Lee
1.9K posts

Lee
@Lobby71
Work in oil and gas. Keen LFC supporter and scouser living in Scotland.
Katılım Haziran 2010
208 Takip Edilen73 Takipçiler

@FBAwayDays West Brom
Charlton
Manchester
Notts
Shrewsbury
Manchester
Bolton
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@Everton__1234 @joshtheprogame2 Celebrating is not provocation, if they were gesturing yeah but I don’t think they were, but I may be wrong.
They’d have had to run to the other end of the pitch to celebrate in front of our fans. Then just celebrated in the corner near to where they scored.
Sensitive blues
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@Lobby71 @joshtheprogame2 Celebrating infront of our fans is clearly provocative mate…
If Beto or Ndiaye ran over to your fans and celebrated mate, they’d have been booked.
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I still don’t understand why they’re allowed to celebrate infront of our fans but we’re not allowed to celebrate infront of there’s. It makes no sense what so ever
🔴⚽️@davidholmes73
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@Everton__1234 @joshtheprogame2 Safety and/or security issues gesturing or acting in a provocative, derisory or inflammatory way in any of their celebrations. Thought they just celebrated.
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@joshtheprogame2 Infront of your fans mate
‘A player must not approach the spectators in a manner which causes safety and/or security issues gesturing or acting in a provocative, derisory or inflammatory way’
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@UziCryptoo I think your math is as one what out.
House price: $625,000
* Deposit (20%): $125,000
* Mortgage: $500,000
* Rate: 7% over 30 years
Results
* Monthly payment: ≈ $3,327
* Total mortgage paid: ≈ $1,197,720
* Add deposit:
➡️ Total paid: ≈ $1,322,720
overpay and reduces
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$625k home
20% down-payment
$500k mortgage
With a 7% interest rate and a 30-year term, you are paying $697,544.64 in interest.
The $625,000 house cost you $1,447,544.64.
This is equal to a $4,021 monthly rental payment, plus you pay for maintenance and repairs.
Houses cost so much because people can borrow money that’s created with the press of a button to buy them.
If everyone had to pay in cash for their home, prices would drop significantly.
Most people think mortgages are designed to help them.
But NO.
Mortgages are designed to earn profits for banks.
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@Lobby71 @theclassicwife @mrwtffacts @influenya They are both to blame. She has brain but didn't use it.
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In the UK, Millie Taplin was attending her first nightclub on her 18th birthday when she was handed a drink by a stranger. The stranger handed her a vodka lemonade “Try this”
Millie took a sip.
Seconds later, her face went numb, her fingers curled into claws and her entire body stiffened like she was possessed.
She stayed fully conscious, trapped inside herself, writhing in agony and screaming in her head that she couldn’t move her body.
Rushed to hospital, doctors said she was likely dosed with two unknown drugs: one to paralyse her, one to knock her out. Tests couldn’t identify the substance.
Her mother later released footage as a warning: never accept a drink from stranger.

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@theclassicwife @mrwtffacts @influenya See continuing to keep posting cos you’re a sad lonely heartless tw@t.
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@theclassicwife @mrwtffacts @influenya Do one now. I know the type of person you are, sad lonely cu*t.
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@theclassicwife @mrwtffacts @influenya Oh do f*ck off. Have you never made the slightest mistake trusting someone, especially when you’re maybe having a good time. You maybe perfect and may think she’s at fault but just keep it to yourself ffs. Feel sorry for your toddler growing up with a person like you.
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@Lobby71 @mrwtffacts @influenya This is a simple thing I would teach my toddler, let alone a grown adult woman.
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@mrwtffacts @influenya If she really accepted a drink from a complete stranger I mean, to some degree that’s her fault
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"That's the way it works"
A generation ago, total pension expenditure was around £20bn.
Today that figure is expected to be £177.8bn.
If pensions had only kept up with inflation, this would only be £59bn.
They don't know how lucky they are (and how unsustainable this is).

sue@sue3563
@LondonWageSlave @NewsonTed And when the old were young they also paid the pensions of the generation before - that’s the way it works...
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@mulronie @Newspace14 @RollingHedge A lot big companies contracted out of SERPS and had a private pension scheme but a lot of that money was lost. There a HMRC page for finding lost pensions.
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@Newspace14 @RollingHedge @Lobby71 You asked how today's pensioners could have built a second income and I told you. Have you heard of SERPS? Have you heard of contracting out?
Today's pensioners either used them, and now have a second income, or didn't.
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Thank you Sandra, for illustrating exactly how most people in this country misunderstand the tax system.
Allow me to explain:
£27k tax is just the start. Add NI, the personal allowance taper (60% effective rate between £100-125k), child benefit clawback, £15k childcare, £18k housing.
A family of four on £100k has roughly £35-40k disposable.
That pensioner you cite on £12,570 has no NI, no childcare, no mortgage, and a triple lock that rises faster than the wages funding it.
The £100k earner isn’t doing well at all, especially relative to their efforts, they are mathematically funding everyone else’s floor while the state pulls away theirs.
Fair? I think not.
Sandra Hope@spanishblueye
@Telegraph The man's moaning about having 3 times the average wage while pensioners are living on less than the tax threshold twelve half thousand pounds. You pay roughly £27 thousand pounds on a £100 thousand pounds salary. Everyone pays income tax over £12,570. Comparing, he's doing well.
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@NewsonTed The OECD also states that pensions are the main source of income for older people in Europe. State Pensions and benefits make up over 70% of older adults’ total household income in most European countries, and in some cases, more than 80%. But let’s keep it as low as possible.
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@NewsonTed Top 10 European Countries by Average State Pension.
Iceland: (£30,251).
Luxembourg: (£26,778).
Norway: (£25,972).
Denmark: (£25,410).
Switzerland: (£22,719).
Austria: (£20,480).
Netherlands. (£20,264)
Belgium: Approx. (£19,000).
Sweden: (£18,882).
Ireland: (£18,318).
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