Quote Him="Him"As Rock God says I think you've misunderstood me, I don't think that at all, I was just making the point why should certain benefits be restricted and people on certain benefits patronised and demonised but not others.'"
Ah. I see.
Quote Him="Him"As others point out, why is it a totally different animal? It's a benefit provided by the taxpayer. '"
It is wrong to equate pensions as a benefit like other benefits. The state retirement pension was always supposed to be your return out of the pot, for the many years you had spent putting money into the pot, usually around 50.
Obviously this situation modified, when you had large numbers of people who for whatever reason, were not gainfully employed for large swathes of their lives, and so did not actually put anything into the pot. There are anecdotally now plenty of whole families generations of whom have, officially, never worked and all of whom exist as professional benefit claimants.
However, they are by no means you typical OAP of today, who come from a different generation and a different time, and who invariably did work hard and long, often for very low pay, and the pensions I am talking about I would certainly view as the state paying them its share of the bargain, that is, a retirement pension which they have EARNED, by defined rules and figures, and to which they are entitled. You can't change the rules after their working life has finished and they have retired, and suddenly claim they are some sort of scroungers.
Then you have the categories of people who paid lots of money into private or employer-based pension pots. As we know, many such people have been financially raped, with disastrous results for the anticipated decent private pensions for which they have paid, but the money has disappeared.
Then yu have the categories of other people who would have had a certain income from their pensions, but find that it has been decimated largely by reason of successive chancellor's repeated tax raids on pension funds.
Then you have the banking farrago and the disastrous knock-on effects for those pension funds which were in significant degree invested in various equities, the prices of which collapsed as all the banking bubbles burst.
Finally, making the new rules or floating the latest proposals, you have people like the scumbag Bichard who talks a good game about some old granny being a burden on the state, and should be made to care for other old people etc or have pension cuts, when all his life he was paid from the public purse, and since he was in his fifties he has been scoring maybe ÂŁ150K a year as his "pension" from public money, and will continue to do so till he croaks.
Somebody ought to do the maths - cut every gold-plated civil service pension like Bichard's by 50%, and let's see what that produces. THOSE are the sort of benefits that should be in the thieves' sights, but of course there is no fookin chance of that happening at all. If we are so badly off that we really do have to further financially rape some old guy who toiled in a mill or on a bin wagon or a bus for 45 years, and was so poorly paid that he never could save up any reserve let alone a private cosy pension, let's make him the final target - not the bloody first.