PassedOut, on 2011-June-30, 10:46, said:
One thing that has gone unnoticed is that the UK actually has a large number of teaching unions and university lecturer unions. The NUT is well known to be rabidly left wing and to give vast amounts of money to the labour party. If also often campaigns on behalf of the labour party, hence Ed milibands silence in the face of strikes which he opposes. In total I think only about 25% of teachers are actually on strike, although it seems hard to get accurate numbers. In the uk the ALT is the other bid union for teachers and it did not strike. Despite claims to teh contrary the BBC news thinks 75% of civil servants turned up to work today. Besides, its after exam season. When the teachers unions are really serious the strike in exam season.
I have to admit, I have much more sympathy for the pensions issue than for any of the other cuts. I would personally shelve many of the pension cuts, although it is certainly right to get rid of final salary pensions which seems to have resulted almost entirely in people gaming the system by always promoting old people near retirement so they can retire on much bigger pensions. Also, I think cutting pensions is only storing up trouble for later. I am especially opposed to the brown changes in the tax regime which have removed almost all the incentives for having a private pension.
helene_t, on 2011-June-30, 10:51, said:
The stiff upper lip doesn't apply to politics. British politics is surprisingly dirty, considering the otherwise polite attitude of the average Brit.
DIrty, but fortunately not corrupt. The "expenses scandal" in the uk was charmingly quaint. The public getting out raged over bogus expenses claims totaling a few thousand pounds over years. In france it seems like their politicians spend that much on their mistresses before breakfast!
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper