Disabled! ...The answer is disabled isn't it?
galmuth
Help, my map doesn't have New Zealand and I got lost
I'm not an Owen Jones cheerleader but if he has 13 sources for his claims without exaggerating or taking things out of context, what legal claim can Raffi possibly have?
Edit: though it might be telling that it's published by a website no one has heard of, rather than something like The Guardian.
Selling out his country to Russia is a matter of principle for Farage, and he'd never sell out his principles.
I've been playing BG3 for about 70h on the steam deck. Performance isn't perfect, but it's definitely playable on 30fps and low graphics. I've just got to Baldurs Gate city and I noticed the audio stutters slightly in busy areas. That's the only noticeable performance issue I've had.
I have only played it on the steam deck so I have nothing to compare it against however. I'd love to play it on something more powerful so I don't have to see it in potato-level graphics tho 😅
True. "Quality of life" is a bit of a weird measurement if they aren't using it as a shorthand for "purchasing power", as it can be pretty subjective.
Like you said, the local amenities where you live can really add to "quality of life". I can walk to a pub, nature reserve, cafe, supermarket, school, or a bunch of other places within a 10 minute walk. I can cycle to work in 20 minutes.
That is fairly common in the UK and I'd think is pretty uncommon in the US.
Ah you're not even from the UK. I'm not sure what the quality of life is like in Mississippi (however you want to measure it) but it's not terrible here outside of London.
I don't have data on hand but from my own experience I can tell you that we do not have an awful quality of life generally speaking, nor do I personally know anyone who is having a terrible quality of life in terms of their buying power and ability to support themselves. I'm able to support my family without issue on my wage.
People are generally struggling a bit more since inflation has taken hold over the last year or so, and there are reports of more people needing to use food banks etc - which is horrific - and there are big issues around home ownership. However it's certainly not that case that the majority of people are in abject poverty.
Personally I'd hate to live in London - it attracts money and it has great public transport, but to me it doesn't feel like a great place to live in many ways and everything is so much more expensive there.
Yes the NHS has been ruined by lack of investment from previous governments, but it is due to get big investments from the new government, so fingers crossed.
Where is that data from? I'd be surprised if the US wasn't worse when considering health insurance, car reliance, etc.
I don't think this is a problem unique to the UK.
Fair enough - you're not completely wrong, looking at it from a wider perspective.
I can't see that ever happening however - the majority of relatively wealthy people are unlikely to ever accept a reduction in their wealth even if it solves climate change, world hunger, whatever.
People want to see an easy solution that doesn't affect them directly. Much more likely is the rise of the far right, riots, etc.
Fixing this problem requires more redistribution of wealth than degrowth. Workers should be paid appropriately for their work, and those at the top should get a smaller slice of the pie.
Capitalism which means that business owners are free to make billions yet those who produce the goods go hungry, is utterly intolerable.
Yeah, it's pretty different in the UK. Different towns, different parks, and different areas of parks, can all have their own rules.
Take this confusing sign for example which caught lots of dog walkers out: