comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 18 minutes ago
What year did we change the definition of poverty to 60% or less than the median household income? Oh yeah 2010...
Causes of poverty
Disability - Disabled adults are twice as likely to live in low income households as non-disabled adults.
Illness
Mental illness
Low intelligence - People with an IQ of 60 or below are speculated to be in danger of poverty and homelessness in the US in 2006.
Unemployment
Underemployment - having a low-paid job with wages lower than the living wage, often the minimum wage, and working part-time.
Being born to poor parents
Lack of social capital
Inadequate management of finances
Being a lone parent - half of all lone parents are on a low income
Racial discrimination
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Very good points raised.
These are the real issues that should be discussed and tackled.
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 50 seconds ago
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 1 minute ago
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 3 minutes ago
comment by What would Stuart Pearce do? Rampant (U3126)
posted 24 seconds ago
Seems to be a lack of appreciation that family situations/dynamics can change due to a multitude of external circumstances.
The simple fact is that millions of families struggle to make ends meet. Sometimes due to no fault of their own.
I recall reading a few comments condemning a parent for having a smart phone but at the same time struggling to make ends meet.
Owning a mobile phone is not a luxury but a modern day essential.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ok so let’s explore it. The parents lose their jobs unexpectedly (covid for example).
Universals credit they will get their property outgoings (rent or mortgage) covered in full and receive money on top of that I think it’s around £600 per month for a married couple living together. They have a child let’s say, they get another £93 per month for that child. So that’s around £700 per month with no rent or mortgage to pay. Food & bills, that’s it.
The vast, vast majority of people in this situation will be absolutely fine for let’s say a year until they both find suitable work again.
My household bills (excluding council tax) come to around £230 per month, 2x sim only contracts for £20 per month total.
You’re not living like a king by any means but you have food on the table, heating, hot water, mobile phones & internet.
Welfare spending increases decade after decade after decade.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Your knowledge of the benefits system is appalling. Please don't comment on this anymore.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Why what’s wrong? You can correct me you know?
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Well you think you get your rent covered for a start. You don't, it's capped and the rest has to come out of your UC.
I could go on but as said earlier I cba and that's because people like you are always so confidently wrong about subjects you have little to no knoweldge of it's nauseating.
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 1 minute ago
comment by What would Stuart Pearce do? Rampant (U3126)
posted 24 seconds ago
Seems to be a lack of appreciation that family situations/dynamics can change due to a multitude of external circumstances.
The simple fact is that millions of families struggle to make ends meet. Sometimes due to no fault of their own.
I recall reading a few comments condemning a parent for having a smart phone but at the same time struggling to make ends meet.
Owning a mobile phone is not a luxury but a modern day essential.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ok so let’s explore it. The parents lose their jobs unexpectedly (covid for example).
Universals credit they will get their property outgoings (rent or mortgage) covered in full and receive money on top of that I think it’s around £600 per month for a married couple living together. They have a child let’s say, they get another £93 per month for that child. So that’s around £700 per month with no rent or mortgage to pay. Food & bills, that’s it.
The vast, vast majority of people in this situation will be absolutely fine for let’s say a year until they both find suitable work again.
My household bills (excluding council tax) come to around £230 per month, 2x sim only contracts for £20 per month total.
You’re not living like a king by any means but you have food on the table, heating, hot water, mobile phones & internet.
Welfare spending increases decade after decade after decade.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Heat, electricity, school costs, clothing, creditors, (UK personal debt is enormous (average 60k per household).
https://themoneycharity.org.uk/money-statistics/#:~:text=UK%20Personal%20Debt,including%20mortgages%2C%20was%20%C2%A360%2C526.
The facts are (whether we agree with it or not) is the vast majority of people on the breadline are not okay, hence why we have seen trends like this:
https://www.statista.com/statistics/382695/uk-foodbank-users/#:~:text=Number%20of%20people%20using%20food%20banks%20in%20the%20UK%202008%2D2020&text=In%202019%2F20%20approximately%201.9,26%20thousand%20in%202008%2F09.
...in regard to the use of foodbanks.
comment by CurrentlyStuckIntheUK (U11181)
posted 2 hours, 3 minutes ago
comment by VOF - Its all about believing .... (U17124)
posted 4 minutes ago
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 59 seconds ago
comment by VOF - Its all about believing .... (U17124)
posted 49 minutes ago
Funny how the parents of these kids, not all, but certainly a good proportion, never miss out on the latest phones, TV's and alcohol/drugs.
It's always someone else to blame though i find. Never there prioritising.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Absolute nonsense
----------------------------------------------------------------------
It's not though. It's just many don't like the thought of it.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
What is it based on?
We had an MP lie about people giving away food voucher for drugs yet nothing to actually back it up.
Can you back up your statement? What proof are there that a large number of people are doing this? What is the percentage?
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I had a summer job at school, I used to help our local milkman, milk tokens were forever being exchanged for cigs, so it wouldn't surprise me if food vouchers were being swapped for drugs.
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 2 minutes ago
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 50 seconds ago
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 1 minute ago
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 3 minutes ago
comment by What would Stuart Pearce do? Rampant (U3126)
posted 24 seconds ago
Seems to be a lack of appreciation that family situations/dynamics can change due to a multitude of external circumstances.
The simple fact is that millions of families struggle to make ends meet. Sometimes due to no fault of their own.
I recall reading a few comments condemning a parent for having a smart phone but at the same time struggling to make ends meet.
Owning a mobile phone is not a luxury but a modern day essential.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ok so let’s explore it. The parents lose their jobs unexpectedly (covid for example).
Universals credit they will get their property outgoings (rent or mortgage) covered in full and receive money on top of that I think it’s around £600 per month for a married couple living together. They have a child let’s say, they get another £93 per month for that child. So that’s around £700 per month with no rent or mortgage to pay. Food & bills, that’s it.
The vast, vast majority of people in this situation will be absolutely fine for let’s say a year until they both find suitable work again.
My household bills (excluding council tax) come to around £230 per month, 2x sim only contracts for £20 per month total.
You’re not living like a king by any means but you have food on the table, heating, hot water, mobile phones & internet.
Welfare spending increases decade after decade after decade.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Your knowledge of the benefits system is appalling. Please don't comment on this anymore.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Why what’s wrong? You can correct me you know?
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Well you think you get your rent covered for a start. You don't, it's capped and the rest has to come out of your UC.
I could go on but as said earlier I cba and that's because people like you are always so confidently wrong about subjects you have little to no knoweldge of it's nauseating.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
When you make a new claim for Universal Credit your housing costs will usually be paid as part of your Universal Credit payment.
How much is it capped at? Do you know? You don’t have to be a whiny prck about things you know? Just have a conversation?
comment by Just Shoot (U10408)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Just give me a minute will you?
I am on the way, its not easy to get across borders,
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Easy! Just get a dinghy. 👍
----------------------------------------------------------------------
rubber dinghy rapids bro
comment by Just Shoot (U10408)
posted 3 hours, 22 minutes ago
Please tell me the last time a child died of starvation in the UK, not including parental neglect?
----------------------------------------------------------------------
especially one where the parents have the latest i phone, & a 60 inch smart TV
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
comment by Just Shoot (U10408)
posted 1 minute ago
The truth of the matter is that the poor have never had it so good. Harsh, but true. That's not to say it's a fair system because it isn't.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
It was an awful lot better 15 years ago so wrong again.
I want to hear from Robbing. He’s such a fountain of knowledge about universal credit, it should be very quick and easy to answer my questions about it.
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
Fackin right
These people want to be watching the four Yorkshiremen sketch...then they'd know poverty
"We used to live in a shoe box in middle o road"...
"cardboard one"...
"aye"
"you were lucky"
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 11 seconds ago
I want to hear from Robbing. He’s such a fountain of knowledge about universal credit, it should be very quick and easy to answer my questions about it.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Did you miss the part where I said I cba? It's not my job to elevate your ignorance is it? It's roughly £450 fwiw but it depends on whether you have the audacity to have a spare bedroom so your child can stay. You can quite easily do a calculation online.
UC doesnt take into account any other bills either but you have to be online to claim it. It also doesn't take into account such things as maintenance so in other words paying towards a child you can't claim for.
Google is your friend. I'm not.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ue7wM0QC5LE
I implore you to watch this...if you've not seen it
comment by Just Shoot (U10408)
posted 2 minutes ago
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 30 seconds ago
comment by Just Shoot (U10408)
posted 1 minute ago
The truth of the matter is that the poor have never had it so good. Harsh, but true. That's not to say it's a fair system because it isn't.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
It was an awful lot better 15 years ago so wrong again.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on what?
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on the amount of support you could claim and the huge increase in child poverty since.
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
Google is your friend. I'm not.
———
comment by Just Shoot (U10408)
posted 3 minutes ago
60k debt when it includes the mortgage is peanuts.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
60k is the *average* debt.
Low-income households over the last ten years (as the United Nations report highlighted) has seen a stark raise in consumer debt.
As more and more normal household purchases / bills/ food are being purchased via credit card (average interest @ 20%). Multiple charities, trade bodies, debt support groups across the country (including the FCA) have universally reached the same conclusions over the last number of years in regard to consumer debt.
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
Not even mentioned being sanctioned because you don't want to work night shifts in a pizza factory 15 miles away.
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 1 minute ago
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 11 seconds ago
I want to hear from Robbing. He’s such a fountain of knowledge about universal credit, it should be very quick and easy to answer my questions about it.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Did you miss the part where I said I cba? It's not my job to elevate your ignorance is it? It's roughly £450 fwiw but it depends on whether you have the audacity to have a spare bedroom so your child can stay. You can quite easily do a calculation online.
UC doesnt take into account any other bills either but you have to be online to claim it. It also doesn't take into account such things as maintenance so in other words paying towards a child you can't claim for.
Google is your friend. I'm not.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Well well well Robbing. I know for a fact that you’re wrong. A former colleague of mine gets her rent of £825 per month paid for and gets £400 per month allowance on top of that. Every month, without question. I’ve seen the online paperwork.
“people like you are always so confidently wrong about subjects you have little to no knoweldge of it's nauseating.”
😂😂😂😂
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 3 minutes ago
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 11 seconds ago
I want to hear from Robbing. He’s such a fountain of knowledge about universal credit, it should be very quick and easy to answer my questions about it.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Did you miss the part where I said I cba? It's not my job to elevate your ignorance is it? It's roughly £450 fwiw but it depends on whether you have the audacity to have a spare bedroom so your child can stay. You can quite easily do a calculation online.
UC doesnt take into account any other bills either but you have to be online to claim it. It also doesn't take into account such things as maintenance so in other words paying towards a child you can't claim for.
Google is your friend. I'm not.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
good answer for someone who cba
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
Sign in if you want to comment
16bn
Page 5 of 11
6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10
posted on 19/11/20
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 18 minutes ago
What year did we change the definition of poverty to 60% or less than the median household income? Oh yeah 2010...
Causes of poverty
Disability - Disabled adults are twice as likely to live in low income households as non-disabled adults.
Illness
Mental illness
Low intelligence - People with an IQ of 60 or below are speculated to be in danger of poverty and homelessness in the US in 2006.
Unemployment
Underemployment - having a low-paid job with wages lower than the living wage, often the minimum wage, and working part-time.
Being born to poor parents
Lack of social capital
Inadequate management of finances
Being a lone parent - half of all lone parents are on a low income
Racial discrimination
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Very good points raised.
These are the real issues that should be discussed and tackled.
posted on 19/11/20
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 50 seconds ago
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 1 minute ago
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 3 minutes ago
comment by What would Stuart Pearce do? Rampant (U3126)
posted 24 seconds ago
Seems to be a lack of appreciation that family situations/dynamics can change due to a multitude of external circumstances.
The simple fact is that millions of families struggle to make ends meet. Sometimes due to no fault of their own.
I recall reading a few comments condemning a parent for having a smart phone but at the same time struggling to make ends meet.
Owning a mobile phone is not a luxury but a modern day essential.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ok so let’s explore it. The parents lose their jobs unexpectedly (covid for example).
Universals credit they will get their property outgoings (rent or mortgage) covered in full and receive money on top of that I think it’s around £600 per month for a married couple living together. They have a child let’s say, they get another £93 per month for that child. So that’s around £700 per month with no rent or mortgage to pay. Food & bills, that’s it.
The vast, vast majority of people in this situation will be absolutely fine for let’s say a year until they both find suitable work again.
My household bills (excluding council tax) come to around £230 per month, 2x sim only contracts for £20 per month total.
You’re not living like a king by any means but you have food on the table, heating, hot water, mobile phones & internet.
Welfare spending increases decade after decade after decade.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Your knowledge of the benefits system is appalling. Please don't comment on this anymore.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Why what’s wrong? You can correct me you know?
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Well you think you get your rent covered for a start. You don't, it's capped and the rest has to come out of your UC.
I could go on but as said earlier I cba and that's because people like you are always so confidently wrong about subjects you have little to no knoweldge of it's nauseating.
posted on 19/11/20
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
posted on 19/11/20
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 1 minute ago
comment by What would Stuart Pearce do? Rampant (U3126)
posted 24 seconds ago
Seems to be a lack of appreciation that family situations/dynamics can change due to a multitude of external circumstances.
The simple fact is that millions of families struggle to make ends meet. Sometimes due to no fault of their own.
I recall reading a few comments condemning a parent for having a smart phone but at the same time struggling to make ends meet.
Owning a mobile phone is not a luxury but a modern day essential.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ok so let’s explore it. The parents lose their jobs unexpectedly (covid for example).
Universals credit they will get their property outgoings (rent or mortgage) covered in full and receive money on top of that I think it’s around £600 per month for a married couple living together. They have a child let’s say, they get another £93 per month for that child. So that’s around £700 per month with no rent or mortgage to pay. Food & bills, that’s it.
The vast, vast majority of people in this situation will be absolutely fine for let’s say a year until they both find suitable work again.
My household bills (excluding council tax) come to around £230 per month, 2x sim only contracts for £20 per month total.
You’re not living like a king by any means but you have food on the table, heating, hot water, mobile phones & internet.
Welfare spending increases decade after decade after decade.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Heat, electricity, school costs, clothing, creditors, (UK personal debt is enormous (average 60k per household).
https://themoneycharity.org.uk/money-statistics/#:~:text=UK%20Personal%20Debt,including%20mortgages%2C%20was%20%C2%A360%2C526.
The facts are (whether we agree with it or not) is the vast majority of people on the breadline are not okay, hence why we have seen trends like this:
https://www.statista.com/statistics/382695/uk-foodbank-users/#:~:text=Number%20of%20people%20using%20food%20banks%20in%20the%20UK%202008%2D2020&text=In%202019%2F20%20approximately%201.9,26%20thousand%20in%202008%2F09.
...in regard to the use of foodbanks.
posted on 19/11/20
comment by CurrentlyStuckIntheUK (U11181)
posted 2 hours, 3 minutes ago
comment by VOF - Its all about believing .... (U17124)
posted 4 minutes ago
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 59 seconds ago
comment by VOF - Its all about believing .... (U17124)
posted 49 minutes ago
Funny how the parents of these kids, not all, but certainly a good proportion, never miss out on the latest phones, TV's and alcohol/drugs.
It's always someone else to blame though i find. Never there prioritising.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Absolute nonsense
----------------------------------------------------------------------
It's not though. It's just many don't like the thought of it.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
What is it based on?
We had an MP lie about people giving away food voucher for drugs yet nothing to actually back it up.
Can you back up your statement? What proof are there that a large number of people are doing this? What is the percentage?
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I had a summer job at school, I used to help our local milkman, milk tokens were forever being exchanged for cigs, so it wouldn't surprise me if food vouchers were being swapped for drugs.
posted on 19/11/20
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
posted on 19/11/20
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 2 minutes ago
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 50 seconds ago
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 1 minute ago
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 3 minutes ago
comment by What would Stuart Pearce do? Rampant (U3126)
posted 24 seconds ago
Seems to be a lack of appreciation that family situations/dynamics can change due to a multitude of external circumstances.
The simple fact is that millions of families struggle to make ends meet. Sometimes due to no fault of their own.
I recall reading a few comments condemning a parent for having a smart phone but at the same time struggling to make ends meet.
Owning a mobile phone is not a luxury but a modern day essential.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ok so let’s explore it. The parents lose their jobs unexpectedly (covid for example).
Universals credit they will get their property outgoings (rent or mortgage) covered in full and receive money on top of that I think it’s around £600 per month for a married couple living together. They have a child let’s say, they get another £93 per month for that child. So that’s around £700 per month with no rent or mortgage to pay. Food & bills, that’s it.
The vast, vast majority of people in this situation will be absolutely fine for let’s say a year until they both find suitable work again.
My household bills (excluding council tax) come to around £230 per month, 2x sim only contracts for £20 per month total.
You’re not living like a king by any means but you have food on the table, heating, hot water, mobile phones & internet.
Welfare spending increases decade after decade after decade.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Your knowledge of the benefits system is appalling. Please don't comment on this anymore.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Why what’s wrong? You can correct me you know?
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Well you think you get your rent covered for a start. You don't, it's capped and the rest has to come out of your UC.
I could go on but as said earlier I cba and that's because people like you are always so confidently wrong about subjects you have little to no knoweldge of it's nauseating.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
When you make a new claim for Universal Credit your housing costs will usually be paid as part of your Universal Credit payment.
How much is it capped at? Do you know? You don’t have to be a whiny prck about things you know? Just have a conversation?
posted on 19/11/20
comment by Just Shoot (U10408)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Just give me a minute will you?
I am on the way, its not easy to get across borders,
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Easy! Just get a dinghy. 👍
----------------------------------------------------------------------
rubber dinghy rapids bro
posted on 19/11/20
comment by Just Shoot (U10408)
posted 3 hours, 22 minutes ago
Please tell me the last time a child died of starvation in the UK, not including parental neglect?
----------------------------------------------------------------------
especially one where the parents have the latest i phone, & a 60 inch smart TV
posted on 19/11/20
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
posted on 19/11/20
comment by Just Shoot (U10408)
posted 1 minute ago
The truth of the matter is that the poor have never had it so good. Harsh, but true. That's not to say it's a fair system because it isn't.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
It was an awful lot better 15 years ago so wrong again.
posted on 19/11/20
I want to hear from Robbing. He’s such a fountain of knowledge about universal credit, it should be very quick and easy to answer my questions about it.
posted on 19/11/20
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
posted on 19/11/20
Fackin right
These people want to be watching the four Yorkshiremen sketch...then they'd know poverty
"We used to live in a shoe box in middle o road"...
"cardboard one"...
"aye"
"you were lucky"
posted on 19/11/20
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 11 seconds ago
I want to hear from Robbing. He’s such a fountain of knowledge about universal credit, it should be very quick and easy to answer my questions about it.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Did you miss the part where I said I cba? It's not my job to elevate your ignorance is it? It's roughly £450 fwiw but it depends on whether you have the audacity to have a spare bedroom so your child can stay. You can quite easily do a calculation online.
UC doesnt take into account any other bills either but you have to be online to claim it. It also doesn't take into account such things as maintenance so in other words paying towards a child you can't claim for.
Google is your friend. I'm not.
posted on 19/11/20
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ue7wM0QC5LE
I implore you to watch this...if you've not seen it
posted on 19/11/20
comment by Just Shoot (U10408)
posted 2 minutes ago
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 30 seconds ago
comment by Just Shoot (U10408)
posted 1 minute ago
The truth of the matter is that the poor have never had it so good. Harsh, but true. That's not to say it's a fair system because it isn't.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
It was an awful lot better 15 years ago so wrong again.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on what?
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on the amount of support you could claim and the huge increase in child poverty since.
posted on 19/11/20
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
posted on 19/11/20
Google is your friend. I'm not.
———
posted on 19/11/20
comment by Just Shoot (U10408)
posted 3 minutes ago
60k debt when it includes the mortgage is peanuts.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
60k is the *average* debt.
Low-income households over the last ten years (as the United Nations report highlighted) has seen a stark raise in consumer debt.
As more and more normal household purchases / bills/ food are being purchased via credit card (average interest @ 20%). Multiple charities, trade bodies, debt support groups across the country (including the FCA) have universally reached the same conclusions over the last number of years in regard to consumer debt.
posted on 19/11/20
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
posted on 19/11/20
Not even mentioned being sanctioned because you don't want to work night shifts in a pizza factory 15 miles away.
posted on 19/11/20
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 1 minute ago
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 11 seconds ago
I want to hear from Robbing. He’s such a fountain of knowledge about universal credit, it should be very quick and easy to answer my questions about it.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Did you miss the part where I said I cba? It's not my job to elevate your ignorance is it? It's roughly £450 fwiw but it depends on whether you have the audacity to have a spare bedroom so your child can stay. You can quite easily do a calculation online.
UC doesnt take into account any other bills either but you have to be online to claim it. It also doesn't take into account such things as maintenance so in other words paying towards a child you can't claim for.
Google is your friend. I'm not.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Well well well Robbing. I know for a fact that you’re wrong. A former colleague of mine gets her rent of £825 per month paid for and gets £400 per month allowance on top of that. Every month, without question. I’ve seen the online paperwork.
“people like you are always so confidently wrong about subjects you have little to no knoweldge of it's nauseating.”
😂😂😂😂
posted on 19/11/20
comment by *Robbing Hoody - Clandestine Boat Pleb (U6374)
posted 3 minutes ago
comment by Sat Nav (U18243)
posted 11 seconds ago
I want to hear from Robbing. He’s such a fountain of knowledge about universal credit, it should be very quick and easy to answer my questions about it.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Did you miss the part where I said I cba? It's not my job to elevate your ignorance is it? It's roughly £450 fwiw but it depends on whether you have the audacity to have a spare bedroom so your child can stay. You can quite easily do a calculation online.
UC doesnt take into account any other bills either but you have to be online to claim it. It also doesn't take into account such things as maintenance so in other words paying towards a child you can't claim for.
Google is your friend. I'm not.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
good answer for someone who cba
posted on 19/11/20
Comment deleted by Site Moderator
Page 5 of 11
6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10