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By poorly executed, I mean it was too inflexible and didn't take account of people's ability to pay. Sound familiar ?
The whole point of the Poll Tax was to make a billionaire and binman pay the same. So no, it wasn't a good idea unless you are a Tory?
A billionaire and a binman pay the same council tax if they live in similar houses. The whole point of the Poll Tax was to relate payment for services to users, rather than to houses.
John D .. you are so 'out of touch' it's amusing..
The Poll Tax was not a flat rate.
But if you tread my initial post, it was a good idea badly executed.
As I recall, John, the basic idea was a flat-rate per-adult tax.
Our Scots friends and other people we've met there mentioned the "trial run" of the Poll Tax in Scotland as one factor in convincing more people of the case for independence. Seems there was widespread anger at being used as guinea pigs by London. (Even those in favour of the Union).
Do you remember when, in the House of Commons, even Thatcher finally used the term Poll Tax instead of that absurd euphemism:- "Community Charge"?
At the time I too heard occasional mention of execution. But I'm against the death penalty- even for politicians.
John, IMO the Poll Tax was a bad idea, and it wouldn't have mattered how well it was executed. No matter how much or how carefully you smear lipstick on a pig, it's still a pig. Deeply unfair. The LibDems have in the past advocated a local income tax. Now that'd be fair.
Agree with the points you make, FPR.
It was only seven years ago the cashpoints almost stopped working.
How easily people forget the dangerous situation that prevailed.
Last year I listened, riveted, to a radio interview with Alastair Darling, someone whose views I'm always prepared to hear. He recounted his phone calls with the MD of the Royal Bank of Scotland at the time. The gist of the first call was, "[the bank] are running out of money". In a call later in the day, Mr Darling how asked how much time before the money ran out. The answer was something like, a couple of hours – such was the rate of haemorrhage.
Then followed the ultra-massive bank bail-out, that now burdens the country with enormous debt for years to come. Yet I have met a few residents who do not want to believe it.
It's not about "taking a hit", FPR. This discussion is not a zero-sum game. I'm-wrong-so-you're-right. Nor about point scoring. (Much as the political parties love their playground games - which most sensible people detest and avoid.)
This is about an inquiry and an exchange of views, ideas and experiences about some of the most important issues our society faces. In fact, the question of what kind of society we want to live in and build. And the values we want to see and foster.
So if you're in a listening and reflection mode, I've just spotted this article. Unread until now in our pile of newspapers destined for recycling bin.
The article I pulled out is: Tom Clark: "Three ways to stop the war on welfare". I first glanced at his advice "to pick the right words" . And then his criticism of "the drift to a U.S.-style discussion on welfare handouts'."
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