chinnyhill10 wrote:
GovernmentYard wrote:
So keep peddling your lies, I'm not possessed of enough spare time to read them on here (which means I have to go) or on Twitter, where you are, I assume, gleefully making spectacle over the discovery that when your behaviour is disingenuous, spiteful and ill-informed, people stop wanting to follow you.
Crow moved into his council house mere months before being elected leader of the RMT and in fact was already deputy leader, no doubt on a equally comfortable salary and 10 grand a year expenses account.
The joyful thing about Twitter is that you can choose to follow or not to follow. I just find it hilarious that the same people who were jumping up and down when Thatcher died suddenly don't like it when the boot is on the other foot. I'll leave the last words to Bob, a man who died while paying £150 a week in subsidised council housing rent while earning £145,000 a year + a 10 grand expenses account:
Quote:
'She didn’t die in a hospice, she died in the Ritz, somewhere no working people could stay for one night. I won’t shed one single tear over her death… she destroyed the NHS and destroyed industry in this country and as far as I’m concerned she can rot in hell.'
Bob Crow there. Like Thatcher no working people could stay in his house either.....
Oh, Chinny, that's appalling, once again. Come on, you're better than that, I've spoken to you enough times, I know you're a good natured and decent person.
If your notion for deserving council tenants was followed, we'd have only unemployed people living in council housing, this is a fact. Indeed, I'd gladly state no property with more than one bedroom would have anything but a vulnerable single mother and children in it. Nationwide. Ghettos would appear, as they have done all over the places I've worked and then the TV cameras roll in along with the gangs, the despair, the class As and the poor health and lack of education. I would have given my right ball for someone like Crow to move in to one of the streets I used to work down, so that some of the people there could meet a man who had done ok for himself and who stuck up for weaker people, as opposed to yet another who had failed for whatever reason and preyed on those weaker out of desperation.
Believe it or not, this issue has been covered by social landlords for many years and the rules are as they are because that's what keeps the whole system from breaking down. You can cite individual cases where deviation from the mean occurs, but that's systems for you. If Crow only moved into his place in recent years, that will be because his old one was regenerated or condemned or he'd applied according to the publicly accountable rules made by elected representatives of precisely the working class community he lived in. And the allocations process would be thrice-checked. Council tenancies are transferable between properties, or at least their rights are. Are you saying well-paid people should have fewer basic rights than poorly paid people, because that's how it sounds from here. Yes, Crow could afford to live elsewhere, but so can tens of thousands of others. If they did, though, taxing us all at 90% of income wouldn't be enough to cover the cost.
Social housing needs economically diverse communities, and while I accept that Crow might have been at the far end of that scale (before tax, he paid a lot more than you and probably enough to keep every family on his street going for a year) I don't see you complaining that people are at the other end, the one that really needs people to be making a fuss about it.
Please, don't make reductive arguments about boots being on other feet. That's scarcely the point. This isn't about you chipping away at a subject until what's left is something you can point at and laugh about, this is about the last man to secure a reasonable living wage for bottom-rung workers in our nation's capital passing away and the political repercussions, which could be punitive for many honest, hard working folk. In council houses or otherwise.
People can find loads of things to have a go at Bob Crow about, so why pick on two of the very shakiest of *ahem* premises in order to do so? This Thatcher thing is a ridiculously far-fetched comparison. They aren't yin and yang, this isn't a binary debate. The only people who seem to wish it were are those who seem to take every opportunity to demonise not only the working classes but the people who dare to say that said classes should not bow and scrape to the rich.