
Andrew Donaldson
2K posts






I still haven't solved the CO2 bedroom challenge You open the window and you wake up from a 6am garbage truck or barking dogs and sunlight You close it, you suffocate in 1200 ppl at 5am I guess you really need some mini tube in your wall with a vent that opens and closed based on internal CO2 but how do I build that?


A minimum wage of £15 would end my coffee shop, it would have to close, as would many other businesses. I’ll explain for the economically illiterate. Staff costs are currently half our costs, a £15 minimum wage is actually more than £15 an hour for the company, because you have to add: - 12.07% holiday - Sick pay - Maternity pay if and when required - National insurance - Pension contributions These costs would mean the shop loses money because remember, energy costs are up, rates are up, regulations are up. Now you can pass these costs onto the consumer - that would mean charging a lot more for coffee, people won’t pay it. The likes of Starbucks and Costa can, because they have economies of scale. The independent doesn’t. Now the little socialist will say well this is your fault, if you can’t run a business that can afford to pay its staff properly, but the little socialist has never run a business and does not understand the dynamics. Now I could pay some staff off and fill those hours myself or reduce us to one staff member during certain periods - but this proves the point that a minimum wage costs jobs. There was a time when these jobs were done by kids, perhaps on the weekend, paid a lower wage, no holiday and no silly employment rights. Perhaps they were even paid cash. The dynamic worked and small businesses like this could operate. It was also a great first job. Sadly now it isn’t worth employing entitlement youngsters at this level of pay. So alas, I don’t need the stress, the business would close, a number of jobs would be lost. Economics is about understanding these dynamics, no vibes. The cost of living is not solved through passing on inflation to the business, it is solved by ending high inflation and creating prosperity. This is what socialists don’t understand, they can’t create prosperity, they can only destroy it.




There’s no such thing as cheap green electricity.



Manuel Neuer asked Bayern's social media admin to keep the ball for him after the PSG ball boy refused to give it to him during the game


The handball call against Ben White, which resulted in a penalty for Atletico Madrid. ❌🤬




A restaurant being suffocated by a council for offering rides homes as part of a package. We need a proper empowered team in government to be constantly spotting and removing these growth strangling absurdities at speed. theguardian.com/uk-news/2026/a…


I know the same as rest of you - what I've read. Although, to be fair to myself, I have also bothered to read their website which doesn't advertise a taxi service, but does advertise local taxi companies. Some of you seem to have come to the conclusion, from you've all read, that an informal act of kindness needs to be officially regulated and charged for. I beg to differ.





UK tax is going to be the highest since 1945. But public spending won't increase; in fact most of us will experience a decline in public services. Here's why - in a thread that I'd love to be completely wrong.



Couples living in unmarried bliss want the same tax rights as married and civil partnered pairs bit.ly/4ucWB2g at the moment they have no rights - none. So the best tax advice is marry the one you love. Or civil partner them if you hate all the marriage baggage. But…







We don’t put VAT on “good things.” Not on groceries. Not on children’s clothes. Not on books. So why put it on education? Because this isn’t really about revenue. It’s about making a point. In Scotland, the results are already clear. Pupil numbers have fallen by around 9%, with even sharper drops at entry points. Schools are shrinking, jobs are being lost, and the wider economy has taken a hit. The policy is now projected to cost more than it raises as these effects compound. Most private school families aren’t ultra-rich. They are parents stretching finances for smaller classes, safer environments, better outcomes. Add 20% and many get priced out. Children are pulled out mid-education, separated from friends, and pushed into an already strained state system. VAT on private schools is not a tax on the “wealthy.” It is a tax on aspiration, and on the system that then has to absorb the fallout. telegraph.co.uk/money/tax/inco…











