Thursday, October 20, 2011

Pensioners, get out of your home, make room for the younger generation. You may have worked hard to buy it, you may have lived there all your life, but get out now, you're causing profound social consequences!

That appears to be the conclusion of a report by the International Foundation, trotted out and given pride of place on Radio 4's Today program.

Apparently 51.5% of over 65's live in homes with additional bedrooms which they do not need. Under occupied as the chosen jargon goes.

Quick, give them tax breaks to sell up and move out, we can have an asylum seeker family with 5 kids in there by breakfast time.

What about MP's with their couple of oversized homes apiece, subsidized by the taxpayer via expenses. Will they lead by example?

Of course, the report does make clear that it is not suggesting turfing old people out, but what does it really come down to in terrible economic times when we're talking about offering financial incentives to move to a smaller property?

How long before we shift from offering incentives, to imposing financial penalties for those who won't downsize?

It may sound a little far fetched, but with Britains ever increasing population coupled with stagnant construction of new homes, it could well reach that stage.

People may say it will never happen, but watch this space. Who'd believe pensioners could be left to freeze to death, or be lying in their own filth in hospital beds, in modern Britain?

We're going to be facing desperate times and hard decisions if population expansion continues. Shunting a pensioner away into a one bedroom box flat, unthinkable as it is now and there's not a politician who would admit it would ever be contemplated, may well become the decision the authorities take tomorrow.

The artificially created population explosion will mean that, for officialdom, the unthinkable may well become thinkable. The mess they have created, and refused to tackle, may well leave them little choice.

Who honestly believes a pensioner, who has paid their taxes and lived their 'productive years', is going to feature as a higher priority with officialdom than those supposedly economically beneficial immigrants who have decades of voting left?

We can deal with the population increase now, or we can face times when the unthinkable may well be forced on Britain. We already see signs we're moving in that direction.

Reports may stigmatise the elderly for under occupying homes, but yet again that ignores the real problem - which is that the huge demand for new homes and living space begins at our borders.

Why should our elderly downsize in order to accommodate the immigration - and immigrant cradle - invasion?

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