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Palace Old Geezer Midhurst 02 Sep 22 12.37pm | |
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Suggestions now that our dedicated nurses are planning to go on strike. So we've already seen the rail staff, post office workers, bus drivers, airline workers, barristers etc etc. I fail to understand the mentality of anyone opting to go on strike in protest about low pay at a time when the country is recovering from the costs brought about by Covid, is throwing buckets of money at the dangerous war in Ukraine and attempting to offset the extortionate fuel costs resulting from it. Seems to me like there's a failure of folk to understand the seriousness of the economic situation we're faced with. Everyone is having to make sacrifices in order to keep fed and warm during the winter. Where is the money for wage increases going to come from. Meantime, it feels like more people are on strike than at work.
Dad and I watched games standing on the muddy slope of the Holmesdale Road end. He cheered and I rattled. |
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cryrst The garden of England 02 Sep 22 1.31pm | |
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Originally posted by Palace Old Geezer
Suggestions now that our dedicated nurses are planning to go on strike. So we've already seen the rail staff, post office workers, bus drivers, airline workers, barristers etc etc. I fail to understand the mentality of anyone opting to go on strike in protest about low pay at a time when the country is recovering from the costs brought about by Covid, is throwing buckets of money at the dangerous war in Ukraine and attempting to offset the extortionate fuel costs resulting from it. Seems to me like there's a failure of folk to understand the seriousness of the economic situation we're faced with. Everyone is having to make sacrifices in order to keep fed and warm during the winter. Where is the money for wage increases going to come from. Meantime, it feels like more people are on strike than at work. Easy tiger. Certain posters will be calling you Tory loving scum.
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ASCPFC Pro-Cathedral/caravan park 02 Sep 22 1.45pm | |
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If people are poorly paid and badly treated, I support the strikes. People should be able to afford to live on their wages. Wages have been effectively cut by up to a quarter in some cases, due to the current cost of living. Companies are still posting profits, however, and my opinion is - they can take a hit on those profits, particularly the larger companies. Where I would have sympathy is for small and small-medium business where a couple of poor months could mean going to the wall. I expect energy costs are actually the main problem here and are not being dealt with effectively. I heard energy companies are posting record profits - if that's the case it's a bit of a disgrace.
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silvertop Portishead 02 Sep 22 2.15pm | |
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Originally posted by ASCPFC
If people are poorly paid and badly treated, I support the strikes. People should be able to afford to live on their wages. Wages have been effectively cut by up to a quarter in some cases, due to the current cost of living. Companies are still posting profits, however, and my opinion is - they can take a hit on those profits, particularly the larger companies. Where I would have sympathy is for small and small-medium business where a couple of poor months could mean going to the wall. I expect energy costs are actually the main problem here and are not being dealt with effectively. I heard energy companies are posting record profits - if that's the case it's a bit of a disgrace. Energy supply companies making a mint. Utility companies not so. SME employees unlikely to strike. Only the heavily unionised public or quasi public sector. I worked in the public sector and wages were frozen for 5 years. It hurt. And that was with little inflation. With no or nominal increases for years and the cost of living crisis they are having to put food on the table with a huge chunk of real income lost. In terms of those who attack them on the basis that it is tough but we are all in it together etc they seem to be retired folk with no mortgage and an index linked pension.
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Glazier#1 02 Sep 22 2.50pm | |
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Originally posted by silvertop
Energy supply companies making a mint. Utility companies not so. SME employees unlikely to strike. Only the heavily unionised public or quasi public sector. I worked in the public sector and wages were frozen for 5 years. It hurt. And that was with little inflation. With no or nominal increases for years and the cost of living crisis they are having to put food on the table with a huge chunk of real income lost. In terms of those who attack them on the basis that it is tough but we are all in it together etc they seem to be retired folk with no mortgage and an index linked pension. Yes. I see workers at my college taking home just 1K a month for a full week and they have rent to pay, food, bills. They haven't had a pay rise more than 1% for the last 10 years. This has a cumulative effect on workers, who have been remarkably patient after the last financial crisis. Yes, the banks who needed bailing out.
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croydon proud Any european country i fancy! 02 Sep 22 2.58pm | |
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Originally posted by Palace Old Geezer
Suggestions now that our dedicated nurses are planning to go on strike. So we've already seen the rail staff, post office workers, bus drivers, airline workers, barristers etc etc. I fail to understand the mentality of anyone opting to go on strike in protest about low pay at a time when the country is recovering from the costs brought about by Covid, is throwing buckets of money at the dangerous war in Ukraine and attempting to offset the extortionate fuel costs resulting from it. Seems to me like there's a failure of folk to understand the seriousness of the economic situation we're faced with. Everyone is having to make sacrifices in order to keep fed and warm during the winter. Where is the money for wage increases going to come from. Meantime, it feels like more people are on strike than at work.
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croydon proud Any european country i fancy! 02 Sep 22 2.59pm | |
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Originally posted by cryrst
Easy tiger. Certain posters will be calling you Tory loving scum. 3-4%, or 22%
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croydon proud Any european country i fancy! 02 Sep 22 3.02pm | |
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Got to laugh at the bank of england boss taking £650 a year and telling workers not to ask for a pay rise because it wil;l fuel inflation!
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Teddy Eagle 02 Sep 22 3.03pm | |
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Originally posted by croydon proud
10%?
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croydon proud Any european country i fancy! 02 Sep 22 3.04pm | |
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Originally posted by croydon proud
Got to laugh at the bank of england boss taking £650 a year and telling workers not to ask for a pay rise because it wil;l fuel inflation! Even £ 650k a year!
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croydon proud Any european country i fancy! 02 Sep 22 3.09pm | |
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Ok, well its gone up 17k since 2010, about 20% pay rise while others havent budged, not bad indeed!
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Glazier#1 02 Sep 22 3.12pm | |
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Originally posted by cryrst
Easy tiger. Certain posters will be calling you Tory loving scum. I wonder, Cryrst, if you would ever support any strike under any circumstances. Please don't think I'm being aggressively antagonistic. It's not that but simply a desire to know.
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