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Britain's basic State pension. Do we revere our elderly people in this country ?

(127 Posts)
Ivanhoe Thu 07-Feb-13 11:34:35

Britain's basic State pension is I believe for a single pensioner, a little over £107 per week.

This is following a working life paying NI contributions and income taxes into the system.

Do you think the State pension on it's own is enough to live on ?

Do you think our oldest citizens should be means tested for State handouts ?

What is your general view of how we look after our elderly people in this country?

POGS Fri 08-Feb-13 01:10:59

IvanhOe

Because we do not see the world as you do. This is nothing to do with politics, this is what we are living with and seeing for ourselves. iIt is our experience but you refuse to accept what we are saying.

You are lost in partisan politics. You are simply not open to the fact your indoctrinated mind can/could be wrong. You want the world to be full of devastation and poverty to support your political agenda. It is a world of spin and brain washing and I will not, cannot subscribe to it.

I can assure you that the posters on here are at times are at different ends of the spectrum. You have actually managed to unite us, well done.

(I hope I have not upset any other poster with my last comment, no harm intended.)

Ivanhoe Thu 07-Feb-13 20:10:54

Ana, this crisis for our elderly people has been going on for over 30 years, how could I expect you or anybody to not agree.????????

Ana Thu 07-Feb-13 19:00:54

Still no answers to any of our questions. Just more of the same old. You seemed to just want everyone to agree with you Ivanhoe. Good luck with that.

Ariadne Thu 07-Feb-13 18:58:14

Shall we go now?

Ivanhoe Thu 07-Feb-13 18:54:18

To all on this thread.

The annual cost of delivering the basic State pension to each pensioner in this country is just £5.40. Means-testing pensioners via
Pension Credit costs £53.70

Ivanhoe Thu 07-Feb-13 18:52:33

Reading your three posts, something springs to mind that was told to me by someone years ago against the Thatcher era.

This person said to me the following.

"The day Thatcher was elected to run this country, that was the day Britain lost its soul".

Unquote.

Your three postings reflect that indifference.

Absent. Graftnan and Banana's. Where is your humanity for those pensioners who have to make choices between heating their homes, and buying food ?

Galen Thu 07-Feb-13 18:52:09

I think he only comes here to engage in his favourite sport

Tilting at windmills

I feel Don Quixote would have been a better name!grin

absent Thu 07-Feb-13 18:41:21

You're welcome Greatnan Do you fancy a glass of wine or a cup of brew?

Greatnan Thu 07-Feb-13 18:38:03

I'll follow you.

absent Thu 07-Feb-13 18:29:14

Ivanhoe An expression involving sucking eggs, grandmothers and teaching is beginning to come into my mind. I think I shall leave this thread now.

BAnanas Thu 07-Feb-13 17:45:21

Ivanhoe, I think you should rethink your name how about "one trick pony". I've never encountered anyone with the tenacity to bang on about the same thing day in day out. Do you ever lighten up? why don't you look at some of the lighter threads on GN. Putting all that frivolity aside, I remember reading a few years back, before the shit hit the fan, that Greece's elderly were among the best provided for the in the world and Greece was the best place in the western world to grow old. I thought at the time, that's really great, that's how we should all be treating our old people, that's how we would treat our old folk in an ideal world. Sadly as we now know the funding of the Greek welfare state was unsustainable for many reasons. I think many of us gasped when we found out the sheer profligacy of some of their more non thought out policies, for example the passing of these pensions on to dependents. Turning to our own pensioners, I hate the thought of any elderly person living in poverty and having to choose between food or heating. Why can't we rejig things a little in order to take from Peter to give some more to Paul. I'd start with some of the fat salaries that bureaucrats, receive, Baroness Ashton is she worth a larger salary than Barak Obama. Do you think that our MEPs should receive the enormous salaries they receive, far greater than our MPs, and who has to pay for their fine dining and their quaffing of £120 bottles of wine, why I believe that would be the public purse. I believe your old mates the Kinnocks and their kids and who knows even their grandkids have done very nicely out of the old gravey train called the EU. All that ok with you is it? Then there is the pretty useless managers that have presided over the criminal shambolic Health Trusts where so many have died and heads never roll, not only do they receive 6 figure salaries they also get massive pay outs when they move onl. Could we perhaps start there, how many state sector jobs are essential, I'm not talking teachers/doctors/police/nurses, but the multitude of pen pushers who don't produce anything.We now of course know that the private sector pensions lag behind the public sector in many industries. Incidentally, man of the people Nick Clegg thought the pension was £30 a week when he was asked a few years back. Tells you everything really!

Greatnan Thu 07-Feb-13 17:44:55

I keep saying adverts for Work Place Pensions, so I presume that in the future every worker will have contributed to one of those, and the employers will also have to contribute.

Ariadne Thu 07-Feb-13 17:38:24

I have written a reasonable and polite but pointed response to the OP, but have decided to walk away. Wimp!

POGS Thu 07-Feb-13 17:35:15

Ivanhoe

I will take it you can't answer my question then. If you are scribing an answer as we speak, I will apologise.

The demise of the state pension? Didn't the State Pension increase by 5% last year. Hasn't the government announced the biggest increase to State Pensions, ever, also giving women and self employed the right to receive the full State Pension. Women were penalised for bringing up children, don't you, can't you be pleased this will eventually be happening?. I see no demise there.

Ana Thu 07-Feb-13 17:26:09

Sorry, I got that wrong. It should have been: How would answering my perfectly reasonable question be 'demeaning this generation'? The money would have to come from somewhere.

Ana Thu 07-Feb-13 17:23:26

Well, there's nothing like answering a question with another question, is there? Wonder where Ivanhoe got that trick from? grin

How is refusing to answer my perfectly reasonable question 'demeaning this generation'? The money would have to come from somewhere.

Ivanhoe Thu 07-Feb-13 17:20:24

POGs. Tell me something, with the demise of the State pension, how are all these drowning workers going to survive in their old age, private pensions ?

Ivanhoe Thu 07-Feb-13 17:18:24

Ana, ""You're still not telling us how you think this proposed pension increase should be paid for, Ivanhoe"".

No, because I refuse to demean this generation anymore than they already are.

Ana, ill tell you what, let's make further savings and take away all their benefits and reduce the State pension to £5 a week. There, that will make a huge saving. Wont it !

POGS Thu 07-Feb-13 17:13:17

Ivanhoe.

You are not answering my questions, I answer yours. I thought we were debating quite nicely.

petallus Thu 07-Feb-13 16:46:31

Back to OP the last thing I want is to be revered.

I'm nowhere near old enough and I hope I don't deserve it grin

Ana Thu 07-Feb-13 16:40:48

You're still not telling us how you think this proposed pension increase should be paid for, Ivanhoe.

Ivanhoe Thu 07-Feb-13 16:31:27

absent, Well i've given you my answer. When you come up with an answer, do tell me know, im dying to hear it.

It always amazes me that we can fight wars in the far east to kill people, we can uphold third world countries who have billionaire tyrants.

Yet when it comes to looking after our old with respect and dignity, suddenly we cant afford it ???????????????????????

absent Thu 07-Feb-13 16:30:39

Dear God, some of them really are a burden on the state and on society!

POGS Thu 07-Feb-13 16:30:02

Ivanhoe

Why should our children who are working hard and paying taxes, trying to keep their heads up from drowning, pay for pensioners to recieve more money than them??

Where will you get the money from?
Will it be universal or means tested ?.
Will that allow pension credits and allowance to be stopped, or kept alongside?
Will that mean enough money for pensioners to live independantly with no more help, such as free prescriptions, fuel allowance, bus passes etc.

After all you are advocating pensioners will receive a higher, non taxable weekly payment than, say a young mum working in Asda.

Ivanhoe Thu 07-Feb-13 16:26:14

Ana, by your very question you are saying that the elderly are a burden on the State.