What system would you enact given the choice.
How about all the school stuff they've done for a start
http://m.conservatives.com/policy/where_we_stand/schools.aspx
How about scrapping the higher tax.
How about massively increasing tax free allowance.
The new planning laws.
The farce was the woeful campaign run by the Yes camp. They targeted their campaign at people who were already going to vote yes rather than undecided voters or No voters.
True. But the vote on FPTP system was a farce, don't you think?
without a massive overhaul of government in general.
Given that the alternative offered was to use one of Clegg's few moments of clarity "a miserable little compromise". Yes, I think it was a farce.
And lol, teh yes campaign was just as bad with their fudge. Both should have been for false advertising. Really should be stricter laws on such things.
The yes campaign wasn't as bad. He said, damning with faint praise.
Either way, there's no doubt the no campaign was more effectively fought. The failure of the Yes campaign to either explain the vote, or push the actual advantages of AV until late in the day instead preferring to try and sell highly questionable claims was doomed when faced with the money and vitriol of the No campaign.
It was doomed from the start, AV is rubbish, no one wanted it. Not even the yes campaign.
Wasn't as bad, pull another one and take the blinkers off.
Plan for the Planet!
Aye and in like 5 years we'll have free energy if we make enough panels. Then we can make more panels to provide energy for our technologised (just made the word up no biggy) farming systems.
(please don't ban me for spamming, these are genuine viable ideas)
They aren't.
The only reason there are solar panels in the UK is because they are massively subsidised (FIT, ROC, etc). They are not viable here. They are just a very expensive way to buy votes from people who don't understand. In addition to not being viable themselves because they're too expensive, they increase the costs of the national grid too. Of course, all this extra cost ends up on everyone's electricity bills.
A more recent study by researchers from the Netherlands and the USA (Fthenakis, Kim and Alsema, 2008), which analyses PV module production processes based on data from 2004-2006. They find that it takes 250kWh of electricity to produce 1m2 of crystalline silicon PV panel. Under typical UK conditions, 1m2 of PV panel will produce around 100kWh electricity per year, so it will take around 2.5 years to "pay back" the energy cost of the panel.
2006 report by the UK Parliamentary Office for Science and Technology, has calculated a "carbon footprint" of less than 60g per kWh of electricity from PV in the UK (and around 35g/kWh for PV in southern Europe), compared to 10 times as much for fossil fuels. More recent research by Fthenakis, Kim and Alsema, (2008) suggests that the total greenhouse gas emission (including CO2 and other gases) for electricity from PV panel is between 20 and 80g CO2-equivalent per kWh under UK conditions. This is ten times lower than the emissions for electricity from fossil fuels (UK grid average is around 500g/kWh, electricity from coal can be as high as 1000g/kWh).
What rubbish. Even without fit they are viable. Fit has made people invest and bring down the costs.
Even without fit you will make your money back, just not much more, as its around ~20years but depends on a multitude of variables.
Is this a serious thread or another 'bash the Tories'?
Mistakes might involve scrapping the 50p tax rate. Or taxing the working class in the form of pastys caravans or otherwise seemingly reversable decisions.
The was never any intention to tax pasties or even introduce any new tax at all, the intention was to clarify current tax law to stop companies like Greggs committing tax avoidance.
It was the media that span it into a tax on pasties, and Greggs themselves because instead or paying the proper amount of tax and having less profit they wanted to charge their customers more to compensate so started accusing the government of taxing pasties so they could trick people into believing that a rise in the cost of pies was the governments fault.
IMO the main problem we have in this country is that people don't vote for a parties policies or even for the party's leader (though he is more important to votes than the actual policies) they vote based on a parties track record. I.E the Tory's should have won the last election via a landslide as Brown had just bankrupted the country and Clegg although performing well in one TV debate had nothing to offer.