
Elizabeth B
3.3K posts

Elizabeth B
@lostinallypally
the clue's in the title Katılım Mayıs 2010
1.3K Takip Edilen231 Takipçiler

@tonkerthomas Agree. Lucky enough to go two weeks ago and loved everything about it. It had such good reviews that I was nervous it wouldn’t love up to the hype but it did. Hopefully can compare notes on Wed eve
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The Archbishop's compassion is admirable. The selective outrage is not. We are told of Layan Nasir's ordeal, prayers are offered, and demands are made for justice. Yet there is no mention of the Israeli victims of terrorism, the hostages, or the families whose lives have been shattered by violence.
If you want to pray for those unjustly imprisoned, pray for everyone. If you want to speak about suffering, acknowledge all of it. Too often, church leaders seem willing to amplify one side's pain while treating Israel's as an afterthought. True moral leadership requires consistency, not selective empathy. #StopTheLies #Antisemitism #Israel #FactsMatter #StandWithIsrael #DoubleStandards #Hypocrisy

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It was a great joy to meet with Layan Nasir in Birzeit yesterday after her release from Israeli prison.
Layan is a Palestinian Christian who worships at St Peter’s Anglican Church in Birzeit.
I’m grateful to Layan’s family for their hospitality in their home. I will pray for them, and for God’s blessing and healing for Layan after the terrible ordeal of her incarceration.
I pray for the release of all people who have been unjustly imprisoned, here in Palestine and Israel and around the world.

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@Matthew1534836 @EuropeanRetired @eurofounder Am a frequent visitor to Spain and just returned from a trip. Service is nearly always exceptional No service added to bill & a tip is rarely expected but v gratefully received. Waiters and taxi drivers seemed genuinely surprised when you do more than round up.
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@EuropeanRetired @eurofounder I find service in Europe, Latin America am Asia pathetic compared to the USA on general. It’s. A fact that people test have a chance at incentive pay perform better. Some call it human nature?
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@MHSJohnWright @Fiona35352137 @thetimes The state is not taking her savings. Her savings are being used to pay for her care and when they run out or become less than the threshold the state will pay for her care like they will pay for others
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@Fiona35352137 @lostinallypally @thetimes And yet mum spent her last five years in a care home here; my Dad at 92, same, as is my wife's father.
We have all paid for their care because we can. We all enjoyed the benefits of free health care in the NHS, and would never begrudge those less capable from enjoying same.
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@larterlia1957 @Fiona35352137 @thetimes Not all inherited money has been taxed previously. If it results from property price increases for example then it’s a windfall. We obviously have different views because for my part IHT is one of the better places
to tax people - you’re dead and have no need of any assets
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@lostinallypally @Fiona35352137 @thetimes But inherited money has already been taxed. Why should it be taxed again. Why should it go to the state all they will do is waste it anyway
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@GCPaulM @AudreySuffolk @simonlevans @francesbarber13 Every time they’re tested which appears to only be when they’re forced to do so ie in a court or tribunal their arguments just fall to pieces
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@AudreySuffolk @simonlevans @francesbarber13 But, of course, they're not interested in composing arguments. Firstly, because they're not capable and secondly because they're not quite dim enough to be unaware that the process would show them up for the charlatans they are.
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@larterlia1957 @Fiona35352137 @thetimes your argument. Some people may get on the property ladder as a result of inheritance but most don’t but you appear to be suggesting that taxes should be paid by those saving to get on the ladder or just on it to protect the inheritance of the few which I can’t see is jusfiable.
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@lostinallypally @Fiona35352137 @thetimes The so called wealthy elderly are usually property rich and cash poor. It’s not their fault they bought a house 30 years ago and it’s increased in value. Their inheritance to their kids will help the young get on the property ladder. You’re giving a strawman argument
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@larterlia1957 @Fiona35352137 @thetimes I include someone who is asset rich as wealthy as they can use that asset to pay for their care unless their spouse is in the property in which case they won’t be forced to sell it. Of course they may want to release equity to pay for better care or more choice. I just 1/3
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@larterlia1957 @poolymacos @Fiona35352137 @thetimes And they can give away cash and assets during their lifetime without affecting their standard of living probably pay for a good care in their own home and still leave assets to their family. I doubt they will have to rely on the state in their old age
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@poolymacos @lostinallypally @Fiona35352137 @thetimes Exactky that. I guarantee you they have trusts
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@PaddyBriggs @jameshawes2 Charles’s visit home and encounters with his father is one of my favourite parts of the book. Mr Ryder is an awful parent but hilarious.
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Waugh is a sort of hyper-Wodehouse in this respect.
I used to ask Ceative Writing MA students to read Vile Bodies as a timeless lesson in comic dialogue.
Then to find every echo of WW1 lurking beneath.
They were always astonished.
A classic lesson in surface vs subtext.
Fr Thomas Crean OP@crean_fr
Listening to @TheRestHistory on the second year of WWI. George Orwell once remarked: "Bertie Wooster, if he ever existed, was killed round about 1915." #Wodehouse is perhaps loved not just as a comic genius but because he describes England as if the Great War had never been.
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@larterlia1957 @Fiona35352137 @thetimes was just luck but in turn makes it even harder for younger people to get on the property ladder. Those same people you want to subsidise the wealthy elderly 2/2
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@larterlia1957 @Fiona35352137 @thetimes So a young person saving up for a deposit to buy a house should pay taxes to pay for someone’s residential care when they have the money to pay themselves but want to pass on their wealth to their family. A lot of their wealth will derive from property price rises which 1/2
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@larterlia1957 @Fiona35352137 @thetimes Perhaps the woman who is now paying’s money will run out and then she will get it for free. What about someone who paid lots of tax but lived less frugally. 2/2
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@larterlia1957 @Fiona35352137 @thetimes Why is it a penalty to have to pay for things if you can afford it. To put it another way why is it ok for taxes to subsidise her kids’ inheritance. How do you know that the person who doesn’t have to pay has done nothing. Maybe they were in a lower paid job or fell on hard 1/2
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@Linda8772490572 @DebWils54473973 @Fiona35352137 @thetimes The real costs outside London are over £1000. I know this from a care home run by a charity. council funding has hardly risen in 15 years in real & costs have risen. councils can’t afford to pay more as their funding was cut by the coalition govt & has never been reinstated
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@DebWils54473973 @lostinallypally @Fiona35352137 @thetimes The high costs are to subside those who don’t pay. The real cost should probably be about £500 a week but since councils only pay about £435 towards care, those who are self funding have to pay three times this to subsidise the benefit cheats.
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@Fiona35352137 @lynnery38 @xueyan94600 @thetimes The home they wouldn’t have to sell it. And I may have to sell my house if I go into a care home - if so fine. I won’t need it anymore 2/2
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@Fiona35352137 @lynnery38 @xueyan94600 @thetimes It’s completely on topic. You said it wasn’t fair that someone who didn’t have to pay got the same care as the person who did have to pay. The fact they sold their home to pay is not relevant. If you have assets - savings or home then you pay. If they had a husband/wife in 1/2
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@Fiona35352137 @lynnery38 @xueyan94600 @thetimes Then that’s fine too. Why should the state pay for my room and board which is a large component of the care costs. There’s a case for covering care and medical costs however but taxes would have to rise significantly. I’d be ok with that too but doubt many would 3/3
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@Fiona35352137 @lynnery38 @xueyan94600 @thetimes me but that’s ok by me as that’s what an NHS is for. I could use some of my earnings to go private. I have that choice and partly that’s what I work for - to live yes but also have choices. The equity in my house also gives me that and if the time come that I have to sell it 2/3
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