Mick Gudgion

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Mick Gudgion

Mick Gudgion

@Gudge62

Whitchurch Salop. Luton Town FC. Love Darts. Maybe tomorrow. Bring me Sunshine. Green Party.

Katılım Şubat 2009
432 Takip Edilen213 Takipçiler
Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@hoezeth Actually mad that they increased the state pension age and are now having to pay UC to young people because someone 65+ is still working.
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Just Dave now
Just Dave now@justdavenow89·
Gary Lineker, "I actually think that 80-90% of the country just want to get on with their lives, be friendly with their neighbours" "They don't look at people of different religions, skin colours, beliefs, traits, and think badly of them" Who agrees with Gary True words to me
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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@ZackPolanski Serious question, what is the estimated cost or taking Water back into public control.
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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@james_e_b_ Only got our first Indian Restaurant around 84 where I lived. 18 pubs, none with Restaurants but around the same time a couple started doing bar food in a basket. We had 2 chippy's and a Chinese takeaway.
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anonymous historian and hat collector
There were loads of relatively cheap options - the Chinese, the curry house, the greasy spoon (which I reckon was probably cheaper compared to middle and lower incomes than most lunch options today)
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anonymous historian and hat collector
Why are there all these Gen Xers announcing that when we were kids we could only afford McDonald's once a year? It's bollocks
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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@ProudlyPastoral Well I was born in 62 and was into my 20's before I ever went into a restaurant after the first Indian restaurant opened in our area. We had no fast food places other than a chippy and a Chinese takeaway and the only pub food you could get was served at the bar in a basket.
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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@Rugmeister78 Bit different laying on a sun lounger, having frequent dips in the pool and a cold beer or three.
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Lee
Lee@Rugmeister78·
Surely everyone has experienced 30 degrees in Spain or Greece in May - had a great time, time of their lives 🤷‍♂️🌞🌞 Why they think 26 degrees in uk is armageddon i don’tknow 🤪🤪🍺🌴🍺🍺🌴🌴
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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@StephenMorganMP Must admit thats really helping me as someone that had to finish work early to look after my wife who has MS. Council tax up £300, petrol up 30p/ltr, water bill up 10% for the 2nd year running etc. But at least I got a £3 a week increase in carers allowance to cover it.
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Stephen Morgan MP
Stephen Morgan MP@StephenMorganMP·
We want families to enjoy the things that make life worth living. That’s why the Chancellor has slashed VAT on summer attractions so that families can enjoy cheaper prices at…. 🎢 Theme parks, museums and soft play 🍿 Cinema and theatre tickets 🍽️ Children’s restaurant meals 🚌 Free bus travel across England for kids between the ages of 5 and 15
Stephen Morgan MP tweet media
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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@abitdickensian and how many jobs are taken up by people 65+ die to the increase in state pension age. It must be cheaper to pay a young person UC than an old person a pension.
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phoebe 🚂💌
phoebe 🚂💌@abitdickensian·
they do realise that the majority of unemployed 18 year olds aren’t out of work because they’re in their rooms on social media but rather because they can’t get a job because everywhere requires 5 years’ worth of experience for an entry level role, right? RIGHT?
Politics UK@PolitlcsUK

🚨 NEW: A Government review has found employers must adapt to the "bedroom generation" of unemployed 16-24 year olds by offering more flexibility It says they're "not snowflakes or faking it" and their anxiety and depression is linked to growing up on social media [@thetimes]

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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@David__Osland As a "Boomer" I would have liked that too. But the reality was 12 hour days 6 or 7 days a week.
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David__Osland
David__Osland@David__Osland·
I think that 35 hours work a week should not only pay the rent and put food on the table, but leave you enough over for the odd night out and an annual holiday. And if that belief makes me an economically illiterate leftwing extremist, so be it.
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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@james_rands @supertolerant My dad used to have the occasional Vesta curry or Chow Mein. We would have fish and chips once a month on a Friday. Never had a meal out until I was in my 20's and was in my late 20's before I went abroad for the first time. Mum and Dad Never went abroad.
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James Rands
James Rands@james_rands·
@supertolerant I am split on this, because on the one hand, I don't and cannot know what your personal experience was growing up, but on the other... this is such obvious bullshit it is genuinely offensive. You don't think your parents ever did fast food?
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Innocent Bystander
Innocent Bystander@supertolerant·
I was young in the 80s/90s in the UK. I don’t remember my parents ever going out to eat, except when we were on holiday (in the UK). I don’t think they ever took me to a fast food restaurant, or ordered takeaway food. People today have no clue how working people lived. /1
Raven@raven_brah

Boomers seem to forget that fast food used to be a normal, everyday expense for them because it was affordable. You could get a burger easily on minimum wage, it wasn’t some fancy treat you had once a year as a reward for pulling yourself up by your bootstraps.

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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@beesley_cathy My wife, daughter and my best friend are all uncomfortable with biological males sharing their intimate spaces. As a man I have no issues with Trans women using male toilets, changing areas etc.
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Cathy Beesley
Cathy Beesley@beesley_cathy·
Jesus. Women seen as possessions of men again. We’re not just your wives, daughters, etc. We’re people. We’re not bothered by trans women in bogs. You are. We’d rather you cut the mass of violence against us by husbands and fathers, thanks. Let trans women pee in peace.
Trevor Phillips@TrevorPTweets

My thoughts on the @EHRC guidance laid yesterday; this is not about non-existent "rights". It is about the safety of women - mothers, sisters, wives, daughters. We men need to hear their voices. Virginia Woolf : "Though we see the same world, we see it through different eyes". My intro on @TimesRadio yesterday: Where I live there are two different routes to and from the tube station. One, let’s call it Acacia Avenue, is quiet and residential. The other, London Road, is a busy major route with lots of traffic. At all times of the day, I automatically head for Acacia Road. It’s just much nicer. The women in my family, on the other hand, will never willingly make that walk after dark. They live with an anxiety that most men find it hard to imagine, and frankly, rarely think about unprompted. Last year 739,000 women were sexually assaulted in Britain. Virtually all such assaults - nine out of ten - are perpetrated by men. One in four women have been attacked at some time in their lives. Acacia Avenue is exactly the sort of place in which most women fear that they become vulnerable, and they are right. As the author Virginia Woolf once wrote " Though we see the same world, we see it through different eyes". I think this is the right context in which to understand the furore over the guidance being laid today by the government, over the meaning of the words man and woman when it comes to providing services and facilities in workplaces. Many men think this is about a rather arcane dispute about who gets to use what loo. For their mothers, sisters, wives and daughters, it isn’t. In a previous life, as Chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, I had a hand in writing this country’s equality laws, in particular the 2010 Equality Act. It never occurred to any of us that there could be any confusion or dispute over the meaning of the words man and woman. But it has taken a decade of campaigning, a Supreme Court judgement and now hundreds of pages of guidance to settle the issue. This is not about so called trans rights, which are completely unaffected by this guidance, since no-one has ever had the right to walk into a changing room reserved for teenage girls. What it does mean is that women and girls are guaranteed the protection they deserve, and that their safety, which we spent half a decade drafting law to ensure, is protected. But the whole business illuminates some serious issues in our politics. First that many of our institutions, in spite of the fact that they always knew what the right thing to do was, decided to ignore the fears of their women customers and employees, under pressure from noisy pressure groups. Instead, the people who were supposed to be the grown ups behaved as though the law said what campaigners wanted it to say, rather than what it actually said. They settled for what they hoped would be a quiet life. In a democracy, there’s little point in Parliament deciding anything if the law is then made an ass by activists intimidating bosses in companies, schools, universities and the media into doing something different. Second, at the heart of the campaign to undermine the Equality Act is an idea that we specifically rejected in 2010, so called self-identification. That is to say, that it should be up to the individual to decide whether they have what’s called a protected characteristic - are you male or female, are you black or white. The problem is that self-ID would destroy the operation of any law against discrimination. Look, it would almost certainly have been to my advantage as a young man to self-identify as a handsome, white public schoolboy. None of those things is true of me. And at various points I am pretty sure it’s been to my disadvantage. It is certainly statistically likely to have been to my disadvantage. But according to the logic of those who say that self-ID should be the rule and that anyone should be able to decide for themselves whether they are male or female, black or white or Asian, were I to complain about racial discrimination, it would be difficult for anyone prove that I’d been discriminated against because of my race since anybody to whom I’d lost out could just tell the courts that they too were black. I know that sounds like Alice in Wonderland but you can google the case where a chap, both of whose parents are white, insisted he should get money from the Arts Council because he so identified with the black struggle that he considered himself black, and everyone should accept his point of view. In the United States and Brazil exactly such outlandish claims have been made and people rewarded to the disadvantage of people actually born into minority families. I have even been told about firms who, when reporting their gender pay gaps have put men who just happen to like wearing dresses at weekends - nothing wrong with that, let me be clear - into the female column and told their women employees that they really haven’t got anything to moan about because statistically they are paid equally, and they should get back in their box. So today’s guidance isn’t just another tiresome chapter in culture wars. It is , I hope, a halt to the efforts to undermine one of the most important pieces of legislation on the statute book, by people who, for their own reasons, would prefer us to be living in the 1950s world of Mad Men.

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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@zarahussain999 It's about getting back to the values this country was built on. Citizens having respect for and abiding by UK law. It's about integration, come to this country because you want to live in a country who's culture is based on Christian values.
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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@TreborJoss @beerandtokens We also made choices. I chose to drive a 10 year old car and not go on holidays. I chose to move away from where I grew up to an area with cheaper housing. I chose to work 12 hours a day 6 to 7 days a week.
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Trebor
Trebor@TreborJoss·
Boomers had far fewer options to piss away money, and they paid cash for most things. Going out, groceries, clothes, etc. Boomers had a single phone line shared by everyone in a household. Today, a household has cell phones for everyone in the house, a lot of those lines have the deluxe cell package and the latest smart phone. Boomers paid less than $20 per month for that single line, today's household spend $100 per month for each cell phone and often have 4 or more cell phones in a house. Today when anyone goes into a grocery with a credit card, it is easy to include impulse items in your shopping (energy drinks, flavored creamers, soda by the case, cutup fruit, frozen chicken breast instead of a whole chicken, etc). Stuff that a boomer did not buy becuase it was not available and they only had so much cash. It was not that boomers made better financial decision, it is that the more costly options were unavailable.
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TheUnusualSuspect
TheUnusualSuspect@beerandtokens·
Again, this is a total different world. You didn’t buy Netflix and all of that. But TV was free. Now it’s not. You went to the movies, now people watch them on Amazon Prime. You need a cell phone to exist in today’s world. You had a land line. “We were frugal”. No.. you just existed in a world that was different and had less financial demands.
Todd Nida@ToddNidasqM

Back in the 70s we didn't take lavish vacations and didn't spend on iPhones, Netflix, Prime, Paramont +, internet, Amazon, DoorDash, and dining out all the time. Nowadays, people just choose to spend their money differently. Apartments were not luxury with exercise rooms, rooftop pools, and balconies. It was just different. Much more simple and money went a lot further.

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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@PhilipProudfoot Where's your outrage about what's happening in Nigeria, Mozambique and the DRC in the name of Islam. It seems to me that so many are happy to codemn the atrocities of Israel whilst ignoring what's going going on elsewhere.
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Philip Proudfoot
Philip Proudfoot@PhilipProudfoot·
People can easily argue that Palestine is irrelevant to Britain (they’re wrong, on multiple levels, of course ) but Palestine is the moral test of the world It is the centre of everything. How you react, who you defend, and who you abandon is the supreme litmus test of humanity.
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Bushra Shaikh
Bushra Shaikh@Bushra1Shaikh·
Halal meat isn't the issue. Bigots are.
Bushra Shaikh tweet media
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Christina DiEdoardo
Christina DiEdoardo@ChristinaSFLaw·
@mr29516 @Bushra1Shaikh As opposed to factory farming? There is no ethical consumption under capitalism and I’m tired of bigoted shits like you claiming this is about protecting animals when it obvs isn’t.
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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@MasterMaliq How's that working out in Nigeria, DRC and Mozambique.
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Maliq
Maliq@MasterMaliq·
The biggest victims of Islamic extremism are Muslims themselves.Most of the deaths linked to it are Muslims killed by other Muslims. It is heartbreaking to see people turn on their own, using a distorted version of faith to justify the slaughter.
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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@LaraInTheMiddle BR wasn't perfect but that due in the main to the quality of people that run it. These days it can be operated as a nationalised service that can provide cheaper fares and not lose money if the right people are appointed to run it.
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LaraInTheMiddle
LaraInTheMiddle@LaraInTheMiddle·
Just reading a thread about trains where privatisation is blamed for poor services by someone not old enough to remember nationalised railways. This country is a mess because we’re at the point where not enough people remember what it was like last time.
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Mick Gudgion
Mick Gudgion@Gudge62·
@Jenny_1884 Keep us oldies working longer whilst youth unemployment soars makes perfect sense. It must be far cheaper to pay UC than pension 😱
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Jen k 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
No pension for me until 67yrs because apparently this government can’t afford it but manages to find £20 million just like that to send to Africa. We are being taken for mugs in the UK. Work hard, get nothing.
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