Do you want to discuss boring politics? (182 Viewers)

torchomatic

Well-Known Member
People send their children to private school in large part because they’ll get better quality teaching in better facilities and generally smaller class sizes.

So if the government really gave a shit it would commit to making that more of a reality in the state sector.
Which is why they are scrapping tax breaks on private education fees. The extra income generated will - so they tell us - be invested in state schools.
 

Nick

Administrator
The answer is to fund all schools and the health service, and indeed all public services properly. That's what we should be seeking from our politicians. Of course that means paying more tax, but most people are better off in those circumstances and society is fairer and works better. Crime is lower in more equal societies too. But we have a narrow minded view about tax in this country and we have useless politicians as a result who concentrate on the wrong things like promising austerity and tax cuts rather than delivering improvements.

Which is all nice in the fairytale "what if" world.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Exactly. That’s why there are people out there criticising the policy because people will drop out from the private sector and the state sector will pick up the burden.

If the state sector is understaffed, underfunded and overcrowded, the last thing you want to do is push people from the private sector to the state sector.

It might sound counterintuitive, but it’s a moment in time where you probably want to incentivise the private sector for education and healthcare.

Find me one teacher who thinks adding upper middle class kids with parents committed to education to their school is a burden.
 

Nick

Administrator
Which is why they are scrapping tax breaks on private education fees. The extra income generated will - so they tell us - be invested in state schools.

Of course it will. :ROFLMAO:

OR maybe loads of people will take their kids over to state schools that are already struggling.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
There’s no reason why it couldn’t be done.

I’m sure if ‘just fund them properly’ was the solution, we wouldn’t be in this situation. Even Labour in 2024 and back in 1997 the NHS cannot survive if government just constantly need to throw more and more money at it.

The private sector and NHS can coexist. The countries that outperform us, there is much higher proportions of independent healthcare providers. Start by removing VAT on private health insurance to and even consider incentives to employers, self-employed and/or young people. Why? Make PHI more affordable, reduce the amount of people that need to use NHS services. It’s not a silver bullet solution, but it reduces the amount of people that need to use the service.

Countries that under perform us also have more private involvement in healthcare. There might be a reason for this…
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
What next? Somebody paying to have a filling at a dentist because they can't get in with the NHS one?

I am sure they will be paying the same taxes as everybody else.
Getting required medical attention is a necessity not a luxury.

You can froth all you like but private education is a luxury.
 

Nick

Administrator
Find me one teacher who thinks adding upper middle class kids with parents committed to education to their school is a burden.

Again, it depends on the school and their resource. Not the teachers fault.

It's pretty much guaranteed that a naughty kid with no interest in education and their parent don't give a shit either will take up more resources and teacher time than the ones you mention.

One example I can think of is my daughter being in a class at primary school teaching other kids to read because the teacher was spending all of their time with the naughty kids and a couple of kids that couldn't speak English. She was also baffled that kids were getting rewarded for not being naughty for a week when she was good all the time and wasn't.

Again, no issues with the teacher because they openly said they would love to spend all their time with kids like her but they can't. Meanwhile, my daughter wasn't getting an education.
 

Nick

Administrator
Getting required medical attention is a necessity not a luxury.

You can froth all you like but private education is a luxury.

Oh I agree, it should be a necessity. Whinging about it isn't going to get shit done when needed, though, is it?

Saying I've hurt my knee and whinging about Sunak because waiting times for physio are months and I can't get in the GP isn't going to do anything. I will have to go and pay for a physio to get it sorted.

That's just the reality.
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member
Again, no issues with the teacher because they openly said they would love to spend all their time with kids like her but they can't. Meanwhile, my daughter wasn't getting an education.
Sounds like you need to go private.

By "naughty" kids do you mean SEND?
 
D

Deleted member 9744

Guest
Which is all nice in the fairytale "what if" world.
I get why rich people want low taxes which forces poor people to pay for what should be public services, as it maintains the privilege and inequality we have. However, make no mistake it makes no sense for poorer people. A proper tax system funding good quality public services is far more beneficial to society as a whole than private sector involvement.
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member
I get why rich people want low taxes and for poor people to pay for what should be public services as it maintains the privilege and inequality we have. However, make no mistake it makes no sense for poorer people. A proper tax system funding good quality public services is far more beneficial to society as a whole than private sector involvement.
And what is the first thing cut to the bone? Public services.
 

Nick

Administrator
Sounds like you need to go private. By "naughty" kids do you mean SEND?

Nah, I totally get that.

Even if it was, that would be down to the school resources and them being able to cater for SEND kids while still catering for others. It isn't the kids or the teachers fault.

I mean "naughty kids".
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
Oh I agree, it should be a necessity. Whinging about it isn't going to get shit done when needed, though, is it?

Saying I've hurt my knee and whinging about Sunak because waiting times for physio are months and I can't get in the GP isn't going to do anything. I will have to go and pay for a physio to get it sorted.

That's just the reality.
But that’s not the reality with schooling. People using private education are not doing it because their child is going to miss the start of term in state education if they don’t. Fair play to anyone willing to do it just don’t expect everyone else to subsidise the luxury with a tax break.
 

Nick

Administrator
I get why rich people want low taxes which forces poor people to pay for what should be public services, as it maintains the privilege and inequality we have. However, make no mistake it makes no sense for poorer people. A proper tax system funding good quality public services is far more beneficial to society as a whole than private sector involvement.

Again, which is all well and good but in reality it isn't like that, is it?
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
I don't get why anybody would be opposed to increasing state funding on the NHS and education, even at the cost of higher taxes.

I mean, I want more people maximising their potential to be the doctors to look after me in hospital. I want more people qualifying as engineers to help us become leaders in industry, end up with improved balance of payments surplus and bring wealth to this country. I want more people able to harness this country's rich cultural heritage and encouraging tourism. I want people more aware of this country's traditions of fair play, helping those less well off than yourself, and not being self-centred but recognising that if everybody is happy, we all become happier.
 
D

Deleted member 9744

Guest
Again, it depends on the school and their resource. Not the teachers fault.

It's pretty much guaranteed that a naughty kid with no interest in education and their parent don't give a shit either will take up more resources and teacher time than the ones you mention.

One example I can think of is my daughter being in a class at primary school teaching other kids to read because the teacher was spending all of their time with the naughty kids and a couple of kids that couldn't speak English. She was also baffled that kids were getting rewarded for not being naughty for a week when she was good all the time and wasn't.

Again, no issues with the teacher because they openly said they would love to spend all their time with kids like her but they can't. Meanwhile, my daughter wasn't getting an education.
Wouldn't it be better to pay a bit more tax, and very wealthy to pay much more tax, and you to have a good public school than have to pay private school fees?
 

Nick

Administrator
But that’s not the reality with schooling. People using private education are not doing it because their child is going to miss the start of term in state education if they don’t. Fair play to anyone willing to do it just don’t expect everyone else to subsidise the luxury with a tax break.

A lot of people are doing it because they don't feel like their kids are getting pushed to their full potential at the other school options available to them.

I'm not sure everybody else is subsidising it though, are they? Especially when tax is still being paid the same as everybody else.
 

Nick

Administrator
Wouldn't it be better to pay a bit more tax, and very wealthy to pay much more tax, and you to have a good public school than have to pay private school fees?

Of course, I am talking about the reality of it though. Just dreaming about the scenario isn't going to give your kid an education or get you seen by a doctor quicker.
 
D

Deleted member 9744

Guest
Again, which is all well and good but in reality it isn't like that, is it?
It could be if we demanded the right things from our politicians. Not all countries gave this toxic view of taxation and public services needing to be cut.
 

Nick

Administrator
It could be if we demanded the right things from our politicians. Not all countries gave this toxic view of taxation and public services needing to be cut.

Again, some people will just get things done that are within their own control rather than hoping that a politician might not be a c**t in 10 years time. Sitting around hoping isn't going to do it.
 
D

Deleted member 9744

Guest
Of course, I am talking about the reality of it though. Just dreaming about the scenario isn't going to give your kid an education or get you seen by a doctor quicker.
But if we send our children to public schools we perpetuate the problem.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
But that’s not the reality with schooling. People using private education are not doing it because their child is going to miss the start of term in state education if they don’t. Fair play to anyone willing to do it just don’t expect everyone else to subsidise the luxury with a tax break.

Can you please clarify if you are in a selective stare borough?
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
A lot of people are doing it because they don't feel like their kids are getting pushed to their full potential at the other school options available to them.

I'm not sure everybody else is subsidising it though, are they? Especially when tax is still being paid the same as everybody else.
It’s a tax break on a luxury item. By default that means it’s being subsidised by everyone else. It’s really not that difficult of a concept.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Again, it depends on the school and their resource. Not the teachers fault.

It's pretty much guaranteed that a naughty kid with no interest in education and their parent don't give a shit either will take up more resources and teacher time than the ones you mention.

One example I can think of is my daughter being in a class at primary school teaching other kids to read because the teacher was spending all of their time with the naughty kids and a couple of kids that couldn't speak English. She was also baffled that kids were getting rewarded for not being naughty for a week when she was good all the time and wasn't.

Again, no issues with the teacher because they openly said they would love to spend all their time with kids like her but they can't. Meanwhile, my daughter wasn't getting an education.

Right. So you would also want more kids in your daughters class who are hard working with engaged parents? One of the many social goods that comes from universal education.

There’s huge problems to solve at the lower end of the socioeconomic scale for education. But let’s be honest those people spending £15k who are scrimping to get a kid into Henry’s would be better buying a house in Finham or wherever and sending them there. And that kid isn’t going to harm Finham, and the tax his slightly richer old schoolmates parents now pay means that everyone else gets a better education.

I don’t think encouraging the rich, who are already the least integrated group in society, to opt out entirely is good for anyone but the rich. And I don’t think you get a significantly better education in private as opposed to just hoping to meet some already rich people who will give you a leg up. And in that case we should make joining posh golf clubs tax free too.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
The reality is even in the state system there is an element of privilege. People migrate into better areas to gain state schools that are better and they are generally middle class children.

I suspect there would not be as much embracing of socialist principles if it was a lottery which school you ended up in regardless of where you lived. So I’ve bought a posh house in Finham and my child is ending up in Grace Academy
 

Nick

Administrator
Right. So you would also want more kids in your daughters class who are hard working with engaged parents? One of the many social goods that comes from universal education.

There’s huge problems to solve at the lower end of the socioeconomic scale for education. But let’s be honest those people spending £15k who are scrimping to get a kid into Henry’s would be better buying a house in Finham or wherever and sending them there. And that kid isn’t going to harm Finham, and the tax his slightly richer old schoolmates parents now pay means that everyone else gets a better education.

I don’t think encouraging the rich, who are already the least integrated group in society, to opt out entirely is good for anyone but the rich. And I don’t think you get a significantly better education in private as opposed to just hoping to meet some already rich people who will give you a leg up. And in that case we should make joining posh golf clubs tax free too.

I'd want my daughter to be pushed to her full potential and get the best she possibly could.

Surely people paying thousands more to live in a certain area for a school aren't much different? After all it's a luxury to live in Finham as opposed to Wood End (for example).

I'm pretty sure the school you worked in would have been an eye opener, I know when I worked in a school it was an eye opener. (This was before it was all academies and watched the council spend shit loads of unneeded money every week that could have gone to teachers).
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
I'd want my daughter to be pushed to her full potential and get the best she possibly could.

Surely people paying thousands more to live in a certain area for a school aren't much different? After all it's a luxury to live in Finham as opposed to Wood End (for example).

I'm pretty sure the school you worked in would have been an eye opener, I know when I worked in a school it was an eye opener. (This was before it was all academies and watched the council spend shit loads of unneeded money every week that could have gone to teachers).

I thought he worked in Bluecoats - a selective state school
 

Nick

Administrator
The reality is even in the state system there is an element of privilege. People migrate into better areas to gain state schools that are better and they are generally middle class children.

I suspect there would not be as much embracing of socialist principles if it was a lottery which school you ended up in regardless of where you lived. So I’ve bought a posh house in Finham and my child is ending up in Grace Academy

Exactly.

It's not exactly equal that people who live in Finham or Kenilworth get better options than those who live in Bell Green, is it?
 

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