Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Women & Minorities Hardest Hit

One of those pompous group letters from all the usual suspects appears in the Guardian today denouncing the government's spending cuts. They appear to play what must be the full house of victimhood poker:

The £11bn welfare cuts, rise in VAT to 20%, and 25% reductions across government departments target the most vulnerable – disabled people, single parents, those on housing benefit, black and other ethnic minority communities, students, migrant workers, LGBT people and pensioners.

What I'm wondering is in what sense the budgets targets LGBT people, if anyone knows please let me know in the comments. Come to that if anyone knows how black and other enthnic minority communities are especially affected then feel free to elaborate.

5 comments:

Macheath said...

I think the Guardian is referring to cuts in funding for LGBT outreach projects, African drumming sessions, street dance collectives, lesbian single parent ethnic minority graffiti workshops and all the other things Guardian-approved local authorities subsidise.

By some bizarre twisted logic, they face unfair discrimination in being deprived of money they were originally singled out to receive.

The Filthy Engineer said...

A most usefull list of who to cull first, methinks.

Ross said...

"By some bizarre twisted logic, they face unfair discrimination in being deprived of money they were originally singled out to receive."

Entitlement in action.

Mark said...

'The usual suspects' = the usual shower of NUS timeservers, public sector troughers, unfunny comedians (Arthur Smith, Mark Steel),diversicrats (David Weaver, Trevor Phillips- being very modest in just calling himself a 'campaigner'!), and old lefties who I thought were dead (Alan Thornett- what 70s memories that name evokes!).

JuliaM said...

What Macheath said.