Video wird geladen...

Video konnte nicht geladen werden

Zur Startseite

1,698,287 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr •via X (Twitter)

11 Kommentare

Profilbild von Jason
Jasonvor 1 Jahr

How is taxing the rich MASSIVELY PUNISHING them??

Profilbild von Trump2024Film
Trump2024Filmvor 1 Jahr

How will you answer?

Profilbild von terry christian
terry christianvor 1 Jahr

Piers Morgan is an arsehole

Profilbild von Chris Swan
Chris Swanvor 1 Jahr

You also had far less immigration.

Profilbild von JJ
JJvor 1 Jahr

This is the most idiotic take I’ve heard all week! You’re obviously not a student of logical fallacies huh 🤣 A is true. B is also true. Therefore À caused B. Fucking retard. Know your LOGIC moron

Profilbild von Britain for Trump
Britain for Trumpvor 1 Jahr

There was no mass immigration back then.

Profilbild von Colin Monaghan
Colin Monaghanvor 1 Jahr

Likewise…both parents born in 1930s and raised in council house tenements…my dad worked as an engineer and was able to buy his own house and raise four kids on his salary alone…1950-1970 was the fastest period of consistent economic growth in UK in the 20th century - 3% a year - while the top rate tax was 91-98%…of course there was a real Labour Party during this period that represented working people…that died with Tony Blair in 1997 and is long gone.

Profilbild von Kellie-Jay Keen
Kellie-Jay Keenvor 1 Jahr

Gary from accounts. Property prices are impacted by not enough housing, foreign and corporate property blocking and other market forces. The rising house prices versus wages that can’t keep up is why people cannot afford them.

Profilbild von Eric Chartman
Eric Chartmanvor 1 Jahr

Sure, taxing the rich more works...

Profilbild von Douglas Karr
Douglas Karrvor 1 Jahr

1. Tax burden was ~36.1% of GDP in 1950, it going to hit 38.3% of GDP by 2027-28. 2. Since then, you’ve added Capital Gains Tax (1965), Corporation Tax (1965), Value Added Tax (VAT) (1973), Petroleum Revenue Tax (1975), Inheritance Tax (1986). Hidden taxes on everything. 3. 47% of public sector workers had employer pension contributions of at least 20%, compared to only 2% in the private sector. 4. Federal employment has skyrocketed to 6.12 million, representing about 18% of the UK’s total workforce compared to less than 4% in the 1950s.

Profilbild von Hunter Hellman
Hunter Hellmanvor 1 Jahr

Could buy a house in his 20’s, but couldn’t keep the lights on, because the entire country couldn’t.

Ähnliche Videos