Sunday 31 March 2019

The EU

Do we have a say in the EU whilst a member?

This was the question posed in a recent comment online. It included a sidebar on immigration.

Actually yes we do. Other EU countries have made use of existing EU law to regulate the degree of migration. Successive UK governments chose not to.

I followed the immigration statistics for several years during the period of peak debate on the subject (see the ONS website). During that time it was more or less 50:50 EU/non EU. The level on non EU barely shifted during the time the Conservative governments were promising to slash numbers. The UK had full control over the migration of non EU migration yet did nothing about lowering it. Call me sceptical about it being the EU’s fault that the EU migration level didnt fall either.

Most of the most frequently complained about EU laws and policies in the UK were proposed by Westminster, lobbied for by our MEPs and voted for by them.

How many can name their EU constituency? How many their MEP? Know their MEP’s voting record? Watch or read the EU Parliament’s media? How many have contacted their MEP on an issue? How many bothered to vote in the EU elections?  How many read at least a synopsis of the manifestos?

Ditto Westminster and their MP?

If you don’t engage in the political process, you tend to get the government you didn’t want.

Friday 29 March 2019

Brexit-go-round

They said Brexit was the most important issue since the war. It should have been handled the same way.

It’s not getting resolved because
- referenda are a tool of direct democracy where we have a representative indirect democracy
- our political system is geared around the left/right axis of the political compass whilst Brexit is an authoritarian / liberal issue.

Trying to ram a square peg into a round hole x 2 was never going to work.

A non standard issue needs handling with a non standard process.

Saturday 23 March 2019

Institutional Thievery

I am sick of seeing comments about benefit fraudsters whenever a story is posted about someone dying from sanctions.

0.7% of the welfare budget is fraudulently claimed according to the government’s own figures (the budget was £264 billion year ending 2017; 34% of all government spending and including pensions of £111 billion).

Tax avoidance according to the Tories £35 billion a year, but it is believed to be nearer £60 billion a year.

People who commit benefit fraud are named, shamed and sometimes sent to prison. Wealthy tax dodgers are given anonymity and made to pay a small percentage of their outstanding tax.

It was estimated last year that 70,000 sick and disabled people will be paid £1BILLION of benefits they were denied after a major government mistake.

Just who is robbing this country?

Saturday 2 March 2019

Disability Shaming

The government’s own figures state that less than one percent of disability applications are fraudulent.

70,000 disability benefit recipients have been underpaid as a result of shoddy administration according to the National Audit Office, many of which will not be paid back. On average, it amounts to some £5000 each but for some it amounts to as much as £20,000. Could you afford to loose that much from your pay packet? Would you be able to cope if you lost your mobility tomorrow? Would you still be able to get to work if your mode of transport was removed? Would you still be able to do your job if you were in horrendous pain?

I know of which I speak because my spine broke just three weeks after being one of 300 people made redundant. In three steps, I went from being pain free and fit to crippled. That level of pain does not just affect you physically (I shook from it) but also mentally (my speech used to garble).

I was ‘fit for work’.

How many employers do you think were prepared to employ someone with an unstable broken spine? How many insurers prepared to cover an employer hiring such a person?

I have degree or degree level qualifications in engineering, IT, project management, life sciences and oceanography. I have experience in oil & gas, telecoms and media.

I am ‘over qualified’ for jobs in my areas of expertise yet can get jobs well below my skill set. Jobs on zero hour contracts. Jobs that don’t even cover my food bill. Just as well I’d already paid off my mortgage else I’d be living on the streets, eh?

My message to those of you condemning the disabled:

You are one pay check away from being in difficulty.

You are one moment away from losing your health.

You are one second away from being labelled work shy for reasons beyond your control.

The disabled are not the problem. Given sufficient, given the right support, they contribute.

Government administration errors cost tax payers far more.