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squid

@startled__squid

Joined Eylül 2023
143 Following18 Followers
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Bear
Bear@BearJFK·
I’ve met people like him, who argue the same way. They’re bullshitters! Notice to constant talking over and deliberate misinterpreting. Stephen isn’t thick, he’s a bullshit artist. They don’t argue, they bully. Sadly, this comes across as clever by many people, even so-called “educated” people. This is the type of socialist who governs our country. Bullshit artists who have a victim complex.
Proper Memes 〓〓@Proper_Memes

@BurnsideWasTosh @ZackPolanski He doesn't understand the fundamentals of taxation.

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squid
squid@startled__squid·
@jay5672 @marcosagusstinn Boris brought in over 1 million migrants after brexit of course the economy fucking grew. Doesn't mean living standards got better though.
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squid@startled__squid·
@jay5672 @marcosagusstinn The fact that we are doing better than France and Germany (to states in near economic collapse) does not actually mean Brexit was beneficial. I mean, what about oer Capita? Real Gdp per capita growth has been non-existent.
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James Young
James Young@jay5672·
Since Brexit: - GDP has kept pace with France, exceeded Germany's - Trade in goods AND services with EU has grown, on trend - Inflation is lower than EU since Brexit - UK is no 1 for AI/tech investment in Europe. EU is nowhere. Your analysis @marcosagusstinn is cherry-picked.
Marcos Agustín@marcosagusstinn

Since Brexit, the UK has taken a clear economic hit: GDP loss: ~4–5% lower than it would have been (BoE estimates) Trade: goods trade down ~10–15% vs trend Inflation: +2–3 percentage points higher (peaked >11% in 2022) Investment: ~10–15% below pre-Brexit trend GDP per capita: stagnating vs EU, gap widening since 2016 The EU also lost its #2 global financial center (London), reducing capital access for European firms. Reintegration is mutual economic gain.

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@spacekadette.bsky.social 🇿🇦🇱🇧🇸🇦
@LeoKearse Why are you all such utter fucking morons unable discuss the actual substance. Even as a comedian you fail to break this down into anything resembling a coherent argument. You do how we excel at megaphoning your own ignorance of the topic. x.com/i/status/20505…
Damien Willey (Kernow Damo) 🟢 🔴@KernowDamo

The most revealing thing in this post is that the worker’s need to live never appears as a real business cost. VAT is real. Business rates are real. Energy bills are real. National Insurance is real. Rent is real. Beans, milk, cups, insurance, accountants, card fees, compliance, all real. But the person making the coffee needing enough money to pay rent, eat, heat their home, travel to work and not rely on state top-ups? Suddenly that is “silly socialism”. No. That is the cost of labour. If your business model depends on paying people less than they need to live, then the state is not attacking your business by demanding higher wages. The state is currently propping your business up by letting taxpayers subsidise the gap between what you pay and what your staff need to survive. That is the bit you cannot grasp, or do not want to grasp. You say businesses fail because they are unprofitable. Fine. Businesses do fail. But “I can only make a profit if my workers stay poor” is not a serious moral defence of a business. It is a confession. You say a cup of coffee has to absorb lots of costs. Yes. Welcome to business. But you are treating wages as the flexible bit that must always be squeezed so your business model survives. Nobody says, “If you can’t afford coffee beans, just get the taxpayer to provide the beans.” Nobody says, “If you can’t afford electricity, tell the staff to sit in the dark and call it prosperity.” But when the unaffordable item is the person being doing the work, suddenly everyone is supposed to become very mature and economically literate about poverty pay. You also get VAT badly muddled. VAT-registered businesses can generally reclaim VAT on goods and services bought for business use, and the VAT registration threshold is turnover above £90,000. So this line about 20% VAT and inputs not being claimable is not the killer argument you think it is. The bigger point is simpler. Workers do not get to tell landlords, supermarkets, energy firms and train companies that their boss has “compounding costs” so everyone must please wait quietly while they are paid less than a living wage. The worker’s bills have compounded too. Their rent has gone up. Their food has gone up. Their energy has gone up. Their council tax has gone up. Their travel has gone up. Funny how “proper economics” always discovers pressure when it lands on the owner, but turns into a lecture on realism when it lands on the staff. The Green proposal is £15 an hour by April 2027. The real Living Wage is already £13.45 across the UK and £14.80 in London, calculated on what people need to live, not what a struggling employer would prefer to pay. And even before that, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation found that a single working-age adult on the National Living Wage was nearly £7,000 short of the gross income needed for a minimum acceptable standard of living in 2025. So spare us the sob story that £15 is some wild Bolshevik fantasy. It is much closer to the actual cost of surviving than poverty pay dressed up as realism. You say jobs will disappear. That is always the threat. Every time wages rise, the same people emerge to announce that civilisation will collapse because a cleaner, waiter, carer or barista might be able to pay a bill without choosing which meal to skip. Yet the Low Pay Commission’s latest judgement was that recent National Living Wage increases have not had a significant negative impact on employment. That does not mean every business has no pressure. Of course small businesses are under pressure. Business rates need reform. Energy costs are brutal. Rents are often obscene. Big chains can absorb shocks that small independents cannot. But none of that proves workers should be the shock absorber. It proves the economy has been built so badly that the smallest businesses and the lowest-paid workers are set against each other while landlords, energy firms, banks and large corporations walk away with the margin. Your welfare argument is even worse. Universal Credit is explicitly available to people who are working but on low incomes, and as earnings rise, Universal Credit is tapered down. That means low wages and public spending are already linked. The taxpayer is already helping cover the living costs that low-pay employers do not meet. So when you ask “where does the money come from?”, one answer is: from the business that uses the labour. That is not extremist. That is basic decency. Profit is not ugly. Profit made by selling a product people want, paying suppliers properly, paying workers enough to live, and still having something left over is perfectly defensible. Profit made by underpaying staff and then expecting the public to top them up through benefits is not heroic enterprise. It is a business model leaning on the state while pretending to despise the state. And this “read a book” routine is always funny from people whose entire economic theory seems to be: owners must be protected from hardship, workers must be exposed to it, and taxpayers must quietly make up the difference while being lectured about socialism. A liveable wage is not a luxury add-on. It is the price of employing a human being. If a business cannot pay rent, it cannot use the building. If it cannot pay suppliers, it cannot use the stock. If it cannot pay energy bills, it cannot keep the lights on. And if it cannot pay workers enough to live, it should not expect applause for creating jobs that keep people poor.

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squid
squid@startled__squid·
@somecallme2019 @kenul1_ken @HoyasFan07 They came to 8 because they directly replace the type 23's that weren't configured as multi purpose frigates. The rule of 3 is a loose rule aswell.
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somecallme2019
somecallme2019@somecallme2019·
@startled__squid @kenul1_ken @HoyasFan07 You’d imagine to work out how many you need you figure out how may you want at sea and x it by 3 (1 at sea, 1 readying up, 1 in maintenance) and considering 8 doesn’t divide by three I think we can come to the conclusion this hasn’t been thought through.
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squid@startled__squid·
@kenul1_ken @HoyasFan07 with 8 you could maintain 3 at sea most of the time. Really we need like 12 or more though.
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ken mac
ken mac@kenul1_ken·
@HoyasFan07 With probably only 2 at sea at any given time
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𝐬 🇬🇧⸆⸉
𝐬 🇬🇧⸆⸉@redelitist·
Putting a picture of John Swinney and claiming it as a success for the Scottish Government when this was entirely the work of HM The King and the state visit arranged by the British Government. Amazing
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Invincible News
Invincible News@InvincibleIntel·
Robert Kirkman on how he would rate the Seasons of Invincible so Far. - Season 4 - Season 3 - Season 1 - Season 2
Invincible News tweet mediaInvincible News tweet media
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Politics UK
Politics UK@PolitlcsUK·
🚨 BREAKING: Donald Trump has lifted all tariffs on Scottish whiskey and bourbon following a request from the King
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Looking for Growth
A group of residents bravely fought against noise from a ... Children's playground. The council had to demolish it, and give £130,000 to two complainants. At the taxpayers expense. 31% of children don't have a playground close to them. Do normal countries operate this way?
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Navy Lookout
Navy Lookout@NavyLookout·
🇺🇸USN has awarded a $282.9M contract to @WeAreHII to begin design work and procure long lead items for the FF(X) Frigate programme. The first ships will have very basic armament, but future flights will likely have expanded capabilities, including VLS cells and ASW systems
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