Superb message, Martin!
Bring on the campaign!
Best,
Tim
From:
hertfordshiretpa@... [mailto:hertfordshiretpa@...] On Behalf Of stalbanstpa
Sent: 19 October 2008 11:40
To:
hertfordshiretpa@...
Subject: [hertfordshiretpa]
Campaign update - October 2008
Dear Activist
We are now back into the serious season. And what a way to start!
National media has woken up to the concept of the public sector pensions deficit
- giving the issue 10 minutes of airtime at 8.10am BBC Radio 4
"Today" programme - whilst government is pouring billions into the
banking sector to keep it from collapsing. At the bottom of the same
bucket, however, guess who's lost billions of pounds in deposits? Yes,
the same public sector put money in Icelandic banks. No wonder this
arrogant government abused the Terrorism Act to confiscate Icelandic
assets. There's a warning there for all citizens, bankers or otherwise.
The economic situation looks grim, too. Rampant deflation is going to
trigger a recession, the Bank of England is about to reduce interest rates for
GBP (the overnight commercial deposit rate for USD went negative on Friday
17-Oct-08!) and so we can expect the value of GBP to slump.
The slump in GBP will cause re-inflation via imports, as - arithmetically -
lower exchange rates make imported goods cost more. Imports? Oh
yes: everything from French electricity, via Arabic oil and Kenyan runner
beans.
So, within 12 months, expect stagflation: a falling economy (GDP slows or goes
negative), rollocking inflation and soaring interest rates to combat said
inflation. Oops.
Meanwhile, the public sector's splurging over the past ten years will make the
state bankrupt. With no additional tax receipts to match the additional
expenditure of the state, any intelligent state would retract now. But,
so far, this hasn't happened. And it's unlikely to: unions are
threatening strike action to deter the public sector from taking necessary
action to protect its financial viability (what little of that is left).
Public sector management being weak, overpaid box-tickers (without the gumption
to do a proper wealth-creating job in the private sector), the unions will have
already won.
Yet no political party is talking about tax tactics at all, let alone financial
strategy or even thinking the unthinkable: two acts of Parliament that would
permanently, arbitrarily and unilaterally convert public sector unfunded
pensions into private sector funded defined contribution schemes.
Not one single politician has commented on the root cause of both public sector
splurging and banking sector greed: lack of individual, personal
liability. Make individual employees liable for the consequences of their
actions - unlimited, personal, financial liability! - and watch responsibility
suddenly appear out of nowhere, without a regulation in sight.
On the contrary (again!), our incompetent politicians are desparately trying to
keep the lid on the debate of public sector fat cats, ranging from the greedy
CEOs of local authorities to the humble non-job jobsworth, keeping his salary
very quiet.
Some of the more economically illiterate politicians strongly support Lord
Turner's statement that he will increase the pay of the Financial Services
Authority (of which he is CEO) to "attract the best" to regulate
better the City. Sounds like tripe to me. The only people he will
recruit are the money-hungry don't-give-a-
Looks like our work is cut out for us this year!
And, in Hertfordshire, it starts on Saturday 1 November 2008 at the Hatfield
Farmer's Market, 9am to 12pm. The group's monthly meeting takes
place on Tuesday 11 November 2008, 6.30pm to 8pm at the Hatfield Arms.
Kind regards
Martin