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Lex

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I'll be included in the next Ipsos/Mori poll (or maybe not because I'm voting Yes so it will depend who commissioned the poll)

I got a phone call tonight. 15 minutes of questions regarding how I'm voting and how I see things going after a vote either way.

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I'll be included in the next Ipsos/Mori poll (or maybe not because I'm voting Yes so it will depend who commissioned the poll)

If the SNP commissioned it you might appear twice.

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They need punishing for dumping a generation of students into debt. Period.

No apology will ever make up for that utter betrayal.

It's the fact they did it to gain power that will finish them as a political force.

Quite rightly so. It's why the Tories are not being punished.

Pretty much the only folk that are upset about students paying for their enhanced education are students. Quite a lot of folk think students should pay for the enormous leg up a degree gives them, not to mention the fact students have always run up large debts at uni and bitched like buggery about the sheer misery of their lives so many voters just yawn when the subject comes up.

The LibDems will be punished for going into coalition with the Tories by a lot of stupid people who thought LibDem was the same as Labour.

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Pretty much the only folk that are upset about students paying for their enhanced education are students. Quite a lot of folk think students should pay for the enormous leg up a degree gives them, not to mention the fact students have always run up large debts at uni and bitched like buggery about the sheer misery of their lives so many voters just yawn when the subject comes up.

The LibDems will be punished for going into coalition with the Tories by a lot of stupid people who thought LibDem was the same as Labour.

This. And I'm a student.

Scottish-based students getting a free ride is an affront to taxpayers.

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This. And I'm a student.

Scottish-based students getting a free ride is an affront to taxpayers.

Scottish students don't get 'a free ride' - maintenance grants get repaid after all.

And it's more than students who care about this. Minus the years spent dossing about as a phd student, it's been 8 years since I did my Beng, for me it's political and sociological: Education and healthcare are two of the most vital societal responsibilities. By making these as freely and widely available as possible, you massively increase the chances of a society's success, a well informed, well educated and healthy electorate makes far better choices collectively and individually than one that is not. Particularly in an age where information is far more freely avaiable, and the rate of technological change accelerating, we need more people able to thing and assess information critically, which requires a robust education system from primary through tertiary education.

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Scottish students don't get 'a free ride' - maintenance grants get repaid after all.

Yeah, Scotland just puts students into just shy of £20k of debt with their maintenance loans now for a typical undergraduate degree, and insists that they start paying it back when they're on less than £16kpa instead of £21kpa in England, meaning those whose inflation-adjusted career average salary is less than £28.5k pay more and when they can less afford it in Scotland for their education package than their English counterparts. Still. Yay for a society which values education, eh?

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Yeah, Scotland just puts students into just shy of £20k of debt with their maintenance loans now for a typical undergraduate degree, and insists that they start paying it back when they're on less than £16kpa instead of £21kpa in England, meaning those whose inflation-adjusted career average salary is less than £28.5k pay more and when they can less afford it in Scotland for their education package than their English counterparts. Still. Yay for a society which values education, eh?

^^^ confirmed Yes voter

But.. but.. I'm challenging the unchallenged... but... but.. if I don't do it, who's going to keep the debate real... but... but....

Sycophant.

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Yeah, Scotland just puts students into just shy of £20k of debt with their maintenance loans now for a typical undergraduate degree, and insists that they start paying it back when they're on less than £16kpa instead of £21kpa in England, meaning those whose inflation-adjusted career average salary is less than £28.5k pay more and when they can less afford it in Scotland for their education package than their English counterparts. Still. Yay for a society which values education, eh?

Is this like the libdum promised education?

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Yeah, Scotland just puts students into just shy of £20k of debt with their maintenance loans now for a typical undergraduate degree, and insists that they start paying it back when they're on less than £16kpa instead of £21kpa in England, meaning those whose inflation-adjusted career average salary is less than £28.5k pay more and when they can less afford it in Scotland for their education package than their English counterparts. Still. Yay for a society which values education, eh?

Rather than rehash this, didn't you and VT have a nice wee ding dong about this ages ago. Why don't you go back and re-read that, pretend you wiped the floor with him and give yourself I nice big hug.

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Rather than rehash this, didn't you and VT have a nice wee ding dong about this ages ago. Why don't you go back and re-read that, pretend you wiped the floor with him and give yourself I nice big hug.

You're the one that is saying maintenance grants [sic.] get repaid and that Scots "don't get a free ride". I'm simply giving it context. vikingTON's argument was specifically that no one has to take out the maximium eligible level of maintenance support, despite the fact that the overwhelming majority of SAAS maintenance applicants do in fact claim the full amount or within £1000 of the full amount to which they are entitled. And why wouldn't they? Though not on as favourable terms as the English grant provision unless you are confident of earning more than 1.5 times the median household wage within 6 years of graduating, it's still easier are better credit than any bank-loan going.

Edited by Ad Lib
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The Lib Dem policy on higher education was dreadful and I always criticised it. The UK Government's policy is excellent.

You have got me wondering.

Would you have thought the libdums policy on this, a bad one, if they had managed to implement it?

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Not in any way scientific or representative of the wider population, but I've seen two things on TV that does make you wonder..

1. Kaye Burley on SKY news walks about Oban and can't find a No voter.

2. Tory MP Rory Stewart walks in to a packed Glasgow pub filmed by the BBC and finds only ONE No voter - the owner/manager.

I heard something similar happened on BBC in Portree but didn't see it

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I'd go further than this.

Paying to put a young person through University is not a cost - it's an investment.

Most fail to get through their courses and many who do fail to get a job paying enough to justify putting themselves through it.

We are investing in the few who make it to the end.

They more than pay that back in taxes.

I actually wouldn't be averse to some sort of 5 year post graduate tax or a fixed repayment or something capped at 5 years but £52k minimum in England? That is an obscenity and a complete dereliction of responsibility from the people in power who want all the benefits of a highly skilled workforce without wanting to pay a penny to get it.

Fortunately we are not affected by such people in Scotland.......yet.

£52k is a false figure for two reasons.

Firstly, English students only attend uni for three years. So by your figures that £47.75k

Also, most students don't receive anything close to £6250 per year in student support. With means testing and some students not wanting to take out a loan, I'd venture that the average is closer to £3000 per year.

Going to uni is a career choice, and I certainly don't want my future self to be paying for 18 year olds to get pissed. The UK government's policy is fantastic because you only pay back what you can afford.

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