Britain: a place where people born into wealth and privilege can rise into even more wealth and privilege |
Learning
disabilities, terminal illness and cancer? Sounds like you need to be getting ready for work, you little slacker.
Isn’t it annoying when you hear about workshy shirkers loafing
around on sickness benefit when they could be filling call-centres and Primark store-rooms?
Take twenty seven year old Ruth Anim, who apparently “can’t work” just because
she needs a “one-to-one carer” and has such severe learning disabilities she
can’t even cross a road. Since when did a terminal illness stop anyone manning
the phones at Claims Direct? Are we going to let so-called ‘cancer sufferers’ lie
around enjoying their chemo when they could be made to do low-paid shifts for big
companies?
Another lazy good-for-nothing avoiding work |
It annoys the government at any rate, who are busily turfing
mountains of the idle sick onto jobseeker’s allowance with a secret weapon
known as its ‘Work Capability Assessment’ (actually a New Labour baby, for the
record). Because this is a party which believes in helping yourself. More of
these claimants need to follow the example of Stephen Hill, who was successfully
forced by the government back into work – so successfully, in fact, that he keeled
over from a heart attack 39 days later. Now that’s
the kind of determination everyone’s looking for! Just look at the Cabinet
itself, which is full of inspiring examples of
riches-to-riches. Did they just sit there lying around waiting for somebody
else to make it happen? No: they pulled their finger out, gritted their teeth,
and inherited substantial sums of money. And if they can do it, so can’t you.
Let’s face it, austerity has to be borne equally, which is why the hugely wealthy families and friends of the Cabinet are committed to not bearing much of it. In
fact the rich have fascinatingly novel
approaches to taxation – which revolve around a complex Economics concept known as ‘not
paying any’. Not that any of this ‘tax avoidance’ could be called ‘tax
avoidance’ or anything dirty like that. It’s just a different way of working. Thinking
outside the box, if you like. Currently the wealthy are thinking so far outside
the box on the issue of tax that they’ve actually flown the box to an offshore
haven, probably via private jet.
Cameron's pad: just like you and me, really |
Top Shop
owner Philip Green, for example, was so excitingly progressive in his approach
to tax on his dividend of £1.2 billion (the biggest pay check in British
corporate history) that he channelled it, excitingly and progressively,
straight to his wife in Barbados, without paying a single penny – a £285m loss
to the taxpayer. David Cameron was so impressed he
made him a senior consultant to the government.
Of course
you could say that it’s sickening to
watch a Tory cabinet born into enormous privilege attack sick people for not
having the energy to work in a call centre sweatshop twelve hours a day. You could say that all this is a cynical and
predatory attack on the most defenceless in society from those who wield huge
amounts of power, thinly disguised beneath a veneer of hard work and entrepreneurialism.
Because ‘austerity’ is a magic word that’s full
of magical surprises, and one of the most surprising of all is that it means
something completely different when it comes to ordinary people – who instead face
an exciting new era of falling wages and benefits cuts, while the
government does everything it possibly can to protect its cabal of landed
gentry, Royals, bankers, media moguls and fox hunting visitors from the
nineteenth century from the tiniest bit of financial pain.
All of
which raises a new possibility for trying something radical. You listening? Okay.
Developed by economists and tested a little bit in places like Scandinavia, this
drastic and untested measure is known by economists as ‘taxing the rich’, and could,
if done gently, do some amazing things. Michael Meacher, Labour MP for Oldham West
and Royton, has pointed out that the wealthiest 1,000 persons (just 0.003% of
the adult population) in Britain possess ‘enough for themselves alone to pay
off the entire current UK budget deficit and still leave them with £30 billion
to spare.’ Luckily our own beloved Tory government is unlikely to listen to
such crackpot ideas! So let’s get back to hounding those
terminally ill, learning difficulties, heart-problem loafers into underpaid
jobs, in the hope that it might raise a few pence here and there. That’s thinking out of the box – carry on like that and there’s a good
chance some of these people might end up in one.