I hope I don't either because other than pushing the government around unions are just about useless when it comes to helping people who really need it. They used to represent the working poor but after seeing them close down so many businesses the working poor generally avoid them so as not to become the unemployed poor. Now they are almost totally the sole preserve of the middle-class employee in the protected sector.I hope you dont ever need help from someone in a union, if this is what you feel when you look at them.
But you are missing the whole point.
I got really annoyed watching the farmers yet again for criticising the government for doing nothing about the fodder crisis. I heard one commentator saying that they had been warning the government since last September. But why should the tax payer be subsidising this?
I'm not really, you're just deflecting again.
I hope I don't either because other than pushing the government around unions are just about useless when it comes to helping people who really need it.
They used to represent the working poor but after seeing them close down so many businesses the working poor generally avoid them so as not to become the unemployed poor. Now they are almost totally the sole preserve of the middle-class employee in the protected sector.
I'm a tradesman. My family were founding members of SIPTU. I was at a book launch in the ironically named Liberty Hall which was written about one of them. The person who wrote it said that they would be ashamed as how unions behave today.
market forces have dictated the policy to start building social housing.
Social housing leases should be for 5 years and not for life.
If someone is living in a three bed social house on their own, they should either give it up or take in at least two other people from the social housing list.
We should not be building any social housing in Dublin or other congested areas.
Low paid workers should be prioritised for social housing close to where they work.
New social housing should be built in villages and towns outside the congested areas.
Anyone in social housing in a congested area who is not working should have their lease terminated and they should be allocated social housing in a less congested area.
Just let single people continue living on their own in the city centre in three bed houses paying no rent and leave the families in hotels.
the poverty industry continues to bleat and mewl about homelessness without ever actually grasping the reality of the situation and dealing with the facts.
No, none of them. The people who make a living out of homelessness, the organisations which exist because of homelessness, the businesses which exist because of homelessness; they are the homeless industry. They are part of the broader charity industry.The “poverty industry” is who exactly? The working people who pay taxes but cannot afford to rent or buy their own home? Or if they can, they are drowning in high rents and mortgage repayments?
Yea, that's exactly what's being proposed alright.The proposal to move tenants of social housing around in a game of musical chairs, on the apparently sole criteria of whether they are at work or not is simply ridiculous, unworkable, and will probably cost the State millions in administration and legal fee’s.
They can and have been answered. We are not in a position to set the bar for every scenario and a tiresome series of follow on questions which just drill into more detail but require the same answer add nothing to the discussion.As for the “but what if” scenarios, I would have thought that at this point that if a handful of simple, straightforward “what if” scenarios cannot be answered, then what chance the more complex “what if” scenarios ever being resolved? It would appear that this penny is taking a long time to drop with some folk.
What does that mean? How do you separate social housing from private housing when they will always compete with each other for physical and financial resources?In the meantime, the economic policies that have transformed housing from a social need into commodities to be bought and sold for profit continue unabated.
No, none of them. The people who make a living out of homelessness, the organisations which exist because of homelessness, the businesses which exist because of homelessness; they are the homeless industry. They are part of the broader charity industry.
Yea, that's exactly what's being proposed alright
People who are not working should be relocated out of congested areas.
Then those who are working would be allocated their housing.
They can and have been answered.
If you think it is fair and just that a single person can inherit a family home from their parents when neither they nor their parents owned the house while a family is homeless in the same locality then shame on you. If you think the solution is to leave that person there but take tax payers money to build another family home then shame on you again.
When faced with something which is utterly unjust and causes human suffering crumbling because a solution is difficult is also shameful.
How obtuse can you get?So put them out of business then and build more houses and stop prancing about with half-baked notions of moving people about because of whether they are at work or not.
What's insane is doing nothing other than proposing throwing more and more money at the problem.I know, its insane isn’t it?
When did you ask that question? Do you think it's fair that your welfare dependent drug addict alcoholic should be given a family home in Rathmines because his parents were given that same home 30 years ago when there are homeless families in the area?Your kidding right? Im still waiting for you answer as to why you think some welfare dependent drug addict alcoholic should be moved to Lucan from Rathmines. What have the good people of Lucan done to you that they deserve to live with drug addicts from Rathmines?
Okay, so any policy that puts someones nose out of joint is pointless, is that what you are saying? Do you think we should build more social housing in expensive areas where there is little available building land rather than build far more houses for the same money elsewhere, just so that people can live where they want?And therein lies the crux, with a supply of housing that falls short of the demands of a growing population, re-locating anybody, anywhere, will probably put someone else’s nose, undeservedly so, out of joint – so the whole concept is pointless.
So how do you propose we make it better (try to keep within the bounds of reality now)?I never said the system was fair, far from it. Im simply opposed to making matters worse.
Yes, doing nothing is far more imaginative.It really is limited thinking on your part.
Indeed, anyone who disagrees with you is morally inferior. Sorry, I forgot.Even the language of “leave that person there” suggests mere begrudgery on your part being the prime motivator of all this nonsense.
That's a great strawman argument you came up with there.There is almost this sense that there are swathes of under-occupied social houses to begin with. Are there? Im sure there are incidences of such but again, the complexities of moving prospective tenants in and out of housing under a policy that ties the employment status of prospective tenants is wholly unfeasible.
But you are cool with inter-generational tenancies and single people being given new tenancies in family homes just because their parents lived there... but that's not barmy. You're a gas man!Speaking as a taxpayer, I would not want my taxes wasted further on barmy notions such as this.
“ paying no rent “ - really Brendan ?You are dead right. Just let single people continue living on their own in the city centre in three bed houses paying no rent and leave the families in hotels. Sure it doesn't matter as we can just continuously squeeze the rich and bring in builders from abroad to build social housing on every plot of land in the centre of Dublin.
Brendan
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