villain
Hates Beyoncé
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- Apr 22, 2014
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They literally cannot stop telling lies about Corbyn.
They literally cannot stop telling lies about Corbyn.
I don't think you have very much idea what you are talking about.
Although tertiary education was free, which it should be, very very few people were able to have it. He will retire at 66 or 67, people live longer these days so he may enjoy life more,people younger than him may have to retire later but will also live even longer.
As for employment, the UK are currently boasting how low unemployment is. the NHS was crap then and it's crap now.
Houses may be comparatively more expensive than then but I'd be interested to see the comparison of monthly mortgage repayments because we had to put up with 17% interest rates so you were paying the value of your house in interest alone within 6 years.
Also there were no luxury distractions that had to be paid for, such as computers, phones and so on.
I would like to have someone tell me in the 70s how easy life was when we had a choice of eating or paying the mortgage.
Not only did he vote for it, Corbyn gave the closing speech in favour of the GFA.
He also won a mandella peace prize for his work leading up to it.
In comparison, mogg made £500K last year selling one of his Jersey companies and kept all the money offshore to avoid paying tax on it.
Apparently in tory world, corbyn is the dodgy one.
a- Those who didn't have it weren't studying hard enough
b- Breathing and living is different. At age 70 (and that will the pensionable age for the likes of myself) you can barely enjoy life anymore. The younger generation will be lucky to have a pension at all
c- most low unemployment is down to zero hour contracts which are a notch above slavery work. Also wait until the last big thank you gift from the baby boomers kicks in (Brexit).
Its true that kids today can have their priorities wrong. There again who can blame them? Its one horrible life they live in were everything is going up to the roof, doors are closing down on them and the chance of true independence is getting worse as worse.
Since you're the generation who hate entitlement then maybe its time for the government to bring austerity to pensioners through savage cuts on the pensions and elderly care. Surely that won't hurt the 'tough as nails' generation (actually the generation before built the nation and won the war but hey, that's a detail right?)
The difference I see today between the generations from back then and now is always trying to find someone to blame but doing nothing about it.
They literally cannot stop telling lies about Corbyn.
oh and
They literally cannot stop telling lies about Corbyn.
Come on, mate, Wenger's taking enough stick as it is.
oh and
This stuff is appalling. I don't know how it can be done but there has to be some kind of recompense , some kind of deterrent against this flagrant lying. It is ridiculous that you can just spout such nonsense.
Oh 'mea culpa ', apology is undoubtedly hidden and we go on to spouting more rubbish that's funny apparently because he's been teleported from the 18th century .
The first comment under the tweet with quite a few likes to it...No wonder politics can make the mockery out of public when average IQ of the population is less than that of the table.
£20,000 for a house in 1981. Must have been some house considering how my parents paid £4,500 for a brand new 3 bedroomed semi-detached house at roughly the same time. & guess what millennials ? They did it by making sacrifices & saving hard for a deposit, just like my wife & I did nearly 10 years later when we bought our house for £30,000, which is now worth £170,000. Who knows, maybe one day this working hard = rewards might come back into fashion.
£20,000 for a house in 1981. Must have been some house considering how my parents paid £4,500 for a brand new 3 bedroomed semi-detached house at roughly the same time. & guess what millennials ? They did it by making sacrifices & saving hard for a deposit, just like my wife & I did nearly 10 years later when we bought our house for £30,000, which is now worth £170,000. Who knows, maybe one day this working hard = rewards might come back into fashion.
for the record, a house from 1991 rising from £30,000 to £170,000 is around £100,000 above inflation
all you have to do is make 3 times as much in inflated wages than the previous generations did, why are you so lazy millennials
My mum and dad bought a 3 bedroom house in S.Wales for approx £120k in 1997 with a deposit of £6k, they then sold it in 2004 for approx £300k.
Now, to get a house locally I need minimum £30k deposit, and that's for a 10% deposit on a house with more than 1 bedroom.
If you think it's reasonable to save £30k from the age of 21 (after university) when the average salary is £28-32k a year (approx 1700-2000 a month after tax), take out 800 for rent & bills, 300 for travel, 200 for food, 150-200 for things like clothes/haircuts/nights out, you're left with about £200 a month.
It will take you years to save even £10k.
Thankfully I earn a good income, and my parents are able to help me with my deposit however without that I would be struggling very badly.
£20,000 for a house in 1981. Must have been some house considering how my parents paid £4,500 for a brand new 3 bedroomed semi-detached house at roughly the same time. & guess what millennials ? They did it by making sacrifices & saving hard for a deposit, just like my wife & I did nearly 10 years later when we bought our house for £30,000, which is now worth £170,000. Who knows, maybe one day this working hard = rewards might come back into fashion.
one of the cheaper places down southWhere do you live if an average house is around the £300k mark ?
being generous and saying the extension added £25000 (and the £25k inflating at normal rates) of value to the house in 2002 it's a mere £70,000 above inflation, wtf are you all complaining about
i was taking the piss out of your posts geniusI'm not complaining, you are.
one of the cheaper places down south
£20,000 for a house in 1981. Must have been some house considering how my parents paid £4,500 for a brand new 3 bedroomed semi-detached house at roughly the same time. & guess what millennials ? They did it by making sacrifices & saving hard for a deposit, just like my wife & I did nearly 10 years later when we bought our house for £30,000, which is now worth £170,000. Who knows, maybe one day this working hard = rewards might come back into fashion.
i was taking the piss out of your posts genius
Yeah, capitalism rewards hard work. It's meritocratic.
https://news.sky.com/story/meet-dorsen-8-who-mines-cobalt-to-make-your-smartphone-work-10784120
Where do you live if an average house is around the £300k mark ?
They did it by making sacrifices & saving hard for a deposit, just like my wife & I did
which one is itgreed for technology as some sort of moral point against capitalism
Ascot, id imagine the average is actually higher in Ascot itself, but I’ve been looking at surrounding areas and the outskirts of London and £350k is about average.
Relocation is out of the question considering working in London you receive a higher income due to the cost of living.
I have no family anywhere up north, and quite frankly I like the south.
It would be unrealistic to expect everyone to move just because it’s hard to secure a deposit on a decent house.
Having said all of that, I am actually in a very good position and should be able to secure my house and pay off my debts (except student loans) within the next 2 years - for those on lower incomes it’s much, much harder.
So your generalisation of millennials is satirical at this point, because you’re only showing that you don’t understand how much harder it is now.
which one is it
it would be true to the boomer motto of feck you i got mineCan't I have both ?
being generous and saying the extension added £25000 (and the £25k inflating at normal rates) of value to the house in 2002 it's a mere £70,000 above inflation, wtf are you all complaining about
*terms and conditions apply, interest rates increase to 5% after 62 monthsLet's be really generous .
Sold my flat in the south for £22k in 1981 - identical flat which no doubt now has central heating and other mod-cons like fitted kitchen and so on saw was sold for £288k recently. Yes house prices have increased out of proportion with wages and inflation but...
One year's Interest on the 22k back in the day was £3746 - interest today on the £288k would be £4896.
You didn't get fixed interest rates then, you rode the waves as you went up and down.
Spot the difference.