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#brexitreality
allyjason · 1 year
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PLACE WHERE YOU MAKE MEMORIES WITH YOU FAMILY AND FRIENDS AND CLICK SOME AMAZING PIC DONT FORGETS TO SHARE YOUR OPINION WITH US. www.oxfordbrunchbar.co.uk 01865 655922
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crhlabour · 2 years
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3 years ago, we jumped off the cliff. We've smashed up on the rocks but the Tory government are saying we're flying. #Brexitisntworking #BrexitReality https://t.co/pOgI80NNvX
— Labour CRH 🌹 (@CRHLabour) Jan 31, 2023
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theotherjourney7 · 3 years
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“Woke up this morning (19 January 2022) to the radio talking about the cost of living rising a further 5%. It infuriates me the index that they use for this calculation, which grossly underestimates the real cost of inflation as it happens to people with the least. Allow me to briefly explain.
This time last year, the cheapest pasta in my local supermarket (one of the Big Four), was 29p for 500g. Today it’s 70p. That’s a 141% price increase as it hits the poorest and most vulnerable households.
This time last year, the cheapest rice at the same supermarket was 45p for a kilogram bag. Today it’s £1 for 500g. That’s a 344% price increase as it hits the poorest and most vulnerable households.
Baked beans: were 22p, now 32p. A 45% price increase year on year.
Canned spaghetti. Was 13p, now 35p. A price increase of 169%.
Bread. Was 45p, now 58p. A price increase of 29%.
Curry sauce. Was 30p, now 89p. A price increase of 196%.
A bag of small apples. Was 59p, now 89p (and the apples are even smaller!) A price increase of 51%.
Mushrooms were 59p for 400g. They’re now 57p for 250g. A price increase of 56%. (This practise, of making products smaller while keeping them the same price, is known in the retail industry as ‘shrinkflation’ and its insidious as hell because it’s harder to immediately spot.)
Peanut butter. Was 62p, now £1.50. A price increase of 142%.
These are just the ones that I know off the top of my head - there will be many many more examples! When I started writing my recipe blog ten years ago, I could feed myself and my son on £10 a week. (I’ll find the original shopping list later and price it up for today’s prices.)
The system by which we measure the impact of inflation is fundamentally flawed - it completely ignores the reality and the REAL price rises for people on minimum wages, zero hour contracts, food bank clients, and millions more.
But I guess when the vast majority of our media were privately educated and came from the same handful of elite universities, nobody thinks to actually check in with anyone out here in the world to see how we’re doing. (Fucking terribly, thanks for asking.)
Every time there’s a news bulletin on the rising cost of living, I hope that today might be the day that that some real journalism happens, and someone stops to consider those of us outside of the bubble. Maybe today might finally be that day.
(But seeing I’ve been banging on about this for a decade now, it’s probably not going to be. Thanks for reading anyway, I appreciate it.)
And just to add:
- an upmarket ready meal range was £7.50 ten years ago, and is still £7.50 today.
- a high-end stores ‘Dine In For Two For £10’ has been £10 for as long as I can remember.
- my local supermarket had 400+ items in their value range, it’s now 91 (and counting down)
The margins are always, always calculated to squeeze the belts of those who can least afford it, and massage the profits of those who have money to spare. And nothing demonstrates that inequality quite so starkly as tracking the prices of ‘luxury’ food vs ‘actual essentials’. 😤
To return to the luxury ready meal example, if the price of that had risen at the same rate as the cheapest rice in the supermarket, that £7.50 lasagne would now cost £25.80.
Dine In For £10 would be £34.40.
We’re either all in this together, or we aren’t.
(Spoiler: we aren’t)
Now, picture if you will, the demographic of the voter who has kept the current Party in power for the last 11 years. Imagine the Chancellor having to explain to them that their precious microwave dinner now cost almost four times what it did yesterday.
Yeah, didn’t think so.
I mean of all the things, the Prime Minister claiming that he's cutting the cost of living while the price of basic food products shoot up by THREE
HUNDRED AND FORTY FOUR PERCENT is the one I'm properly angry enough to riot over.”-Jake Monroe
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labourites · 2 years
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The Tories are panicking about people seeing them as the high-tax Party. Not the Party of austerity or people thrown into poverty, not the Party of 200,000 Covid dead, not the Party of Windrush or Grenfell or the Party who are removing our democracy and privatising the NHS then ?
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bristolforeurope · 3 years
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"Hi UK, Denmark’s supermarkets are fully stocked come buy our produce. And France’s, Germany’s and everyone else in the EU. It isnt #Covid that has broken your supply chain, what is happening now is the #BrexitFoodShortages your remainer friends warned you about. #BrexitReality " https://twitter.com/MettePrime/status/1425079322847625231 https://www.instagram.com/p/CScAFFtsEj4/?utm_medium=tumblr
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wineworldnews · 4 years
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The Brexit effect: will fine-wine prices rise? via Club Oenologique https://bit.ly/2MPX4Zt #wine #Brexit #BrexitReality
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adamwittek · 4 years
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The wait is over: Parental #GermanChristmas #CarePackage has finally arrived. 📦🎁 Postage increased by 57% (!) due to #BrexitReality, but the #ChristmasBiscuits with #FaceMask make it totally worth it. 🍪😷 https://www.instagram.com/p/CKJiZj3H5TJ/?igshid=fub3dwoaldag
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georgesmithlove · 4 years
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It is now in the transformation period of creating a new relationship with the EU. During the transition period, it doesn’t have an EU policy, but will still abide by EU Rules.
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thecpdiary · 2 years
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What Getting Brexit Done Means
I openly talk about Brexit on my blog, because it’s still making headlines and the issues with the UK getting Brexit done isn’t going away. As the decision to leave the EU is playing out, we are seeing just how bad it is affecting the population. Getting my thoughts out into the open always helps, so I continue to write.
How did Brexit come about?
Brexit was brought about through selfish ideologies that only serves those making the Brexit decision. Had sensible, objective, rational and responsible decisions been made, politicians would never have chosen to get Brexit done.
What does it exactly mean?
It means hardships are set to continue. We’re already seeing fuel prices continue to rise. Supply chain issues, the war in Ukraine and Brexit have all played their part in Brexit, leaving millions of people struggling to afford hot water and basic home heating in the UK.
It is important politicians don’t shirk from their responsibilities for the extreme unprecedented hardships millions of people are about to face. (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)
People cutting back on the essentials
Many people have already had to cut back on food and energy essentials, with many also having to choose between the two. Those with little, or no income, are now having to use food banks instead of supermarkets.
What the Brexit Stats show
The stats show that around 24 million people in Great Britain have been cutting energy use in their homes, with 16 million people cutting back on essentials including food, the Office for National Statistics has warned.
The latest cost of living survey from ONS found that in Great Britain, 9 in 10 adults said their cost of living had increased, as households were hammered by rising inflation.
So, the most common causes are:
Food shop increases (94%) Increase in the price of fuel (77%) Increase in gas or electricity bills (82%)
Now millions of families are running down on their savings to be able to afford rising prices, or are cutting spending, or putting more on credit. “More than a third of those whose cost of living had gone up cut back spending on food and essentials (equal to around 16 million people).
Almost a quarter (23%, around 11 million people) used savings to cover costs, and 13% (around 6 million people) said they were using more credit than usual.”
Source: https://www.guardian.com
For more inspirational, life-changing blogs, please check out my site https://www.thecpdiary.com
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berlinbrent · 5 years
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A viewer shared this image as the UK left the EU. She didn’t venture a guess when I asked how long she expects the continent to look after Britain’s star. #Brexit #brexitreality (at Berlin, Germany) https://www.instagram.com/p/B8AXWCrIf_K/?igshid=uir6eyryw67x
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theotherjourney7 · 3 years
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“UK energy prices increased by around 50% yesterday (3 February 2022) but the cost of producing most energy has not increased. Nuclear and renewables cost the same to produce, for example. So, the price increases deliver very large profits to some energy companies. Why is Sunak happy about that?
The problem is energy is priced at the cost of the most expensive unit sold. As a result, Russia can push up gas prices and create an economic crisis in the UK. If we had a nationalised energy system that supplied our energy at the average price we could avoid this.
Instead of our energy being priced at the cost of the most expensive source available we’d instead pay the price set by a basket of energy sources. We’d see nothing like the proposed cost increase as a result, and the crisis for families across the UK could have been avoided.
This, though, would require the government to admit three things. First, the energy market does not work so, second, energy privatisation was a mistake and, third, the state could and should do this job because it can do so better than any market system.
Our government is not going to admit that. So, instead energy companies are going to be allowed to profit, 5 million households are going to be in fuel poverty and a wholly inappropriate and unfocused support system is going to deliver a bizarre package of support.
In that case there is one conclusion to reach. Because the government prefers its pro-market dogma to helping deliver what’s best for the people of the UK we’re going to have a massive cost of living crisis from which profits will flow to a few, inevitably.
I believe in markets when they're the right mechanism to use. When they are they can work to benefit us all. But artificial markets for energy that deliver worst possible outcomes for people and best possible outcomes for companies are just wrong, and that is what we have.
The right response to our energy crisis is not to keep existing structures going. It is to accept that the energy market is failing and to bring the state licenced profiteering to an end and rebuild an energy system run in the interests of people and not profits.
The political party that says so is onto a winner. They should be taking note. The energy system we have cannot continue. Who will have the courage to say so?“-Richard Murphy
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labourites · 2 years
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One Tory MP sexually molested a child. Another Tory MP offloaded the elderly into care homes where they infected others and died. A third Tory MP was caught watching porn. Yet another Tory MP partied while people died and repeatedly lied to Parliament. What a track record!
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wineworldnews · 4 years
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very interesting to read=Cutting ties: What a no-deal Brexit would mean for the UK wine trade https://bit.ly/3dZkxAk #wine #wintrade
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stephiewoodcock · 3 years
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#Britain #BrexitShambles #BrexitReality #StarTrek https://www.instagram.com/p/CUSmc9-qoiN/?utm_medium=tumblr
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pedro-demetriou · 5 years
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🇬🇧 B R E X I T 🇬🇧 Finally we are free! Bring on the blue passports and dat sweet-ass 50p💰 Totally worth it🦁 #illustration #comicbooks #comics #illustratorsofinstagram #illustrationdaily #makersgonnamake #makersofinstagram #artistsoninstagram #portraits #portraitillustration #brexitparty #brexitmemes #brexitbadboi #brexit #brexitmeansbrexit #eu #europeanunion #brexitreality #borisjohnson #political #politicalcartoons #politics #jacobreesmogg https://www.instagram.com/p/B8AKif2AF1W/?igshid=1focbdoeqgmko
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proffotoevents · 5 years
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From 1973, the year I was born, to 2020, what a 47 years that was, here we go: LIVE: Countdown is on - Farewell parties as UK prepares to leave EU | Politics News | Sky News #brexiteve #brexitcelebration #brexitreality #brexitday #brexit https://www.instagram.com/p/B8AEpRqhjN1/?igshid=1j4puvng60m20
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