![]() |
Food banks and smokers?
is it right that people who use food banks are seen coming out smoking and wearing branded sporting label goods. One imagines that some are using drugs/alcohol too.,
How do you feel about this and the rise of the food bank? http://www.pecan.org.uk/wp-content/u...icture-731.jpg http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/...02_468x311.jpg |
Wouldn't really bother me no
|
Doesn't bother me..
I also think your opening post is extremely stereotypical tbh, so because someone is at a food bank and wearing branded clothes you automatically assume they take drugs? I think it's terrible that so many people in this country are having to turn to food banks but everyone deserves to eat regardless of what clothing brands they wear. |
Fox news comes to the UK.
|
And what do you mean
Quote:
|
Don't much care tbh. And I imagine the amount of people like this are few and far between. I have never seen someone coming out of a foodbank smoking ...
The rise of the foodbank I find disgraceful in this day and age, but its nothing to do with the people using them. Its that that amount of people HAVE to use them because of benefit cuts, sanctions and low wages. |
hey, think of it this way.... the more they smoke, the sooner they die. and the less time they spend on the dole.
(i'm a smoker) |
You've been talking to Mrs Currie haven't you trumpet?... :laugh:
|
It bothers me somewhat,some of the people(not ALL) that plead poverty are well built,smoke have mobiles and all the modern day luxuries,times are hard for some but a bag of spuds,bread and milk is roughly the price of a pack of ciggies I think,i know this will not be a popular opinion,but its mine
|
Quote:
|
Cigarettes are about £7 for twenty. If you're paying that much for twenty fags and pleading poverty, I'm afraid my compassion just plummeted to nil.
Perhaps we should have cigarette banks for people too poor to smoke because they're spending all their money on food? |
Quote:
Also the government seem to have shat themselves at the success of e-cigs in getting people to stop. As I have noticed them not being allowed to be used in certain places now..and its spreading too. Trying to discourage people from using them and go back to the ciggies, as they are outcasts anyway having to go outside to use them :joker: |
The word "poverty" is bothersome. In the western world you hear about our "poverty" rates and then you see the people in poverty and they have iPhones, and ps4, and most of them are overweight. Not at all what most of us think of when we think of the word "poverty"
Many media sources and politicians exploit the word "poverty". We imagine starving kids in Somalia when we hear the word "poverty". and they know it. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
FoxNewsHD is on SkyHD so yes |
I dont quite understand how people on low wages/benefits afford ciggies tbh. Backy I can understand, as even when I was on 15 a day a £7 pack of backy would last me about 10 days
|
Quote:
Valid Points Kaz |
poverty is an exploited word by politicians
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
And my post was just in general, I wasnt using it as an excuse for people to spend their money on fags then go to a foodbank :p |
I would imagine that many, not all, who need foodbanks make bad choices re fiances and probably dont see any irony in spending £7 on tabs and then thinking F me I have no money for food now.
|
Quote:
Exploitative companies like brighthouse enable those with nothing to have something, so they end up drowning in debt too. Education for those who are in the cycle of poverty the children being raised in the hand to mouth households is still the best way I think, but I see characters like 'white dee' too and I think grrrrrrr! you're taking the piss! Kiz... Being right since 2014 ;) Take the shame liz :nono: At the “no frills” end of the high street, near where William Hill neighbours Paddy Power, and a few doors away from Poundland, there stands an altogether glossier alternative. Here, as suggested by the shop’s very name, BrightHouse, all is light and brilliancy. The lush primary colours of the window ad announce “our biggest TV ever!” beneath depictions of brightly wrapped presents and the promise of “Christmas moments”. The sales counter is approached via the massed ranks of ultra-high definition widescreen TVs, with the Ecobubble washing machines beyond. nd yet when Nothoizile Kombe exits the store in Lewisham, south-east London, it becomes clear that all is not quite what it seems at BrightHouse – at least not for its customers. “The rates they charge the poor,” she says, the feisty laughter not quite hiding her frustration, “are extortionate.” The 25-year-old fast food worker, by her own admission “struggling” on the minimum wage, had asked about a mobile phone. As she discovered, and as the BrightHouse autumn catalogue confirms, an Apple iPhone 7 Plus would cost her £1,277 with weekly payments of £24.57 spread over a year. Yet Apple is selling the exact same model for £769, or from £886 spread over two years – 30 per cent cheaper than at BrightHouse, with twice the time to repay. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...-a8048901.html |
Quote:
|
That would be jumping to conclusions.
What if a friend or family member gave them the clothes? Or any of the any other reasons they could have for wearing the clothes they do. Baseless assumptions don't get you anywhere. |
Quote:
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 05:38 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
User Alert System provided by
Advanced User Tagging (Pro) -
vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.