Film, Media & TV1 min ago
Have You Ever Taken Part In A Protest March Or Demonstration?
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If so, for what cause?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I was always being carted about around demos ever since I can remember, both my parents are very politically active. For myself I do PRIDE, I've marched and campaigned about NHS and a few other things that I consider very important but more generally I protest with my purse and boycott companies like Nestle and inform them of how much I've spent in a year on rival products and why I chose to boycott theirs etc, and how many people I have managed to recruit to do likewise. I have a reasonably extensive *** list of companies that I do this with, it may make no difference but it might in the fullness of time.
Personally I boycott them alone for the issues with water, but there is a HUGE list, they are not and have never been a nice company.
http:// listver se.com/ 2018/01 /03/10- outrage ous-nes tle-sca ndals/
http://
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"I also refused to pay my Poll Tax for quite some time,..."
Off topic a bit, but it is hot, why did you fundamentally object to the Community Charge, ken? Bear in mind that it replaced domestic rates and was replaced by Council Tax (identical to domestic rates). Just what was it about the charge that you disagreed with so much? I've asked this question of many people but never really received an answer which helps me understand the issue..
Off topic a bit, but it is hot, why did you fundamentally object to the Community Charge, ken? Bear in mind that it replaced domestic rates and was replaced by Council Tax (identical to domestic rates). Just what was it about the charge that you disagreed with so much? I've asked this question of many people but never really received an answer which helps me understand the issue..
Sorry for the delay, NJ. Just seen your post - and would probably not have seen it had it not been for the last post catching my eye at the right hand side of the site.
Okay, i was in private rented property and prior to the 'Poll Tax', apparently £2 per week of my total rent went to my rates. That equals £104 per year. In comes the Poll Tax and both myself AND my wife each have to pay £298 per year. Total = £596! Fair? Not in my book. Then i find out that a couple of work colleagues were able to pay less because their Tory run council had a thing called 'Transitional Relief', which we in Burnley did not have.
Had the rise in payments been brought in on a gradual basis, i wouldn't have had a problem with it but i also think that a person's earnings, rather than the value of their home, should have been used as a basis for Poll Tax. At the time, i was a semi-skilled welder living in rented property while my next door neighbour ran his own very successful little business and owned his home. Yet we both paid the same PT. Hence the very strong Anti Poll Tax feeling i had. Hope this explains it.
Okay, i was in private rented property and prior to the 'Poll Tax', apparently £2 per week of my total rent went to my rates. That equals £104 per year. In comes the Poll Tax and both myself AND my wife each have to pay £298 per year. Total = £596! Fair? Not in my book. Then i find out that a couple of work colleagues were able to pay less because their Tory run council had a thing called 'Transitional Relief', which we in Burnley did not have.
Had the rise in payments been brought in on a gradual basis, i wouldn't have had a problem with it but i also think that a person's earnings, rather than the value of their home, should have been used as a basis for Poll Tax. At the time, i was a semi-skilled welder living in rented property while my next door neighbour ran his own very successful little business and owned his home. Yet we both paid the same PT. Hence the very strong Anti Poll Tax feeling i had. Hope this explains it.
Pride, in a few different cities. Both political versions and 'party' versions.
Protests against fees, though not any of the really big London ones.
I joined the candlelit vigil in London for the victims of the Orlando shooting, which was very touching. Likewise I also went to a similar kind of thing at a local synagogue for victims of an anti-gay shooting in Tel-Aviv some years ago.
I was at quite a small demo outside the NUS against their 'no-platforming' policies and speech codes. Alas I was experimenting with new ways to style my beard at the time and happened to have one that didn't suit me terribly well. So I'm not proud of the pictures...
I'm sure I remember going to some event protesting the Sochi olympics but I really can't remember details. I was invited by someone I fancied at the time anyway and didn't really pay the event itself much attention...
I was at the protests shortly after Boris Nemtsov's death in Moscow, though I went there more to observe than to participate (not that I wasn't sympathetic or anything, it just felt too intrusive to participate myself on something that really affected so many Russians).
When I was very first starting at university I was invited to an occupation (again, invited by someone I fancied...) but chickened out at the last minute.
I have a feeling there might have been one or two more, but I can't remember them offhand.
Protests against fees, though not any of the really big London ones.
I joined the candlelit vigil in London for the victims of the Orlando shooting, which was very touching. Likewise I also went to a similar kind of thing at a local synagogue for victims of an anti-gay shooting in Tel-Aviv some years ago.
I was at quite a small demo outside the NUS against their 'no-platforming' policies and speech codes. Alas I was experimenting with new ways to style my beard at the time and happened to have one that didn't suit me terribly well. So I'm not proud of the pictures...
I'm sure I remember going to some event protesting the Sochi olympics but I really can't remember details. I was invited by someone I fancied at the time anyway and didn't really pay the event itself much attention...
I was at the protests shortly after Boris Nemtsov's death in Moscow, though I went there more to observe than to participate (not that I wasn't sympathetic or anything, it just felt too intrusive to participate myself on something that really affected so many Russians).
When I was very first starting at university I was invited to an occupation (again, invited by someone I fancied...) but chickened out at the last minute.
I have a feeling there might have been one or two more, but I can't remember them offhand.
Thanks for the reply, ken. Been away for a couple of days.
"At the time, i was a semi-skilled welder living in rented property while my next door neighbour ran his own very successful little business and owned his home. Yet we both paid the same PT. Hence the very strong Anti Poll Tax feeling i had. Hope this explains it."
I understand your gripes about the sudden increase. There should have been more of a transition arrangement. However, the issue you raised above is just as evident with Council Tax. There is a house near me where a couple and their three adult children live. They all have decent jobs, so five decent incomes coming in. They pay the same Council Tax as their neighbours, a retired couple living on fairly low pensions.
The same applied to domestic rates which the Community Charge replaced.
"At the time, i was a semi-skilled welder living in rented property while my next door neighbour ran his own very successful little business and owned his home. Yet we both paid the same PT. Hence the very strong Anti Poll Tax feeling i had. Hope this explains it."
I understand your gripes about the sudden increase. There should have been more of a transition arrangement. However, the issue you raised above is just as evident with Council Tax. There is a house near me where a couple and their three adult children live. They all have decent jobs, so five decent incomes coming in. They pay the same Council Tax as their neighbours, a retired couple living on fairly low pensions.
The same applied to domestic rates which the Community Charge replaced.
And forgot to comment on the other shortcoming of the Poll Tax: it would have been far fairer if the amount charged was standard across the country. There is no justification for local variations - they just give busybody councillors something to feel important about when they set their local taxes.
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