Hey Britain First here is where your taxes are going

0
116
Hey Britain First here is where your taxes are going

Britain First are trawling hotels looking for migrants housed by the government and then stating that they are being denied access to them. They state they have a right to know where are taxes are going.

Well let us kick it off for you.

Can we ask you why you are not trawling around gated houses, off shore tax havens and the penthouses of very shady oligarchs before invading the space of vulnerable people?

Is it because they are non white and you folk are merely satisfying your racist needs?

How about taking a long look at where our taxes are really going and then feeding off reality instead of the bigotry that you protect with your lives?

How did you vote to protect the country you believe is being ruined?

You mention homeless ‘ex servicemen’…. What are you doing about this then?

And have you ever sat down and spoken to the people you are so concerned about?

And what about these very scary poverty facts:

One of the most comprehensive measures of poverty on offer at the moment is produced by the Social Metrics Commission (SMC). The SMC is an independent group of experts who have been working to improve the way we understand and measure poverty in the UK, which has been publishing estimates since 2018.

They found that in 2017/18:

  • An estimated 14.3 million people are in poverty in the UK
  • 8.3 million are working-age adults, 4.6 million are children, and 1.3 million are of pension age
  • Around 22% of people are in poverty, and 34% of children are
  • Just under half (49%) of those in poverty are in “persistent poverty” (people who would also have fallen below the poverty line in at least two of the last three years). This is as of 2016/17
  • Working-age people in poverty are increasingly likely to be in working families
  • Most poverty rates aren’t all that different to what they were at the start of the 2000s. The most marked reduction has been in pensioner poverty, it is almost half as common as it was back in 2000, while rates for working-age adults are now slightly higher
  • Poverty rates fell in the years after 2010, as the UK recovered from the financial crisis, but are now showing clear signs of rising again

Are you outside Whitehall and Downing Street campaigning or joining voluntary organisations to help and support those who have been made vulnerable by the lies, ideology and policies of repeated governments?

And one more fact for you:

People seeking asylum who are homeless or can’t afford food typically receive £37.75 per week. The level is slightly higher for young children and pregnant women or new mothers. This is in addition to furnished housing and utilities which are provided for no cost.

They are as human as you and this planet is our landlord not the other way around.

Oh and for your information your behaviour is classified as… drum roll

No doubt your bigotry will eventually kill you but if you fancy salvation run away from the ignorant racists and never return.

James Finlayson

To report this post you need to login first.
Previous article‘Liz Truss are you comfortable working with someone who has been widely described as a sexist, misogynist, homophobic and a climate change denier?’
Next articleMan arrested for assault and affray following incident in Poole
Dorset Eye
Dorset Eye is an independent not for profit news website built to empower all people to have a voice. To be sustainable Dorset Eye needs your support. Please help us to deliver independent citizen news... by clicking the link below and contributing. Your support means everything for the future of Dorset Eye. Thank you.