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> which has already taken a hammering (lost pensions
>By no means are public sector pensions gold plated. My (contributory) pension is projected to be just over £4k
>We ALL have to experience the hardships that are a result of basically mans greed in wanting/expecting more.
> (Personally I have to work an extra 8 years before I can retire now, something that does concern me
> as both my parents were medically unfit for work before they reached the pensionable age now 60/65 and I'm
> expected to work to 68 years old.
> Being in the private sector which has already taken a hammering (lost pensions, pay cuts if not actual job losses) I shan't be striking.
> ...As it happens I am not working today but if I was I would cross it head held high.
>
>Staff at our 'local' (20 miles away) hospital are not striking - what they are doing is donating a day's pay to charity. At least they are thinking of others :-)
> It makes me so angry about how self centred and lemming like people are
> I wonder how much the union subscriptions are now and what they pay for
> Are you striking? Do you believe in it?
> I have taken the decision not to strike. So far havent had any hassle for my decision but am apprehensive about tomorrow, especially if i have to walk across a picket line. I know my partner got a lot of abuse when he worked through the royal mail strikes.
>Do (paid) union officials ever go on strike and lose pay ??
> It fair put the union fella's gas at a peep
> xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">When the old age pension was introduced it was rare for people to live long enough to collect it; if it was being set up nowadays on the same basis then people would have to work till they were 80.
>Very much depending on what part of the country you stay in. There are wards in Glasgow where the life expectancy of men is....63
> The least they could do is give my poor overworked under paid mum a pension for the full 25 years she's worked there.
> were then better off than her because of the amount that they could claim for various things.
> I am 25 and doubt I'll ever see the money i've paid into my pension so far
>I appreciate that as a teacher I am paid better than many of the carers and members of other public sector workers but we're all in it together and in order to keep the RIGHT people in these jobs they need to have some perks considering there's no huge bonuses on offer.
>I don't think public sector workers particulary appreciate being "all in it together" when they are the ones picking up the tab
> We're all in it together, public and private sectors, and all 'picking up the tab'. It's just taken a little longer to reach the public sector, that's all.
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