Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Life copies satire

My spoof article of six months ago:

Work unpaid or lose all your state pension for three years - this is the new message from the government to the long-term retired. Employment minister Chris Grayling said he is convinced a new 'work for pension' scheme would help to reduce Britain's £100 billion pensions bill.

From the BBC today:

Retired people should be encouraged to do community work such as caring for the "very old" or face losing some of their pension, a peer has suggested.

Lord Bichard, a former benefits chief, said "imaginative" ideas were needed to meet the cost of an ageing society. And although such a move might be controversial, it would stop older people being a "burden on the state".


The correct answer to this is to simply not exempt certain special interest groups from Land Value Tax and to pay them a fair whack in Citizen's Pension, continue to give them 'free' NHS treatment and so on, but hey.

1 comments:

Bayard said...

He must read your blog.
It's dangerous to joke about such things: I will always remember Ben Elton lambasting the Dept of Education as a department with nothing to do (it was all done by the LEAs). "There isn't even a National Curriculum" he jeered. Shortly afterwards, what did we get? A National Curriculum.