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Direct action: an introduction
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Obituary - John Challis, actor and writer known for Only Fools and Horses
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John Challis obituary
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as the third. labour and plenty of conservatives say putting up national insurance in particular will tax the less well off, to subsidise the better off. the government has got to rethink this. they say they want to level up across the country, but in fact they would be hitting many families in constituencies like mine in the midlands and in the north hard but not getting improvements in care and they would be seeing greater taxes on businesses too, just when they are struggling. it seems to me that looking i at income tax, which of course is a far less regressive tax and a tax that everyone i who has income pays. those who are repaired, even if they have a l retired won t pay national insurance mps are returning to parliament and a row is brewing already. so what could these new measures look like in practice?
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Forty-five million Americans now owe a total of $1.7 trillion in federal and private student loans.
For many people, that debt is the biggest drag on their adult lives. It prevents them from buying a home or starting a family or investing in their future. They are stuck in a perpetual loop.
This crisis has led to calls to cancel all that debt and liberate an entire generation of Americans something I instinctively support. But when you start to think about all the obstacles and trade-offs, you quickly realize how politically fraught such a proposal would be. Is there any way to do it fairly? What about the millions of people who spent decades paying down their loans? And what about the people who didn’t go to college because they didn’t want the debt how would this land for them?