UK councils in breach of human rights? - Printable Version +- Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora) +-- Forum: Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Profits before People (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-25.html) +--- Thread: UK councils in breach of human rights? (/thread-12278.html) |
UK councils in breach of human rights? - David Guyatt - 11-03-2014 As the reporter indicates, this was all about a government handout for outsourcing council jobs to the private sector, I think. In the Uk it would require a court order for a council to make a person undergo a lie detector test - and it is unlikely any court would comply anyway - why then is VRA really any different? Were human rights breached? I suspect they were. Quote:Councils spend millions on controversial 'pseudo-science' lie-detector tests to help catch benefit frauds UK councils in breach of human rights? - Magda Hassan - 11-03-2014 Why don't they go get Vodafone and other TNCs to cough up some taxes? I'd love to see the cost benefit analysis for this programme to the amount of fraud discovered. UK councils in breach of human rights? - David Guyatt - 11-03-2014 Magda Hassan Wrote:Why don't they go get Vodafone and other TNCs to cough up some taxes? I'd love to see the cost benefit analysis for this programme to the amount of fraud discovered. I really doubt ANY fraud was discovered. For that to happen, a judge would have to be convinced that the VRA was valid. It isn't. It was all about giving private companies an impetus to take on council jobs --- the old political pocket-filling dogma that private is good, public is wasteful bollocks. Even now the UK government will not take legal steps to insist multinationals pay their fair share of tax. The fear is that the big company's will pull out of the UK -- as if we can't do without Starbucks, Amazon or Pizzahut. Anyway, the opposite is true, I believe. Blighty Plc really is "Treasure Island" for the obsessively greedy buggers. They flock here in droves to make fortunes, pay the most meagre wages possible, on the most favourable terms, plus bear an almost zero tax burden. It's akin to husking out UK society - a case of the old Quack "bleeding" a sick patient. Grrrr. :: |