The Brewmaster, tomorrow from about 5.20.
Leicester Square Tube, exit 1 and turn left and left again into St Martin's Court (an alleyway). We put a yellow YPP leaflet on the table so that you can recognise us. Contact me at gmwadsworth@gmail.com or on 07954 59 07 44 if you need more info.
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Topics: 9/11.
Thursday, 10 September 2015
Thursday, 3 September 2015
YPP meet-up, tomorrow Friday 4 September
The Brewmaster, tomorrow from about 5.20.
Leicester Square Tube, exit 1 and turn left and left again into St Martin's Court (an alleyway). We put a yellow YPP leaflet on the table so that you can recognise us. Contact me at gmwadsworth@gmail.com or on 07954 59 07 44 if you need more info.
If you would like to be removed from this list, please advise.
Topics: The weather.
Leicester Square Tube, exit 1 and turn left and left again into St Martin's Court (an alleyway). We put a yellow YPP leaflet on the table so that you can recognise us. Contact me at gmwadsworth@gmail.com or on 07954 59 07 44 if you need more info.
If you would like to be removed from this list, please advise.
Topics: The weather.
Reader's Letter Of The Day
From The Evening Standard. The letter won't be viewable online for a couple of days, because for some reason it is updated two days in arrears, go figure, but here is the original text as submitted:
If Thames Water was allowed to charge what the market would bear, they would enjoy excessive profits of the scale that London developers, home sellers and landlords do now. Surely a compelling case for heavy taxation or regulation of these monopoly profits?
A Land Value Tax would deal with the problem most efficiently but rent controls and a massive council housing building drive would provide some relief for UK renters and homebuyers. We have the shameful honour of the worst value housing in the world, clearly the market is utterly broken.
Joe Momberg, Young Peoples Party
If Thames Water was allowed to charge what the market would bear, they would enjoy excessive profits of the scale that London developers, home sellers and landlords do now. Surely a compelling case for heavy taxation or regulation of these monopoly profits?
A Land Value Tax would deal with the problem most efficiently but rent controls and a massive council housing building drive would provide some relief for UK renters and homebuyers. We have the shameful honour of the worst value housing in the world, clearly the market is utterly broken.
Joe Momberg, Young Peoples Party
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