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#52 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,096
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When you are ready to engage in rational and sensible debate I will debate with you. In the meantime, I think you will find that the BNP has quite a few members who are above average intellegence and that is proved by being in the party. After all, only thickos could think that either Labour or Tory have any real interest in improving Britain's state education system. Many BNP members would have benefitted from a Grammar school education. At least we in the BNP want to improve social mobility by bringing these schools back rather than have a state education system with absymal standards at all schools which makes those parents lucky enough to be able to afford it have to pay twice over to send their child/children to a private school like David Cameron and friends want to see continuing. |
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#53 (permalink) | |
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 489
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You are either completely ignorant of the details of the UKIP flat tax proposal or you are choosing to ignore key components of it. The personal exemption would be raised to £9000 which of course would remove many low paid workers from the tax rolls entirely, or nearly so. And even people earning say, 25,000 would benefit because the 33% rate is calculated on income over the personal exemption, and includes NI. As for paying for it. I'm sure that in a £600 billion + budget and between 600+ Quangos there's a little fat can be trimmed. I think this policy could have enormous appeal for people on lower incomes. For example - someone earning £12,000 per year would pay £2032.40 in tax and NI (£39.08 per week). Under UKIPs proposals that person would pay £990 in tax, saving them £1042.40 in the course of the year or £20.05 per week. Are you suggesting that the poor wouldn't support that policy. According to my calculations someone earning about £25,000 per year would save about 782.40 in tax and NI payments. Again, that is a fairly significant amount of money in a taxpayers pocket. But of course, you know better, and you know that in a time of price inflation noone but the rich would be attracted to a policy that lets them keep more of their money to spend on food, petrol, and utilities. |
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#54 (permalink) | |
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 489
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#56 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: North West UK
Posts: 543
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#57 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,096
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Ok I made a spelling error! They will be centres of educational excellence like many were in the past until Mrs Thatcher, Shirley Williams ect destroyed them. |
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#58 (permalink) |
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Uber Member
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: London
Posts: 22,896
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The results of the first opinion poll since the Crewe-Nantwich Parliamentary By-Election of 22.5.2008 have been published in today's Daily Telegraph - and the Cameron-Tories are down 2% in the new YouGov poll compared to one conducted by YouGov earlier this month:
Cameron-Tories down 2% in new opinion poll - but still well ahead of Labour |
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