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3:00pm Tuesday 29th November 2011 in Blackpool
By Jon Livesey, Reporter
EAST Lancashire is bracing itself for ‘severe’ disruption to services when thousands of public sector workers strike against pension changes tomorrow.
According to union chiefs, more than 20,000 members are expected to walk out in East Lancashire as part of the TUC’s national Day of Action.
Among those set to strike are nurses, paramedics, midwives, headteachers, teachers, classroom assistants, civil servants, probation staff and waste disposal workers.
Police support staff and fire and rescue support staff are also expected to take part in the protest.
The day of action, the biggest of its kind for more than 30 years. It has been organised in objection to the Government’s plans to make staff pay more and work longer to earn their pensions. It is supported by all major unions, including Unite, UNISON and GMB.
Gareth Roscoe, UNISON branch secretary in Blackburn with Darwen, said “Public sector workers in the local government scheme voted 76 per cent in favour of strike action.”
Thousands of public sector workers from across East Lancashire are expected to march through Blackburn, setting off from outside the town hall at about 11.45am.
Click on the link below for school closures and how services will be affected.
Comments(69)
coates warder
says...
11:28am Sat 26 Nov 11
coates warder
says...
11:33am Sat 26 Nov 11
gudari
says...
12:43pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Gary The Snail wrote:Don't care about people having to take time off. This is about solidarity. If these people don't reaize that one day it could be them then hell mend them!
Having been involved in strike action, all I can say is; this will get you nowhere. Apart from of course a growing resentment from those who have to take ANOTHER day off to look after their children.
gudari
says...
12:49pm Sat 26 Nov 11
coates warder wrote:You sound like a tory politician mate. This country is one of the 5 richest in the world! There's money for a civil list, wars that don't interest anyone and a London Olympics that only interests a few but none for important things like social services, NHS etc. What the government wants is for people to believe that the country is broke and keep more for themselves. this country has loads of money; If you want to ensure the government spends it wisely, you need to start asking a dofferent set of questions instead of bleating about selfish motives!
nowt but greed...some people dont even have a pension.if a teacher or doctor cant fund their own retirement on the tens of thousands a year its time to give up.moan moan moan.try living in the real world for once.cant these people see we as a country are broke.but no greed comes before anything else.just 1 day off will cost the country millions people not able to go to work because of children not able to go to school.this will cost me £75 a day.you will get no sympathy from me or family.the part i can'not understand is only 27% voted for strike action i thought you needed a majority.
Jack Herer
says...
12:53pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Jack Herer
says...
12:53pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Chris P Bacon
says...
12:59pm Sat 26 Nov 11
coates warder wrote:Ahh, £75! And we wonder where your objection to the right thing comes from!
nowt but greed...some people dont even have a pension.if a teacher or doctor cant fund their own retirement on the tens of thousands a year its time to give up.moan moan moan.try living in the real world for once.cant these people see we as a country are broke.but no greed comes before anything else.just 1 day off will cost the country millions people not able to go to work because of children not able to go to school.this will cost me £75 a day.you will get no sympathy from me or family.the part i can'not understand is only 27% voted for strike action i thought you needed a majority.
Jack Herer
says...
1:12pm Sat 26 Nov 11
gudari wrote:Keep more for themselves? Ever heard of Greece? Ireland? Portugal? Spain? Italy?
coates warder wrote:You sound like a tory politician mate. This country is one of the 5 richest in the world! There's money for a civil list, wars that don't interest anyone and a London Olympics that only interests a few but none for important things like social services, NHS etc. What the government wants is for people to believe that the country is broke and keep more for themselves. this country has loads of money; If you want to ensure the government spends it wisely, you need to start asking a dofferent set of questions instead of bleating about selfish motives!
nowt but greed...some people dont even have a pension.if a teacher or doctor cant fund their own retirement on the tens of thousands a year its time to give up.moan moan moan.try living in the real world for once.cant these people see we as a country are broke.but no greed comes before anything else.just 1 day off will cost the country millions people not able to go to work because of children not able to go to school.this will cost me £75 a day.you will get no sympathy from me or family.the part i can'not understand is only 27% voted for strike action i thought you needed a majority.
'Kean on getting out..!
says...
1:35pm Sat 26 Nov 11
gudari wrote:This strike is going to upset people who hav'nt even got a pension to look forward to. 'like myslf'
Gary The Snail wrote:Don't care about people having to take time off. This is about solidarity. If these people don't reaize that one day it could be them then hell mend them!
Having been involved in strike action, all I can say is; this will get you nowhere. Apart from of course a growing resentment from those who have to take ANOTHER day off to look after their children.
Walsh
says...
2:34pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Good call
says...
2:50pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Walsh wrote:Well said walsh but the people on here (the sheep) don't seem to realise that it isn't police officers, members of the armed forces (yes they are public sector workers too), teachers and health workers who caused the economic crisis it was the Bankers who wrecked the economy and the Politicians who let them.
Coates Warder, "the part i can'not understand is only 27% voted for strike action i thought you needed a majority." In response I always thought the same applied to our political masters. However, when it comes down to it the Conservatives only got 36.1% of the vote in the last election. How can they then demand changes to employment law, when if they were to abide by their own logic we would be entitled to a general election. The Tories must be laughing their heads off. Instead of getting angry at the people who are having us over we are fighting amongst ourselves. Why are people not as vociferous about such things as Vodaphone being let off £6 billion in taxes when HMRC are chasing 1.4 million citizens for £2 billion? Why did no one cry out when the profitable portion of National Rock was sold for a loss leaving us, the taxpayer, with the part that is loss making and amongst other things why does foreign aid add up to £500 per person in the UK. Don't get me wrong I know things are tough, but when we are told "we are all in this together" I know that a small minority are still profiting whilst the rest of us are suffering.
jack daniels
says...
3:05pm Sat 26 Nov 11
jack daniels
says...
3:08pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Jack Herer
says...
3:34pm Sat 26 Nov 11
jack daniels wrote:Another shocking loss to the average man on the street caused by the last labour government.
"After pouring more than £20billion into Lloyds, the government is sitting on a paper loss of £9.3billion on its investment."
Which would just about cover the public sector pension 'black hole'...
Baaah..
Jack Herer
says...
3:45pm Sat 26 Nov 11
jack daniels
says...
3:58pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Jack Herer wrote:but NONE of this is the fault of the actual public sector workers yet you are still repeating the same brain washed chant as told by the Condems and media.
It was Gordon Brown who sidled up to the bankers. It was Gordon Brown who decided they should have "light touch regulation" which allowed them to take such risks. It was Gordon Brown who showered them with knighthoods for taking the risks which led the world to the brink of collapse. It was Gordon Brown who decided that the tax payer would bail out the banks to stupid amounts which has now led to losses.
Good old Labour eh. The party of the people. As long as the people are public sector workers anyway. Then they make everyone else pay for stupidly high pensions and wages.
Brendan Barber, TUC general secretary, is a fat cat just like the bankers. Massive pay, massive bonuses, massive pension.
The unions are a shocking, disgusting reflection on what they were created for. They were created by decent people to get fair conditions. Now they are just fat cat societies who look after themselves to the detriment of the masses, even showing outright contempt to the general public by putting them out and costing them money with needless strikes.
Shame on you.
Chris P Bacon
says...
4:17pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Jack Herer wrote:Anyone with more than the bare minimum amount of brain cells distributed to you will see your nonsense and you can almost hear eyes rolling in heads. How dim can ANYone get to swallow the guff spewed forth by the current criminals in charge about the last lot?
It was Gordon Brown who sidled up to the bankers. It was Gordon Brown who decided they should have "light touch regulation" which allowed them to take such risks. It was Gordon Brown who showered them with knighthoods for taking the risks which led the world to the brink of collapse. It was Gordon Brown who decided that the tax payer would bail out the banks to stupid amounts which has now led to losses.
Good old Labour eh. The party of the people. As long as the people are public sector workers anyway. Then they make everyone else pay for stupidly high pensions and wages.
Brendan Barber, TUC general secretary, is a fat cat just like the bankers. Massive pay, massive bonuses, massive pension.
The unions are a shocking, disgusting reflection on what they were created for. They were created by decent people to get fair conditions. Now they are just fat cat societies who look after themselves to the detriment of the masses, even showing outright contempt to the general public by putting them out and costing them money with needless strikes.
Shame on you.
Jack Herer
says...
4:24pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Good call
says...
4:26pm Sat 26 Nov 11
jack daniels
says...
5:04pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Jack Herer wrote:but the private sector are not being shafted by the public sector. The pension was part of their employment contract, and used as a tool to ensure that well trained staff remained employed within the council and not head-hunted by the then affluent private sector. Just because times have changed, it does not mean it's fair to tear up the employment contacts because the politicians raided the pension piggy bank.
And none of it is the fault of the private sector workers.
So why should they get shafted for it and also shafted over by public sector workers by having to pay for their bloated pensions?
They need the money themselves thanks, they are already skint.
Noiticer
says...
5:19pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Jack Herer
says...
8:58pm Sat 26 Nov 11
jack daniels wrote:The public sector head-hunting thing turned out to be complete lies to justify those stupidly high wages which Labour borrowed heavily to pay.
Jack Herer wrote:but the private sector are not being shafted by the public sector. The pension was part of their employment contract, and used as a tool to ensure that well trained staff remained employed within the council and not head-hunted by the then affluent private sector. Just because times have changed, it does not mean it's fair to tear up the employment contacts because the politicians raided the pension piggy bank.
And none of it is the fault of the private sector workers.
So why should they get shafted for it and also shafted over by public sector workers by having to pay for their bloated pensions?
They need the money themselves thanks, they are already skint.
Jack Herer
says...
9:07pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Noiticer wrote:Any pension scheme which pays far more out than it gets in are like ponzi schemes - they take ever more suckers at the bottom paying in but eventually it runs out of suckers.
Some of the public service pension pots are in profit eg the NHS and others would have been if the money had been invested wisely instead of just being used as government income as the 3% additional contributions being demanded by the Con/Dem government will be. Those in the private sector should have decent pensions too but that is down to the capitalists who run their companies, not the fault of those in the public service without whom the country would fall apart.
As has been said above the government want to drive a wedge between different groups of workers - it's an old trick of the Tory Party and fellow travellers - the trick is to ignore this and for all workers to demand a fair and just society where all share in the wealth created. It won't happen until employees have fair represenation on boards of directors - after all it is the skill and hard work of employees which bring in the profits to companies along with the skill of their managers. Yes we should all be in it together but, alas, in the current way society is organised that is certainly not the case and until we truly are the country will continue to decline in many ways.
grunny
says...
9:10pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Jack Herer
says...
9:13pm Sat 26 Nov 11
Good call wrote:Get bailed out by a Labour government funded by the unions. Go figure.
Loot a shop:Get sent to prison
Loot the economy:Get bailed out by the government and then reward yourself a huge bonus.
northwesterly
says...
9:20pm Sat 26 Nov 11
feciko
says...
10:27pm Sat 26 Nov 11
hunter3062
says...
2:30pm Sun 27 Nov 11
Good call
says...
6:27pm Sun 27 Nov 11
Jack Herer wrote:If you look at my earlier comment, I said that it wasn't just the banking cartel members like fred goodwin to blame, it was also the fault of the politicians who let them loot the economy.I'm no fan of the last government whatsoever some of the things they did were bad Iraq war,ID cards etc etc.But I also don't like the current government
Good call wrote: Loot a shop:Get sent to prison Loot the economy:Get bailed out by the government and then reward yourself a huge bonus.Get bailed out by a Labour government funded by the unions. Go figure. It wasn't strictly a self rewarded bonus by the bankers either. In Fred Goodwin's case his huge pension had to be agreed by the Labour Government when we suddenly owned the RBS after the bailout. Good work Labour, rewarding those matey matey bankers to the end.
gene.hunt
says...
6:46pm Mon 28 Nov 11
Keep Darwen Green
says...
6:49pm Mon 28 Nov 11
gene.hunt
says...
6:50pm Mon 28 Nov 11
northwesterly wrote:Course it comes from tax payer funding.Just like my salary. Northwesterly = Tosser
How stupid are some people, we pay into our pensions it doesn't come from tax payers funding. We do NOT get it for nothing. Once the government get there own way then the private sectors will follow. Stop giving us grief as in the long run it could benefit everyone !!!!
embeee
says...
6:57pm Mon 28 Nov 11
northwesterly wrote:Of course it comes from Tax Payer funding - the 'employers' contribution towards a public sector workers pension comes from taxes, and this recent guardian article shows the percentages. http://www.guardian.
How stupid are some people, we pay into our pensions it doesn't come from tax payers funding. We do NOT get it for nothing. Once the government get there own way then the private sectors will follow. Stop giving us grief as in the long run it could benefit everyone !!!!
Rumpole
says...
7:20pm Mon 28 Nov 11
burner
says...
8:55pm Mon 28 Nov 11
Hopping mad
says...
8:56pm Mon 28 Nov 11
Brian Todd
says...
9:47pm Mon 28 Nov 11
Livesey rover
says...
9:48pm Mon 28 Nov 11
happycyclist
says...
10:10pm Mon 28 Nov 11
Jack Herer wrote:Good comment.
It was Gordon Brown who sidled up to the bankers. It was Gordon Brown who decided they should have "light touch regulation" which allowed them to take such risks. It was Gordon Brown who showered them with knighthoods for taking the risks which led the world to the brink of collapse. It was Gordon Brown who decided that the tax payer would bail out the banks to stupid amounts which has now led to losses.
Good old Labour eh. The party of the people. As long as the people are public sector workers anyway. Then they make everyone else pay for stupidly high pensions and wages.
Brendan Barber, TUC general secretary, is a fat cat just like the bankers. Massive pay, massive bonuses, massive pension.
The unions are a shocking, disgusting reflection on what they were created for. They were created by decent people to get fair conditions. Now they are just fat cat societies who look after themselves to the detriment of the masses, even showing outright contempt to the general public by putting them out and costing them money with needless strikes.
Shame on you.
happycyclist
says...
10:13pm Mon 28 Nov 11
burner wrote:GOOD question!
Are people concerned that their kids' educator is on strike or that their kids' child-minder is on strike?
Millie85
says...
11:01pm Mon 28 Nov 11
Jack Herer wrote:I am a public sector worker who (having qualified young) started paying into my pension very recently when I started work at the age of 21. If this new scheme came into being tomorrow I will be expected to retire at 68 or possibly older as I'm sure the age will have increased further by that point. Each month I currently pay approx £200 into my pension and this amount would potentially increase with the government intentions to £300 each month and will increase further in line with my wage (coincidently the vast majority of public sector workers are not on the hyper inflated wages reported by the media - at the very most if I am very fortunate the most I would ever earn as a senior manager - which is highly unlikely as I like the day to day role of dealing with the public - is approx 42k a year). So by retirement I will have paid 47 years worth of pension contributions. Based on my current contribution I would have paid (47 x 12 = 564 x 300 = 169200). As I'm sure someone will be pedantic we'll subtract £900 for the 6 months contributions = 168300. Given that the life expectancy for males like myself is 77 years that gives me roughly 9 years of retirement or £18700 a year. Seeing as how my pension forecast predicted that I won't get a retirement lump sum and I will receive a pension payout of just under £17000 each year when I last checked it I'd say my pension is pretty much self sufficient... Yes I appreciate that I could live longer but I could also drop dead 6 months into retirement. I do feel for those of you who are in the private sector but to attack the public sector workers who quite often are in a similar position to yourselves is wrong - yes I'm well paid and will admit it but I worked hard for my degree and could very easily have moved overseas with better conditions the decent pension was really the only draw to my job other than the job itself - but what about the admin staff on 12 - 15k a year, the cleaners on less still... I'd struggle to meet my mortgage (and I live in a £75k house with my partner who works full time in a similar position to me) if we both have to up our pension contributions by £100 each month - we bought at the height of the market and so now are in megative equity and we've not been exempt from the rising costs of living either. So I dread to think how some of my lesser paid colleagues will cope. I do agree that the country's economy is in a mess but somehow feel we've been made a public enemy purely for trying to protect what we signed up for...
Noiticer wrote:Any pension scheme which pays far more out than it gets in are like ponzi schemes - they take ever more suckers at the bottom paying in but eventually it runs out of suckers.
Some of the public service pension pots are in profit eg the NHS and others would have been if the money had been invested wisely instead of just being used as government income as the 3% additional contributions being demanded by the Con/Dem government will be. Those in the private sector should have decent pensions too but that is down to the capitalists who run their companies, not the fault of those in the public service without whom the country would fall apart.
As has been said above the government want to drive a wedge between different groups of workers - it's an old trick of the Tory Party and fellow travellers - the trick is to ignore this and for all workers to demand a fair and just society where all share in the wealth created. It won't happen until employees have fair represenation on boards of directors - after all it is the skill and hard work of employees which bring in the profits to companies along with the skill of their managers. Yes we should all be in it together but, alas, in the current way society is organised that is certainly not the case and until we truly are the country will continue to decline in many ways.
The public sector pensions are so big and unsustainable that either the rest of us pay more and more of our hard earned and hard stretched money to pay for them, which eventually will just snap, or public sector workers just get in the real world and stop acting so selfishly.
Why aren't you all calling to change over to a scheme which pays out what you pay in if your schemes are so self sustaining? That way you can't ever be accused of being parasites on everybody else.
Millie85
says...
11:01pm Mon 28 Nov 11
Jack Herer wrote:I am a public sector worker who (having qualified young) started paying into my pension very recently when I started work at the age of 21. If this new scheme came into being tomorrow I will be expected to retire at 68 or possibly older as I'm sure the age will have increased further by that point. Each month I currently pay approx £200 into my pension and this amount would potentially increase with the government intentions to £300 each month and will increase further in line with my wage (coincidently the vast majority of public sector workers are not on the hyper inflated wages reported by the media - at the very most if I am very fortunate the most I would ever earn as a senior manager - which is highly unlikely as I like the day to day role of dealing with the public - is approx 42k a year). So by retirement I will have paid 47 years worth of pension contributions. Based on my current contribution I would have paid (47 x 12 = 564 x 300 = 169200). As I'm sure someone will be pedantic we'll subtract £900 for the 6 months contributions = 168300. Given that the life expectancy for males like myself is 77 years that gives me roughly 9 years of retirement or £18700 a year. Seeing as how my pension forecast predicted that I won't get a retirement lump sum and I will receive a pension payout of just under £17000 each year when I last checked it I'd say my pension is pretty much self sufficient... Yes I appreciate that I could live longer but I could also drop dead 6 months into retirement. I do feel for those of you who are in the private sector but to attack the public sector workers who quite often are in a similar position to yourselves is wrong - yes I'm well paid and will admit it but I worked hard for my degree and could very easily have moved overseas with better conditions the decent pension was really the only draw to my job other than the job itself - but what about the admin staff on 12 - 15k a year, the cleaners on less still... I'd struggle to meet my mortgage (and I live in a £75k house with my partner who works full time in a similar position to me) if we both have to up our pension contributions by £100 each month - we bought at the height of the market and so now are in megative equity and we've not been exempt from the rising costs of living either. So I dread to think how some of my lesser paid colleagues will cope. I do agree that the country's economy is in a mess but somehow feel we've been made a public enemy purely for trying to protect what we signed up for...
Noiticer wrote:Any pension scheme which pays far more out than it gets in are like ponzi schemes - they take ever more suckers at the bottom paying in but eventually it runs out of suckers.
Some of the public service pension pots are in profit eg the NHS and others would have been if the money had been invested wisely instead of just being used as government income as the 3% additional contributions being demanded by the Con/Dem government will be. Those in the private sector should have decent pensions too but that is down to the capitalists who run their companies, not the fault of those in the public service without whom the country would fall apart.
As has been said above the government want to drive a wedge between different groups of workers - it's an old trick of the Tory Party and fellow travellers - the trick is to ignore this and for all workers to demand a fair and just society where all share in the wealth created. It won't happen until employees have fair represenation on boards of directors - after all it is the skill and hard work of employees which bring in the profits to companies along with the skill of their managers. Yes we should all be in it together but, alas, in the current way society is organised that is certainly not the case and until we truly are the country will continue to decline in many ways.
The public sector pensions are so big and unsustainable that either the rest of us pay more and more of our hard earned and hard stretched money to pay for them, which eventually will just snap, or public sector workers just get in the real world and stop acting so selfishly.
Why aren't you all calling to change over to a scheme which pays out what you pay in if your schemes are so self sustaining? That way you can't ever be accused of being parasites on everybody else.
district01
says...
11:13pm Mon 28 Nov 11
Poppy1990
says...
11:45pm Mon 28 Nov 11
Poppy1990
says...
11:46pm Mon 28 Nov 11
ladysal
says...
12:43pm Tue 29 Nov 11
Jack Herer wrote:Doesn't happen very often, but I actually agree with Noiticer!!
Noiticer wrote: Some of the public service pension pots are in profit eg the NHS and others would have been if the money had been invested wisely instead of just being used as government income as the 3% additional contributions being demanded by the Con/Dem government will be. Those in the private sector should have decent pensions too but that is down to the capitalists who run their companies, not the fault of those in the public service without whom the country would fall apart. As has been said above the government want to drive a wedge between different groups of workers - it's an old trick of the Tory Party and fellow travellers - the trick is to ignore this and for all workers to demand a fair and just society where all share in the wealth created. It won't happen until employees have fair represenation on boards of directors - after all it is the skill and hard work of employees which bring in the profits to companies along with the skill of their managers. Yes we should all be in it together but, alas, in the current way society is organised that is certainly not the case and until we truly are the country will continue to decline in many ways.Any pension scheme which pays far more out than it gets in are like ponzi schemes - they take ever more suckers at the bottom paying in but eventually it runs out of suckers. The public sector pensions are so big and unsustainable that either the rest of us pay more and more of our hard earned and hard stretched money to pay for them, which eventually will just snap, or public sector workers just get in the real world and stop acting so selfishly. Why aren't you all calling to change over to a scheme which pays out what you pay in if your schemes are so self sustaining? That way you can't ever be accused of being parasites on everybody else.
NelsonAsianButProudBritish
says...
3:20pm Tue 29 Nov 11
Jack Herer
says...
3:25pm Tue 29 Nov 11
Jack Herer
says...
3:31pm Tue 29 Nov 11
Poppy1990 wrote:If the public sector pension pots are cash rich, then why not detach them from tax payer responsibility or meddling?
Perhaps those who are so opinionated should actually make themselves aware of the facts. Public sector - a pay freeze again; being asked to contribute more into a pension scheme that is cash rich - already paid into for years by those in the public sector who work damned hard to serve the 'public'; and for what? so the Government can bleed it dry, and make those that are willing to turn a hand to a hard days work to cover the costs of those who aren't willing to get off their backsides and work - or to cover the costs of the Bankers - all of whom dont mind bleeding the country dry, but object when the Public Sector workers have been pushed to the limit.
wtloild
says...
5:15pm Tue 29 Nov 11
Jack Herer wrote:We borrowed billions to hand it over to dodgy banks and fight questionable wars in far off places (both of which the Government has continued to do despite the pleas of being broke).
gudari wrote:Keep more for themselves? Ever heard of Greece? Ireland? Portugal? Spain? Italy?
coates warder wrote:You sound like a tory politician mate. This country is one of the 5 richest in the world! There's money for a civil list, wars that don't interest anyone and a London Olympics that only interests a few but none for important things like social services, NHS etc. What the government wants is for people to believe that the country is broke and keep more for themselves. this country has loads of money; If you want to ensure the government spends it wisely, you need to start asking a dofferent set of questions instead of bleating about selfish motives!
nowt but greed...some people dont even have a pension.if a teacher or doctor cant fund their own retirement on the tens of thousands a year its time to give up.moan moan moan.try living in the real world for once.cant these people see we as a country are broke.but no greed comes before anything else.just 1 day off will cost the country millions people not able to go to work because of children not able to go to school.this will cost me £75 a day.you will get no sympathy from me or family.the part i can'not understand is only 27% voted for strike action i thought you needed a majority.
Are their politicians keeping more for themselves there? Have those countries got loads of money too?
This country doesn't have loads of money. It is currently BORROWING lots of money to pay for pensions already. Why would a country with loads of money be borrowing any at a time when it causing countries to go under?
We do not want to borrow any more. We are borrowing far too much, and have far too much debt. We need to make the books balance. A massive cost to everyone is public sector pensions. How is that fair on everyone?
The last labour government borrowed stupid amounts to pay for pointless, drawn out, unwinnable and eye wateringly expensive wars. They also were the ones bidding for the London olympics. All on borrowed money.
Ever increasing debt was the labours economic policy. It didn't work - it was as reckless as the bankers. Possibly more so. We need to make the books balance now. We cannot afford those totally unsustainable pensions. It's bizarrely selfish of public sector workers to just expect everyone else to pay for something they can never hope to afford themselves.
wtloild
says...
5:22pm Tue 29 Nov 11
Chris P Bacon wrote:Whilst there is little doubt the Tories would have done much the same as Gordon Brown, Jack Herer's point is a valid one.
Jack Herer wrote:Anyone with more than the bare minimum amount of brain cells distributed to you will see your nonsense and you can almost hear eyes rolling in heads. How dim can ANYone get to swallow the guff spewed forth by the current criminals in charge about the last lot?
It was Gordon Brown who sidled up to the bankers. It was Gordon Brown who decided they should have "light touch regulation" which allowed them to take such risks. It was Gordon Brown who showered them with knighthoods for taking the risks which led the world to the brink of collapse. It was Gordon Brown who decided that the tax payer would bail out the banks to stupid amounts which has now led to losses.
Good old Labour eh. The party of the people. As long as the people are public sector workers anyway. Then they make everyone else pay for stupidly high pensions and wages.
Brendan Barber, TUC general secretary, is a fat cat just like the bankers. Massive pay, massive bonuses, massive pension.
The unions are a shocking, disgusting reflection on what they were created for. They were created by decent people to get fair conditions. Now they are just fat cat societies who look after themselves to the detriment of the masses, even showing outright contempt to the general public by putting them out and costing them money with needless strikes.
Shame on you.
There's sheep on Pendle Hill with more nous than displayed here by you. Are you a Tory councillor using a nom-de-plume?
Truth will out
says...
5:44pm Tue 29 Nov 11
Coeur de Lion
says...
6:34pm Tue 29 Nov 11
deweydawn
says...
9:24pm Tue 29 Nov 11
kate11
says...
9:35pm Tue 29 Nov 11
ghost of sceptic
says...
9:44pm Tue 29 Nov 11
The Curator
says...
9:56pm Tue 29 Nov 11
ghost of sceptic wrote:That is very sad in the affluent Ribble Valley ,you would think staff there would be some of the better paid in the country bearing in mind the cost of living in the Ribble Valley .
The refuse collectors in ribble valley are having to work on the proposed strike day due to the fact they cannnot afford to strike because of the very low salary paid in the ribble valley.
ghost of sceptic
says...
10:14pm Tue 29 Nov 11
The Curator wrote:Yes curator it i am afraid it is a very sad fact! but that is the price the low paid workers at ribble valley council have to pay to keep council tax frozen or rises kept very low, a very bitter pill to swallow.
ghost of sceptic wrote: The refuse collectors in ribble valley are having to work on the proposed strike day due to the fact they cannnot afford to strike because of the very low salary paid in the ribble valley.That is very sad in the affluent Ribble Valley ,you would think staff there would be some of the better paid in the country bearing in mind the cost of living in the Ribble Valley .
macattack63
says...
11:53pm Tue 29 Nov 11
kate11
says...
8:44am Wed 30 Nov 11
kate11
says...
8:44am Wed 30 Nov 11
i.s.
says...
9:25am Wed 30 Nov 11
Jack Herer
says...
10:48am Wed 30 Nov 11
i.s. wrote:Who wouldn't "think" they've earned every penny of their pension?
Well said macattack. I agree entirely with what you say. Makes sense doesn't it.
There have been some infuriating comments on this item by people, who quite frankly are talking out of their backsides & haven't a clue what they're bleating about. Yes, i'm on strike today because i'm sick of being shafted by my employers the government. As for the comments about being 'well paid' haha i wouldn't consider £14k before tax a well paid job would you, in fact its probably a lot less than some peoples benefits if you include help with housing/council tax etc so put a sock in it all you ignorant, know it alls who probably wouldn't know a days work if it slapped you in the face!!!!!
I've earned every penny of my pension so far & will continue to do so, i just have to pay more in........ for longer........ and get less, ludicrous!!!!!
Monotoni
says...
2:56pm Wed 30 Nov 11
Monotoni
says...
3:05pm Wed 30 Nov 11
pepperpot531
says...
4:26pm Wed 30 Nov 11
will12
says...
6:25pm Wed 30 Nov 11
kylecosw
says...
10:07pm Thu 1 Dec 11
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Gary The Snail says...
11:14am Sat 26 Nov 11