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Wish it included the overground!


Can you provide sources for your claim?


If you're looking for hard numbers on how many people shouldn't be getting them then you won't find it. Only the government has access to the details of individual claims.

However you can infer a lot from a) the insane rise in claims, especially mental health related:

https://obr.uk/docs/box-chart-3-f.png

Has the mental health of the nation got twice as bad in 2 years? Obviously not.

And b) whenever the BBC does touchy feely profiles of people there are always some weird red flags:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cx2gpl4528go

£400/month help with her bills because she struggles with time management? I'm sympathetic to her problems but that is a shit ton of money!

Even some of the people receiving it agree:

> "I was shocked by the ease with which it was granted. I was expecting to be interviewed, rightly so, but it was awarded without interview and he received backdated pay for the maximum amount." > > She was also surprised that her husband got mobility allowance for not having a car, even though she had a car and could drive him around.

(This reminds me of WFA where plenty of people receiving that also thought it was ridiculous.)

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cn0ry09d50wo

> Paul Harris, from Barnard Castle, gets £72.65 a week in PIP payments to help with extra costs associated with his anxiety and depression - such as for specialist therapy apps and counselling.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cn4llx4kvv8o

> Nick Howard, 51, from Cambridge, is neurodivergent and has been claiming Pip for five years. > > "Without Pip I would not be able to work as it pays for my transport to and from my workplace. > > "I'm currently buying an electric bike on credit, others I have had have been stolen or vandalised," he added.

Great... but I don't think paying PIP for 5 years is a good way to buy someone a bike.

Obviously not all cases are like this, but clearly something has gone wrong. And this isn't a partisan issue. Both parties agree that it has to change. The Tories just ignored the problem and Labour gave up after predictable "N people will die!" press.

And to be clear I'm not anti-poor or anything like that. I also thing WFA is ridiculous and that mostly goes to the rich. Child benefit also goes to lots of people (myself included) who totally don't need it. They all need reform, but look what happens when the government tries...


Has the mental health of the nation got twice as bad in 2 years? Obviously not.

Assuming that's true, do we know if the new claims are fraudulent, or are they valid claims that people simply didn't claim for before?


Nothing sounds wrong to me in any of the cases you mentioned?

> £400/month help with her bills because she struggles with time management? I'm sympathetic to her problems but that is a shit ton of money!

£4800/yr is a shit ton of money? Things must be pretty rough over there!

> Child benefit also goes to lots of people (myself included) who totally don't need it.

Is that a bad thing?


> £4800/yr is a shit ton of money? Things must be pretty rough over there!

For the average person in the UK, it definitely is.


> £4800/yr is a shit ton of money

It's a shit ton of money for the government to just pay to people. I wasn't saying it's enough money to live on or anything. Obviously.

> Is that a bad thing?

The government is just a little short on money and they're wasting it by giving WFA and child benefit to people who definitely don't need it.

This should be obvious.


> for the government to just pay to people

Right, but they're not, because this isn't what's happening. There's a reason they're paying her. Otherwise you would be getting the money too, but you're not.


For what it's worth I've had a joint account for years. It works fine but there are some wrinkles - mainly that it's not a first class citizen. Split the bill and other Monzo specific features only work with your individual account.


That's actually a plus


Why?


Nobody goes to the README for ads. The README is for a description of the project, and maybe some documentation. When I open the file, that's what I should see, not an ad for the paid version of the project and links to five different monetization services. I'm being advertised to and I have no idea what the project does yet! Granted, if I'm reading on GitHub, then I get a brief blurb at the very top of the screen - and even that's followed by another link to the paid version.


I love the execution. I'll consider switching.


Do you fancy an intern this Summer?


Hey! We're preparing to start hiring so very possibly! You can reach out to me @michael on our slack (slack.scaphold.io) and I'll keep you in the loop!


SEEKING WORK Software Engineering student seeking remote internship Summer 2016.

I'm looking for a placement with a startup or well established software engineering company with a culture of remote work.

As for me I was top of my department last year. I'm experienced with C#, Java, JS, Rust and strong at both back and front end. Have open source contributions and a lot experience outside the classroom including delivering to clients.

Hit me up at arranf@gmail.com and find out more @arranf, arranfrance.com


I've used Picnic CSS in a project I've been working on. I sent you an email about a bug I've found and have another bug to share if you're interested!


Yes! But please send it/them to http://github.com/picnicss/picnic , in my email it might slip away


What can I go out and immediately build in Lily as a "useful" hello world program?


That's a good question, and unfortunately one that I'm at a loss as to how to answer right now. I've been focused more on building it, and less on using it. However, I've been looking to change that lately now that the core is becoming more stable and usable.


Awesome I would love to get to grips with this and start building.


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