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# Struggling to see exactly where you're coming from
I agree in the most part with what you're saying about all the finance shit that Thatcher brought in but we never had the money for a mortage until later in life and then with the husband falling ill fell into arrears now having to cope with spiralling debts and faceless, heartless debt companies - maybe you could say that was our own fault for aiming higher than we should have but we could never have foreseen the sudden illness that basically halved our income - maybe you could once again blame us for not taking out adequate insurance for such an eventuality - but you know shit happens! So I see your Rant against Rant in some parts to be quite hurtful of lower income people who desperately want to break free of the poverty void but instead get thrust further back than when they started - in some respects what you are saying 'You're low income - work harder, aim lower you shits and don't expect more than the Big Man will hand you as a wage packet!'
/tl;dr
(, Fri 24 Jun 2011, 10:20, archived)
# I remember when
there would be more of an outcry that our manufacturing industry is now proudly proclaimed ( by Evan Davis ) to be bigger than it was thanks to us selling the most up to date ways for other countries to kill each other and its own people. Huzzah!

I also remember the 21st night of September. Love was changing the mind of pretenders, while chasing the clouds away.

I remember, too, a distant bell and stars that fell
Just like the rain out of the blue-ooh-ooh-ooh-hoo-hoo-hoo
(, Fri 24 Jun 2011, 12:23, archived)
# Please don't think that this is aimed
at people who are below the poverty line. It's a terrible state of affairs that so many people do live in poverty. The implication is not that "it was much better when people were content to work in lower paid jobs" but rather that *there existed a time when* much of the UK workforce were in lower paid jobs which we'd generally regard as rather uninteresting and quite hard work these days. It's true that some of the UK workforce still do work in such jobs. Heck, a lot people *in the world* are still in this situation (go here en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poverty for actual stats and stuff).

The point is that it'd be nice if people who weren't in this situation (i.e. who are relatively well off, and I count myself in this bracket) would realise how fortunate they are and not to piss and moan about how expensive their iPhone was and how they could only afford to go skiing /once/ this year. I imagine that a little bit of humility would be welcomed by the people who actually are in poverty and whose lives the current economic climate (the cuts etc.) is making really miserable.

And please don't think I'm saying that everyone should just put up and shut up. We really need to do something about all this! The very last sentence is a call to action for people who are not truly happy with their situation to try and do something about it (and I know that this is not always possible and that you can't necessarily change the circumstances you are a victim of) instead of just proselytizing through your facebook status and either trying to guilt others into doing the same (you know the whole tear-jerking "I know only 1% of you will repost this but...") or thinking that somehow the government (or whomever) is suddenly going to log on and go: "Wow look at all the people updating their Facebook statuses - they must be really upset about something so we'd better change it." I guess my point is that moaning about something definitely_isn't_going_to_change_it so why not at least /attempt/ to do something vaguely constructive instead.

I'm not going to provide an exegesis of the whole thing because it is just a load of ephemeral bullshit I posted as my facebook status. It's a parody, and not a particularly good one as it's an example of exactly the kind of crap it purports to be ridiculing.
(, Fri 24 Jun 2011, 16:09, archived)