Tags for Forum Posts: protest, public spending cuts
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" It just breaks my heart. Making these cuts goes against the grain of what it means to be a Labour politician. We would never have made these cuts under ordinary circumstances and feel that this anger should be directed at the coalition Government."
Well Sheila: don't you feel that the anger should be directed against the previous Labour government ?
Who spent public money like a drunken sailor, stuffed the public services with non-jobs, abandoned checks on illegal immigrants, and relaxed regulation of the financial services ?
"We could say they [Congress] spend like drunken sailors. But that would be unfair to drunken sailors. The sailors are spending their own money." Joke by Ronald Reagan in 1964 at the Republican National Convention.
Joke mangled by John McCain, Republican Primary debate 2007. "
Ronald Reagan used to say, we spend money like a drunken sailor. I never knew a sailor, drunk or sober, with the imagination of the Congress."
You're welcome to express your views John. And I'm sure we could have an interesting conversation about migration, and what constitutes a "non-job".
But over the past ninety years there have been arguments across the political divide about what action social democratic western states can and should take during an economic downturn.
Can we at least agree that Britain's response to the recession and the banking crisis are serious issues. Deserving more than repetition of old Republican jokes?
Can I please ask, John, not to score points but because I'm genuinely curious:
● Do you think national Governments should stop issuing bonds?
● Or leave all capital investment to the private sector?
● That our Government should have let Northern Rock and other banks collapse?
● In brief what are your views on John Maynard Keynes and William Beveridge?Can certainly see why people are angry about the cuts, but I guess what I've not been persuaded about yet is that there is an alternative to cutting. All the main political parties (and expert organisations like the IFS) seem pretty much agreed on the size of the hole in the national finances and the need to deal with it. Even Labour, had they been returned to power last year, planned to recover 2/3 of what was then estimated as a £67billion debt through public sector cuts (and the rest through tax hikes) if this IFS report from the time is right.
Unless there IS another solution, doesn't damaging the Civic Centre, disrupting council meetings and taking up police time just take even more money out of the public purse?
All the main political parties are more interested in listening to the already rich and powerful than in meeting the needs of the people they are supposed to represent. There is no need for these cuts at all. Government cuts to local authority funds total approx £6.5bn. UK tax avoidance by large companies and wealthy people is estimated at almost £100bn a year. This government and the last sanctioned this. They also allowed billions of public money to prop up banks and then allowed these banks to pay huge bonuses rather than paying back the money they owed.
UK Uncut argue against the cuts and encourage everyone to take action to expose the myths about how 'the cuts are necessary' and 'we're all in this together'. And the PCS website has more detailed info on finances and why the cuts are unnecessary.
There have been some financial experts who have suggested this as an option, but, mostly no, the UK's financial experts don't come up with this as an option, because most 'financial experts' benefit from tax avoidance for the super rich. Be that through the money they make on advising how to go about tax avoidance, or in the case of the large financial advice companies, their own direct tax avoidance.
And while PCS are a public sector union, 'inevitably going to argue that public sector cuts are not necessary', they also represent tax inspectors who have good inside knowledge of all the tax avoidance and evasion that is going on.
It's not so much a conspiracy by the political class, as banks and other huge corporations using their huge finances to influence (putting it politely) those in government to let them increase their huge finances even more by shafting the rest of us.
There's a nice snippet in Woody Allen's Annie Hall when a man in a cinema queue expounds on the theories of Marshall McLuhan . . . if you don't know the scene watch it here.
Please forgive me whoever posted this link before, but Mehdi Hassan seems to have reimagined the Woody Allen scenario for Ed Miliband – with no less than three Nobel Prize winners.
But things aren't as simple as consulting the independent experts. Not all the experts agree. David Klegaron would I’m sure be able to field equally distinguished independent experts to say the opposite.
There are also some very important subsidiary issues. Even if everyone agreed (I do) that local councils could still find and cut out waste and unnecessary spending; and even if we all agreed (we don’t) that these cuts are needed and desirable, there’s still the question of their depth and crazy speed.
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