise by above inflation so that the taxpayer money goes less to making fares cheaper and more on investment. It's "worked" in that it's achieved what it was intended to do. But there's a very obvious downside to it- rail is expensive.
Tubby Isaacs
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Tubby Isaacs »

I think buses have a stigma. I don't really like trams very much because the wires look appalling (that might change if battery powered trams can be made to work). But I think they do attract passengers who won't get a bus, so that's very positive.

Train fares are too confusing, for tourists, and many others. I managed to save a friend £20 on his ticket to see me by splitting his journey into two fares. Ridiculous really, though apparently it happened a bit under BR, and they wouldn't have appreciated you taking up time at a window trying out lots of combinations.

I think the National Rail site ought to have a bit of fare splitting software on it, for advice. None of them seem to work every time, but it might help, and people would understand the principle better.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by AnatolyKasparov »

Tubby Isaacs wrote:I've just seen more from Laura Pidcock. Not going to be friendly with any Tory MPs. Lucky we're trying to build a cross party alliance on an important issue or anything. She's been there 5 minutes and already done interviews with Sqwawkbox and Russia Today.

"I'm here for my class". And, er, your constituents of all kinds.
That is yesterday's news (its why I mentioned her then)

Why should she be matey with Tory MPs if she doesn't want to be?

The widespread sense that politics is a chummy "game" is one thing driving stuff like Brexit and Trump.

She also made clear she will represent all her constituents regardless of how they voted or anything else. Not that several media accounts bothered to mention that.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by SpinningHugo »

Tubby Isaacs wrote:I've just seen more from Laura Pidcock. Not going to be friendly with any Tory MPs. Lucky we're trying to build a cross party alliance on an important issue or anything. She's been there 5 minutes and already done interviews with Sqwawkbox and Russia Today.

"I'm here for my class". And, er, your constituents of all kinds.
She does raise an interesting point though.

Could you be friends with a Tory?

I could, and am. I'm friends with people of dramatically different political views from me.

I also doubt many Tories have any problem at all being friends with Labour supporters.

But some on the left are good at hating. They *hate* Tories. I am sure someone like John McDonnell has no Tory friends for example. For them it is personal.

Some of our more vitriolic Tory haters have left for more comfortable pastures in order not to read anything that they might not strongly agree with, but I wonder what others think. Is it reasonable to take politics to this personal level? Or is it a sign of a closed mind?
howsillyofme1
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by howsillyofme1 »

Tubby Isaacs wrote:I think buses have a stigma. I don't really like trams very much because the wires look appalling (that might change if battery powered trams can be made to work). But I think they do attract passengers who won't get a bus, so that's very positive.

Train fares are too confusing, for tourists, and many others. I managed to save a friend £20 on his ticket to see me by splitting his journey into two fares. Ridiculous really, though apparently it happened a bit under BR, and they wouldn't have appreciated you taking up time at a window trying out lots of combinations.

I think the National Rail site ought to have a bit of fare splitting software on it, for advice. None of them seem to work every time, but it might help, and people would understand the principle better.

I don't see the need to understand how splitting works....I saved myself £75 not so long ago by the way......it should just automatically tell you the cheapest fare without the complications.

You want to go from A->B not from A->C and C->B without changing trains - just tell us the price for the journey

The websites can deal with things such as advance fairs for specific trains etc but the machines at stations should be more simple
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Tubby Isaacs »

AnatolyKasparov wrote:
Tubby Isaacs wrote:I've just seen more from Laura Pidcock. Not going to be friendly with any Tory MPs. Lucky we're trying to build a cross party alliance on an important issue or anything. She's been there 5 minutes and already done interviews with Sqwawkbox and Russia Today.

"I'm here for my class". And, er, your constituents of all kinds.
That is yesterday's news (its why I mentioned her then)

Why should she be matey with Tory MPs if she doesn't want to be?

The widespread sense that politics is a chummy "game" is one thing driving stuff like Brexit and Trump.

She also made clear she will represent all her constituents regardless of how they voted or anything else. Not that several media accounts bothered to mention that.
I was glancing at Sqwawkbox directly. I gathered it must be what was being referred to on here before.

I'm sure there are plenty of Tory MPs you can learn from. Loads of them will have done very effective casework, been school governors, local councillors etc. If you think too much in terms of "the enemy", you're going to miss out on that. She's adjacent to two Tory constituencies. It wouldn't hurt to have amicable relations with their MPs.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by howsillyofme1 »

SpinningHugo wrote:
Tubby Isaacs wrote:I've just seen more from Laura Pidcock. Not going to be friendly with any Tory MPs. Lucky we're trying to build a cross party alliance on an important issue or anything. She's been there 5 minutes and already done interviews with Sqwawkbox and Russia Today.

"I'm here for my class". And, er, your constituents of all kinds.
She does raise an interesting point though.

Could you be friends with a Tory?

I could, and am. I'm friends with people of dramatically different political views from me.

I also doubt many Tories have any problem at all being friends with Labour supporters.

But some on the left are good at hating. They *hate* Tories. I am sure someone like John McDonnell has no Tory friends for example. For them it is personal.

Some of our more vitriolic Tory haters have left for more comfortable pastures in order not to read anything that they might not strongly agree with, but I wonder what others think. Is it reasonable to take politics to this personal level? Or is it a sign of a closed mind?

That last paragraph is a pile of shite but then it is not surprising coming from you

Your post seems to be a lot of crass generalisations that ignores the complexity of people

Going to apologise for calling Corbyn a liar?

It is up to each person to decide how they choose their friends and some people may feel that anyone who is a Tory cannot share the same values as they do......being friends is more than just a casual acquaintance as well......

I have friends who are Tories but we cannot ever discuss politics as we end up falling out.....are they true friends or not? I am not sure

And are you really sure about McDonnell? 'Sure' is a strong word - for someone who claims to be a lawyer you are very sloppy with your English

I also know people who hate the Tories because of what they have done to certain communities, and I also have come across people who despise and looks down on anyone who even demonstrates any compassion to the less fortunate (I imagine those guys who burn £50 notes in front of homeless people don't really feel much affinity for the poor do they?)

And in the end, is there that much difference between most people despite who they vote for.....many people I know are actually pretty apolitical and just knowing who someone voted for does't tell the whole story. I know some great people who vote Tory as they know their local MP and don't want to pay any more tax than they do now.....I disagree with them on that last point but is it enough not to be friends with them?
Last edited by howsillyofme1 on Thu 24 Aug, 2017 5:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by HindleA »

It depends on your perspective,as previously stated we are lucky in that we have a very good local bus service,well used,regularly,all accessible and cheap.I have never understood the looking down on thing,though I never did over housing,given we had a Scandanavian Barrett built,downstairs loo etc as Council and took as much pride over my £10 a week one bedroomed HA flat as I do now,it's my home.A form of transport is a form of transport though I have never driven,still have managed to get to a fair few places and enjoy being taken,no longer being able to smoke on board notwithstanding and talking to people rather than pretending I am a grand prix driver and all other drivers are my competition and the you get get a double decker bus through there and sounding horn on a nanosecond delay in responding to a changed light etc.Coaches are o.k.but when we wanted to travel any distance,they were still in the process of being made accessible,trains were far more convenient for various reasons,in effect,the only reasonable way to get any distance,certainly where we wanted to go.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by HindleA »

Hate Tory Party,happened to have mixed/have family with a wide range of opinions.FWIW whereas I have remained unaltered beyond reinforced tendencies which I freely admit some have moved towards my way of thinking
Tubby Isaacs
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Tubby Isaacs »

Splitting, as far as I can tell, works when the train operator is offering a discount between the start/end of your journey and somewhere that you pass through on the way. In my friend's case, he was going home from seeing me, travelling from deepest Herefordshire to London. For some reason, the train operator wants to offer a really cheap (£6) fare from Worcester to London. He's bought that ticket, and an extra single from deepest Herefordshire to Worcester. That works out at £11.70. There were no promotions offered for his whole journey, and he'd therefore have had to pay the full off peak fare (something like £33, IIRC).

Apparently, this did happen with BR to some extent too. The promotional fare is nice to get, but it's hardly fair on the person who takes the same journey, books at the same time, and goes on the same trains but pays £20 extra. Promotional fares probably do though have a positive role in getting people to use trains who might not otherwise. I don't know, maybe they've identified Worcester as a place that doesn't have as many people using the train to London as might be expected.

My friend is certainly more interested than he was, so I wouldn't want to stop this kind of pricing. I'd just like to see some software, where everyone could see it, that could help you find these splits.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by HindleA »

Tarquin is far too radical for me,but understandable when you have been denied even a vote.
howsillyofme1
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by howsillyofme1 »

Tubby Isaacs wrote:Splitting, as far as I can tell, works when the train operator is offering a discount between the start/end of your journey and somewhere that you pass through on the way. In my friend's case, he was going home from seeing me, travelling from deepest Herefordshire to London. For some reason, the train operator wants to offer a really cheap (£6) fare from Worcester to London. He's bought that ticket, and an extra single from deepest Herefordshire to Worcester. That works out at £11.70. There were no promotions offered for his whole journey, and he'd therefore have had to pay the full off peak fare (something like £33, IIRC).

Apparently, this did happen with BR to some extent too. The promotional fare is nice to get, but it's hardly fair on the person who takes the same journey, books at the same time, and goes on the same trains but pays £20 extra. Promotional fares probably do though have a positive role in getting people to use trains who might not otherwise. I don't know, maybe they've identified Worcester as a place that doesn't have as many people using the train to London as might be expected.

My friend is certainly more interested than he was, so I wouldn't want to stop this kind of pricing. I'd just like to see some software, where everyone could see it, that could help you find these splits.

In any process design the focus should be on the customer and to meet their needs. It is beholden to the train companies to ensure their customer has a good service at the best possible price - it is not good if the customer pays too much for their ticket due to a complexity put in place by the train company......the problem is now that the complexity seems all at the user end and there are no attempts to simplify it

The assumption is that the train companies see the passenger as a customer.....if they have no alternative, and on many routes there is not much of an alternative, then I would bet that they see their main customer as being someone/something else....possibly their shareholders
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by HindleA »

In the '90's it was cheaper to buy my ticket from Three Bridges to the midlands,than a ticket bought just from London by some degree.
Last edited by HindleA on Thu 24 Aug, 2017 6:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Tubby Isaacs
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Tubby Isaacs »

SpinningHugo wrote:
Tubby Isaacs wrote:I've just seen more from Laura Pidcock. Not going to be friendly with any Tory MPs. Lucky we're trying to build a cross party alliance on an important issue or anything. She's been there 5 minutes and already done interviews with Sqwawkbox and Russia Today.

"I'm here for my class". And, er, your constituents of all kinds.
She does raise an interesting point though.

Could you be friends with a Tory?

I could, and am. I'm friends with people of dramatically different political views from me.

I also doubt many Tories have any problem at all being friends with Labour supporters.

But some on the left are good at hating. They *hate* Tories. I am sure someone like John McDonnell has no Tory friends for example. For them it is personal.

Some of our more vitriolic Tory haters have left for more comfortable pastures in order not to read anything that they might not strongly agree with, but I wonder what others think. Is it reasonable to take politics to this personal level? Or is it a sign of a closed mind?
I don't know about McDonnell, but Tony Benn used to have Tory friends. I read his diaries (which are excellent) and actually used to find it a bit irritating, the sense that the Labour Left and the Tory Right on Europe were great principled people.

I think McDonnell used to get on with Zac Goldsmith before the awful mayoral campaign, because of Heathrow.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by HindleA »

SH give it a rest,no one hates the Tories more than me,not least for proven and continued systematic and grave violations and regression from what took hard fought for decades of effort to build up.
AnatolyKasparov
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by AnatolyKasparov »

Corbyn's good relationship with David Davis in their mutual backbench days has been commented on.

But the point is - as with the friendships based on fellow Euroscepticism mentioned just above by Tubby - they had common interests regarding various what might be loosely described as "civil liberties" issues. Some "centrists" just seem to think Labour and Tory MPs should be mates automatically, and are genuinely annoyed at Pidcock for not agreeing.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by HindleA »

Not forgetting,of course,the Wail money advisor S Webb et al for the crucial part they played.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by citizenJA »

Tory MPs have made a commitment to a political party I can't respect or support. They're each a person. I'd strongly encourage them to think better of their association, work for everyone and not a few. That would likely mean leaving the Tory party. A person isn't wholly defined by their memberships but some clubs are worse than others. I hold Tory MPs responsible for the needless harm they've inflicted on people and country since being in government. I didn't care much for the Tory party prior 2010. I'd no idea how bad they could get.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Tubby Isaacs »

Ah, Civil Liberties, that's a good point. You have right libertarians and left libertarians, who can do usefully work together. I think that's an area where there was principle, rather than the ignorance there was over Europe.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Tubby Isaacs »

Yeah, I think the way some somebody who know about rail splitting can get a better price than somebody who doesn't, that does fail basic customer service fairness. Once at Gatwick Airport (I didn't feel confident enough to book a particular train in advance, dependent on a flight arriving on time), the train company employee at the desk brought up some scary sounding fare, and looked puzzled. He went away, spoke to somebody, and came back with a much lower amount based on splitting the journey at Reading. But that's hardly systematic. I could have gone to another window and paid far more.

The funny thing about this is that the "extra" revenue that train companies get from this is factored into what they bid for the franchise. So arguably, I as a taxpayer, represented by the DfT, would be ripping myself the passenger off.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by HindleA »

http://touchstoneblog.org.uk/2017/08/ec ... um=twitter" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

‘Economists for free trade’ contradicted by today’s GDP data
Tubby Isaacs
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Tubby Isaacs »

Good spot, Hindle.

Nice graph on there.

Image

Those Brexit small staters will doubtless be up in arms about that increasing government consumption.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Willow904 »

Some years back I moved to the Co-op for gas and electric because they were offering a single variable tariff for all their customers, so no one was getting a "discount" at the expense of others on an expensive "standard" tariff. It was an ethical rather than economic choice, but I didn't find them especially costly at the time.

Then along comes Cameron who "reforms" the energy market and suddenly not only can I no longer earn dividend points but the Co-op's single tariff suddenly turns into multiple tariffs and I'm back to fixed rate "discount" deals that always seem suspiciously more expensive. Having only really moved for the single tariff I'm now back to the yearly "shop around". We all use exactly the same energy via the exact same infrastructure but in order to buy it we have to trail around getting "quotes" like you would for something unique and personal like home or car insurance.

As with rail tickets, you can't just get a list of prices to compare, you have to get a "quote" and have no idea what your neighbour is being quoted for the exact same thing. No way of knowing if you have a good deal but the assurance that if you are someone else is paying well over the odds to pay for it.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

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Willow904 wrote:Some years back I moved to the Co-op for gas and electric because they were offering a single variable tariff for all their customers, so no one was getting a "discount" at the expense of others on an expensive "standard" tariff. It was an ethical rather than economic choice, but I didn't find them especially costly at the time.

Then along comes Cameron who "reforms" the energy market and suddenly not only can I no longer earn dividend points but the Co-op's single tariff suddenly turns into multiple tariffs and I'm back to fixed rate "discount" deals that always seem suspiciously more expensive. Having only really moved for the single tariff I'm now back to the yearly "shop around". We all use exactly the same energy via the exact same infrastructure but in order to buy it we have to trail around getting "quotes" like you would for something unique and personal like home or car insurance.

As with rail tickets, you can't just get a list of prices to compare, you have to get a "quote" and have no idea what your neighbour is being quoted for the exact same thing. No way of knowing if you have a good deal but the assurance that if you are someone else is paying well over the odds to pay for it.
Yeah, that's pretty unfair. At least with rail, and the example with the split fare earlier, there was probably some rationale for there being very cheap fares offered for part of the journey, in terms of attracting new people to rail. Energy isn't like that at all- it's not like anybody says "I didn't realize how cheap electricity was, I'm going to use it from now on!"
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Tubby Isaacs »

I hadn't realized that a public train company could bid for Scotrail next time. That'll be interesting. The SNP might be wishing they were still able to moan about Westminster not allowing it.

They might or might not make improvements, but they'll be under pressure to restrict (unregulated) fare rises more than private operators have. It could very easily end up with tickets being cheaper and investment being cut.

What might have been better is something else they've been campaigning for, but not got- that's a Scottish Network Rail. They've been let down by the UK version, with delays and overspending.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by PorFavor »

Tubby Isaacs wrote:
Willow904 wrote:Some years back I moved to the Co-op for gas and electric because they were offering a single variable tariff for all their customers, so no one was getting a "discount" at the expense of others on an expensive "standard" tariff. It was an ethical rather than economic choice, but I didn't find them especially costly at the time.

Then along comes Cameron who "reforms" the energy market and suddenly not only can I no longer earn dividend points but the Co-op's single tariff suddenly turns into multiple tariffs and I'm back to fixed rate "discount" deals that always seem suspiciously more expensive. Having only really moved for the single tariff I'm now back to the yearly "shop around". We all use exactly the same energy via the exact same infrastructure but in order to buy it we have to trail around getting "quotes" like you would for something unique and personal like home or car insurance.

As with rail tickets, you can't just get a list of prices to compare, you have to get a "quote" and have no idea what your neighbour is being quoted for the exact same thing. No way of knowing if you have a good deal but the assurance that if you are someone else is paying well over the odds to pay for it.
Yeah, that's pretty unfair. At least with rail, and the example with the split fare earlier, there was probably some rationale for there being very cheap fares offered for part of the journey, in terms of attracting new people to rail. Energy isn't like that at all- it's not like anybody says "I didn't realize how cheap electricity was, I'm going to use it from now on!"

Along vaguely similar lines - Smart Meters (which keep being pushed at me) -

How likely am I to say, "Blimey! That 'frig' is using a lot of electricity. I think I'll switch it off"?
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by HindleA »

http://blacktrianglecampaign.org/2017/0 ... tastrophe/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by citizenJA »

"In 2014-15, EEA nationals paid £13.6 billion more Income Tax and National Insurance
than they took out in tax credits and Child Benefit. This is £1.4bn higher than in 2013-14.
"

Official Statistics
Income Tax NICs Tax Credits and Child Benefit Statistics for EEA Nationals 2014 to 2015
From:
HM Revenue & Customs
Published:
24 August 2017

https://www.gov.uk/government/statistic ... 14-to-2015" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
How's Beryl's husband?
Do we have his opinion on this here data?
Some apoplectic gunners below the line yonda

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... -prejudice" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... way-option" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by HindleA »

I panicked when I put the kettle on,after berating fridge,freezer etc for giving a reading above 2 whateveryoucallits.I have put the thing in the back of a cupboard somewhere.
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by citizenJA »

Martin Kettle's piece linked below

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... way-option" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
HindleA
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by HindleA »

Nice kettle link.
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citizenJA
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by citizenJA »

oh, ha ha ha
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citizenJA
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by citizenJA »

Damn, that 'gunners' reference
It's not sport, I repeat, it's not a sport reference
It's a US expression, at least, that's where I heard it
HindleA
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by HindleA »

[youtube]qaNQT7G2R_I[/youtube]



"
I'm knobbled on the cobbles
Cos I hobble when I wobble
Swim!

So place your hard-earned peanuts in my tin
And thank the Creator you're not in the state I'm in
So long have I been languished on the shelf
I must give all proceedings to myself"

#CRPD17 rapporteur describes dialogue with the UK the most challenging exercise in history of the disability cttee.

said members were “deeply concerned” by the government’s failure to implement the convention, and delivered a withering putdown, telling the UK delegation: “I could provide a long list of examples where the state party doesn’t live up to the convention. Unfortunately, the time is too limited.”
Last edited by HindleA on Thu 24 Aug, 2017 8:50 pm, edited 2 times in total.
howsillyofme1
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by howsillyofme1 »

Tubby

I just looked at the wiki link you gave and these are the subsidies to rail/passenger km in Euro (1st column) and % of mean (2nd column)

Ireland 0.54 234
Switzerland 0.32 139
Denmark 0.29 126
Sweden 0.26 113
Belgium 0.26 113
Germany 0.21 91
Spain 0.21 91
Austria 0.21 91
France 0.16 76
Netherlands 0.15 71
Poland 0.12 52
UK 0.07 33

Some of the data is older than the others (UK is 2016) but it seems to indicate the UK is not overly generous to say the least

Obviously caveats about data sources and there is definitely some cases of comparing apples and pears, along with some multiplications that would not meet much scrutiny but it can be used as indicative
SpinningHugo
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by SpinningHugo »

AnatolyKasparov wrote:Corbyn's good relationship with David Davis in their mutual backbench days has been commented on.

But the point is - as with the friendships based on fellow Euroscepticism mentioned just above by Tubby - they had common interests regarding various what might be loosely described as "civil liberties" issues. Some "centrists" just seem to think Labour and Tory MPs should be mates automatically, and are genuinely annoyed at Pidcock for not agreeing.
I call nonsense on that.

Nobody subscribes to this "automatic friends" view.
howsillyofme1
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by howsillyofme1 »

Further to that last post

The UK does not seem to give many subsidies to many things, have many nationalised industries to suck up loads of cash, be overly generous in health or education spending.....be extra generous do those needing state support so my question is

where does all the bloody money go?
Tubby Isaacs
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Tubby Isaacs »

I think the data is probably OK, and better than the cash figures I put up. We aren't big spenders, and those figures probably take the whole public amount spent on rail as "subsidy". If you take the bit that directly subsidizes ticket prices, then we'd have an even smaller number, I expect.

I can see why Miliband was cautious about tax rises, and they took a decision to spend all or virtually all on the NHS. It might have been better to take some of that money and earmark it for things like rail, or legal aid. If you vote Labour, X will get sorted out, and you'll see it.

Then again, I'm not a great predictor.
howsillyofme1
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by howsillyofme1 »

why does a certain poster continually pick up on clearly throwaway comments by other contributors and try to create a row over nothing rather than dealing with some of the challenges to the nonsense that he himself posts?

Anyway, just to be clear that I would like to apologise to Tubby for some of the unpleasant things I have said in the past....it was based on one comment that is best forgotten and I hope he will accept the apology - I am trying to engage more constructively, even when I have some fundamental disagreements (we need a white flag emoji here)
PorFavor
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by PorFavor »

@citizenJA

I thought the Kettle link-link was deliberate, too!
howsillyofme1
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by howsillyofme1 »

Tubby,

The numbers did shock me to be honest (almost as much as Ireland's did) - I would take the numbers as +-20% to be honest but even then I think the UK numbers will still be about right as the spending was from 2016 but the passenger figures from 2014 and I think numbers have been rising since then so make the subsidy even lower
Tubby Isaacs
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Tubby Isaacs »

howsillyofme1 wrote:why does a certain poster continually pick up on clearly throwaway comments by other contributors and try to create a row over nothing rather than dealing with some of the challenges to the nonsense that he himself posts?

Anyway, just to be clear that I would like to apologise to Tubby for some of the unpleasant things I have said in the past....it was based on one comment that is best forgotten and I hope he will accept the apology - I am trying to engage more constructively, even when I have some fundamental disagreements (we need a white flag emoji here)
Thanks, and my apologies to you. Been good discussion.
howsillyofme1
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by howsillyofme1 »

Oh by the way I am reading Varoufakis's 'Adults in the Room' at the moment - a good read for those interested in power politics at the highest level
howsillyofme1
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by howsillyofme1 »

me again!

If you read this article and the sub-heading - would this have been the headline you would have used?

I think the story is probably interesting but not for what the headline says!

edited to add the bloody link

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... e-election" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Last edited by howsillyofme1 on Thu 24 Aug, 2017 9:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.
HindleA
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by HindleA »

I hate waste,both in personal and more general terms,so it isn't just about amount but effectiveness,purpose and in my areas of interest what I call.cost saving investment purposefully because,again purposefully,it is labelled a "problem/subject to lifestyle choice exhortions or whatever,basically bad or more correctly transmuteable dependent on propaganda purpose.The spewing of monies-£31-£52 g per assessor,or more correctly a computer operative far better deployed in the care field they are trained for and the eye watering amounts associated with paper only PIP assessments alone,perhaps gives a hint as to where the money is going.
Tubby Isaacs
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Re: Thursday 24th August 2017

Post by Tubby Isaacs »

howsillyofme1 wrote:Tubby,

The numbers did shock me to be honest (almost as much as Ireland's did) - I would take the numbers as +-20% to be honest but even then I think the UK numbers will still be about right as the spending was from 2016 but the passenger figures from 2014 and I think numbers have been rising since then so make the subsidy even lower
Yes, the numbers have been rising spectacularly. I don't know if it was widely foreseen, and even with better funding, it would still be very hard to keep up. If rail became pleasant, as it often isn't, God knows how many might use it.
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