shmmeee
Well-Known Member
Again, you deliberately miss the point. It’s the lack of contingency planning, not necessarily the principle of the taxation.
Where do I mention taking from working class. I worked all my life, therefore I was working class. I was pretty well paid and have paid hundreds of thousands in tax and NI. Previously privately educated kids turning up at a state school will be taking from the working class. I simply don’t believe that you are so thick as not to realise that.
Labour are taking from the pockets of working people, all the increases in travel taxes for example. It’s hypocrisy that you are happy to go along with as long as Elton John gets his just desserts. I will keep my ears open for the sound of the timbrils and Madamme G’s swoosh followed by the cries of the crowds of old women knitting as they get spattered in freshly gushing arterial blood.
We cannot afford the services we have on the taxes we pay. They’ve already been cut to the bone. More cut mean vital services are cut to working class people who need them. So we need to raise tax, given that it can come from work or wealth and pensions, inheritance, private schools are ways the wealthy preserve their wealth.
The implementation will never be perfect with tax. If you telegraph it too much people change their behaviour too much. There’s no perfect way, but again it’s a tax on fees that schools are mostly rich enough to choose how they implement it. Be it their own service cuts or price changes or eating into endowments.