I Investigated Why British Cities Keep Going Bankrupt

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  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • Get Nebula using my link for 40% off an annual subscription: go.nebula.tv/tomnicholas
    Watch my Nebula-exclusive feature about the making of this documentary: nebula.tv/videos/tomnicholas-...
    A video about why British cities are running out of cash.
    Written, directed and presented by Tom Nicholas.
    Edited by Georgia Burrows.
    Chapters
    00:00 British Cities are Going Bankrupt
    01:46 Act I: Birmingham Goes Bust
    12:10 Act II: A Brief Guide to UK Local Government
    28:17 Act III: Deceptive Decentralisation
    35:06 Epilogue: Community Wealth Building
    Bibliography
    You can find a bibliography for this video on my Patreon, here: / 104406583
    Blurb
    British cities are going bankrupt. What was once an exceptionally rare event has become a regular occurance as six city, borough or county councils have announced they've run out of cash over the past two years.
    In order to find out why, Tom Nicholas sets off on a four-day road trip around the UK to unpick how local government in the UK works, and how local councils might be empowered to become more sustainable in the future.
    Support my work on Patreon at / tomnicholas
    Twitch: / tom_nicholas
    Twitter: / tom_nicholas
    Instagram: / tomnicholaswtf
    Patreon: / tomnicholas
    Website: www.tomnicholas.com
    Select footage courtesy of Getty
    Music from Epidemic Sound

Komentáře • 2,7K

  • @Tom_Nicholas
    @Tom_Nicholas  Před 17 dny +593

    I hope you enjoyed this video!
    You may have noticed that making it was *a lot* more complicated than usual! It involved a four-day trip around England, arranging interviews, buying in extra kit, and a much more complicated edit process as we attempted to tie the various threads of the video together.
    I'm really keen to keep pushing the boundaries of what we do with these videos over the coming year. I want to use the opportunity of the platform I've got on CZcams and Nebula to tell important stories in the most engaging ways possible.
    If you'd like to support me and my team in that, there are a couple of ways you can do so.
    Firstly, by signing up to Nebula using my personal link go.nebula.tv/tomnicholas
    Or, by signing up to support the channel on Patreon at patreon.com/tomnicholas
    Thanks so much for considering it!

    • @jesusvasquez4734
      @jesusvasquez4734 Před 16 dny

      it's ok, gj 👍

    • @thecrazycapmaster
      @thecrazycapmaster Před 16 dny +1

      Heck yeah, go wild! It’s usually great to swing for the fences, even if it doesn’t work out every time (and I’m willing to bet this one’s a winner 😆)

    • @elliot_729
      @elliot_729 Před 16 dny

      Microphone on screen?

    • @elizabethdavis1696
      @elizabethdavis1696 Před 16 dny +3

      Please consider doing a video on the lifeboat foundation and lifeboat ethics

    • @shaunmodipane1
      @shaunmodipane1 Před 16 dny

      is this video part of Vapeonomics series?

  • @-N0V4-
    @-N0V4- Před 16 dny +1534

    This is the weirdest Top Gear special I've seen in years.

    • @christopher9727
      @christopher9727 Před 15 dny

      ....
      Jesus Christ is the only hope in this world no other gods will lead you to heaven
      There is no security or hope with out Jesus Christ in this world come and repent of all sins today
      Today is the day of salvation come to the loving savior Today repent and do not go to hell
      Come to Jesus Christ today
      Jesus Christ is only way to heaven
      Repent and follow him today seek his heart Jesus Christ can fill the emptiness he can fill the void
      Heaven and hell is real cone to the loving savior today
      Today is the day of salvation tomorrow might be to late come to the loving savior today
      Holy Spirit Can give you peace guidance and purpose and the Lord will
      John 3:16-21
      16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. 17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved. 18 He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. 19 And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. 20 For every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved. 21 But he that doeth truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God.
      Mark 1.15
      15 And saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel.
      2 Peter 3:9
      The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.
      Hebrews 11:6
      6 But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him.
      Jesus

    • @miscellaneousz2681
      @miscellaneousz2681 Před 14 dny +39

      It’s top gayer

    • @antediluvianatheist5262
      @antediluvianatheist5262 Před 14 dny

      And thus gooder. ​@@miscellaneousz2681

    • @J-K-A
      @J-K-A Před 13 dny +2

      Hahahaha

    • @kodragon6531
      @kodragon6531 Před 12 dny

      Yup

  • @peterjol
    @peterjol Před 16 dny +2165

    Nobody seems to see much connection to the wealth of the Rich and the private corporations going through the roof while everything else is failing.

    • @orterves
      @orterves Před 16 dny +280

      It's not a bug it's a feature

    • @JAI_8
      @JAI_8 Před 16 dny

      The rich do. That’s why they’re so dead set against anyone in the msm talking about it! It’s all “culture”, “identity”, “race”, “traditional values”, “woke” this, “trans” that, “pedophile” moral panics, “BLM”, “migrants” etc. etc. all of it generating massive profits for the rich who’s giant media companies host the entire discussion no matter what you’re side in the “culture war” and mold and shape the form of the discussion by their control of the private algorithms that mediate who we see, what we see, and slowly moderate the terms of the debate to their satisfaction. That is why you’ll NEVER see any radical anti-capitalist revolutionary promoters of working class solidarity on MSM or gaining any significant influence via the main media platforms. A divided working class more or less fully in support of capitalism, and without the ability to form a coherent critique of it, nor the ability to see past culture war categories and form a working class class consciousness suits the needs of the rich ruling class who owns all the significant gathering places on the internet now. When there’s anywhere that the rich Western Capitalists don’t fully own or control … like TikTok for example, the rich lose their minds and start shouting about espionage and privacy concerns (they have no such privacy concerns when their own citizens are subjected to ever more unconstitutional surveillance by the state, or by anyone who will reliably hand over data about US citizens to law enforcement in the US, legally or not. TikTok has them losing their minds because it is NOT owned by a reliable US / western capitalist company who will supply ONLY pro-rich, pro-US oligarchy messages on the platform.
      And of course the bold, outspoken working class former bank trader and economist, Gary Stevenson, he does too! On his channel “Gary’s Economics” he.l explains it all quite powerfully and convincingly, and explains equally powerfully and convincingly why a massive wealth tax on the richest 1% or 2% or 3% or so of the wealth holders in the world’s capitalist democracies will recreate a healthy and functioning middle class-based society, by redistributing the massive quantities of wealth and assets accumulated and hoarded by the super rich over the last several decades. He implies the current social pathology among the working class, the poor, and the increasingly frustrated and dispossessed former middle class is a result of this massive shift in the economic priorities in our capitalist democracies over the last several decades. The economic interests of the super rich have been favored over those of the middle class and the poor, as well as even the interest of a government possessed of enough wealth and assets to provide the services people need to live in the 20th and 21st century. Gary argues like Tom does here that the bankruptcy of cities is but one symptom of a wider pathological “privatization” of the nation and selling so much of the resources, and even infrastructure already paid for by the taxpayers to the rich so that they may profit from selling access to these services back to the very people who already paid to build the schools, roads, transit, communication, economic system, and many other basic infrastructure elements. These services are forced into artificial “bankruptcy” by the rich taxpayers who refuse to pay into the tax system at all … then instantly have the duly DDS to buy these services they wouldn’t pay to use before, in order to charge criminal rates to use the same systems weeks or months before they had been crying to poor to pay taxes to utilize the service. The scheme is obscene. It’s an invention of the criminal “supply-side” “trickle down” economists favored by Reagan and Thatcher and Mulroney and every other neoliberal crook who saught to destroy the working class by bankrupting it by refusing to pay taxes they claimed they couldn’t afford, only to turn around, use loans from their own banks underwritten by taxpayer guarantees to buy the exact same resources and assets from the government they’d just refuse to pay tax in order to use. Their argument? They were all trustworthy selfless men who could run these services better than the people’s government could. What a scam.
      To this day we live under the increasing economic strain of this scheme, and are still being encouraged to blame each other; our fellow working class neighbors for either our idiotic retrograde “conservative” traditional values, or our ridiculous, elitist, ideological, doctrinaire “liberal woke” values. The rich don’t care about any of this; they’re laughing giddily as we fight amongst ourselves ignoring the ongoing economic thievery they are perpetrating against ALL of us the whole time.
      If you want to scare the crap outta yourself to understand what the driving philosophy and the “social values” of the ruling rich oligarchy is today (because they sure don’t care about “patriotiism”, “Christianity”, “traditional values”, “woke values” “social justice”, any of the stuff they sell to us as culture war products. Nope. Try and go search the internet for “Right Accelerationism (R/ACC) and Elon Musk” or Peter Thiel or Jeff Bezos. Or try looking up the Political Philosophy of The Koch Brothers AND “A Treatise on Government” by John C. Calhoun or The Koch Brothers AND James M. Buchanan (economist) and his “The Limits of Liberty” or his “The Calculus of Consent” . . as well as Peter Thiel (again) AND Calhoun’s book or either of Buchanan’s books. These rich men love these theoretical books which elaborate upon a theoretical rationale for destroying democracy as a fundamentally unfair “tyranny of the majority against the “natural” rights of the rich and successful to rule. It’s frightening to think what stuff the rich are planning if only they could remove the pesky impediment of democracy. That’s why they quietly support Trump and the MAGA GOP with millions of dollars. regardless of the ugliness and hypocrisy in some of their cases to do so. Democracy is so “unfair” and a waste of energy that could be better spent making them more rich, if only it could be eliminated for good, and let the natural rights of the rich and successful rule forever uninterrupted.

    • @dmwalker24
      @dmwalker24 Před 16 dny +220

      And that IS the cause of this. Stagnant or falling wages, increasing prices, reductions in services, but increasing taxes. It's all in service of extracting everything from regular people, and transporting it to the very top.

    • @DjDolHaus86
      @DjDolHaus86 Před 16 dny

      There is also the massive elephant in the room which is Amazon. They take a huge proportion of the population's money that would otherwise be spent locally and then pay no corporation tax on the profits. Billions are simply disappearing into the ether

    • @LWQ15881
      @LWQ15881 Před 16 dny +79

      Wealth inequality is a serious detriment to consumer based economies like the uk’s as consumer spending accounts for 60% of gdp.
      The state should help consumers as the economy wouldn’t be able to function and would completely collapse.

  • @hugosaurus
    @hugosaurus Před 7 dny +74

    The fact that public toilets aren’t a statutory service is outrageous. Most older people and a lot of younger people with medical conditions have to use the toilet a lot, and not having working public loos really makes it hard for them to go out.

    • @keighlancoe5933
      @keighlancoe5933 Před 18 hodinami

      I remember a time when they were a lot more prevalent, and I'm not sure if it's such a bad thing they aren't so common anymore. Nearly all of them had a hive of crackheads &/or prostitutes that had taken up residence there, and you could smell the stench of 20 or so years worth of built-up urine that the council had long since given up on attempting to get rid if. Along with the crackheads.

    • @hugosaurus
      @hugosaurus Před 13 hodinami +1

      @@keighlancoe5933 Fine, but that is really down to the lack of maintenance, another part of the service that the councils are able to cut from their budgets.

  • @captain_context9991
    @captain_context9991 Před 15 dny +359

    I was a Norwegian student in Brum university 20 years ago. It was the exact same talk back then. Every municipal building in the city centre has a blue plaque on them saying "partly sponsored by the European Union" because British cities were getting development help. Crisis-funds from the EU. Money predominantly meant for the exact purpose of keeping EU cities from going bankrupt. I remember they were talking about there being 4-500 000 people in poverty in greater Birmingham back then.
    I wrote a thing for university back then where I blamed it on... The UK economy being focused almost entirely around London.

    • @juliantheapostate8295
      @juliantheapostate8295 Před 15 dny +23

      As the second largest net-contributor to the EU (in a fiscal sense) after Germany, that was just us getting SOME of the money back which we paid in the first place!

    • @KathyClysm
      @KathyClysm Před 14 dny +88

      @@juliantheapostate8295 Right, which is clearly why everything as been going incredibly well since we left. Oh wait

    • @haxor98
      @haxor98 Před 14 dny +51

      ​@@juliantheapostate8295we got the money back but now it's funneled up to the torys and their mates

    • @pritapp788
      @pritapp788 Před 13 dny +28

      @@juliantheapostate8295 Britain has been getting money back since Thatcher negotiated a rebate. Has done wonders indeed in funnelling the money back where Britain needs it eh? The NHS is flourishing, the towns are coming to life with brilliant projects.

    • @moosky7344
      @moosky7344 Před 13 dny

      The UK donated 100s of billions to the EU and took in 6 million EU citizens costing yet even more 100s of billions!!! Now we have a housing crisis and crisis here and there, we can't cope with the influx

  • @Prophencia
    @Prophencia Před 16 dny +773

    If I had a £1 for everytime some modern issue was linked back to Thatcher I'd have enough money that the conservatives would give me a PPE contract...

    • @oldishandwoke-ish1181
      @oldishandwoke-ish1181 Před 15 dny +8

      Yep.

    • @yuglesstube
      @yuglesstube Před 13 dny +28

      It has a lot to do with mass immigration and the decline of North Sea oil and gas.
      Brexit hasn't helped.

    • @AlJay0032
      @AlJay0032 Před 13 dny +18

      Many Brits don't understand what Thatcher has done for them and how they are still profiting from her work to this day.

    • @golemgolden4670
      @golemgolden4670 Před 13 dny +14

      Or Reagan

    • @yuglesstube
      @yuglesstube Před 13 dny +10

      @AlJay0032 Brits in the City and Home Counties certainly.
      Mancunians, Liverpudlians and Geordies, not so much. In fact much of the UK really sucks.
      Whether Foote, in her place, would have been better for Britain is questionable.
      Losing the Empire, the rise of the US and Japan and multitudinous externalities, including mass immigration, have broken Britain.

  • @alexjames7144
    @alexjames7144 Před 16 dny +882

    'I'm in Liverpool..... and it's incredibly windy' 😱
    Truly a staggering turn of events

    • @christopher9727
      @christopher9727 Před 15 dny

      Romans 6:23
      For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.
      Come to Jesus Christ today
      Jesus Christ is only way to heaven
      Repent and follow him today seek his heart Jesus Christ can fill the emptiness he can fill the void
      Heaven and hell is real cone to the loving savior today
      Today is the day of salvation tomorrow might be to late come to the loving savior today
      John 3:16-21
      16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. 17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved. 18 He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. 19 And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. 20 For every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved. 21 But he that doeth truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God.
      Mark 1.15
      15 And saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel.
      2 Peter 3:9
      The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.
      Hebrews 11:6
      6 But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him.
      Jesus

    • @wpjohn91
      @wpjohn91 Před 14 dny

      Joe Anderson

    • @JJTMStudio
      @JJTMStudio Před 14 dny +5

      God bless all you kites in Scouserland.

    • @kodragon6531
      @kodragon6531 Před 12 dny

      Yup

    • @NikChillin
      @NikChillin Před 12 dny

      Chemical engineering

  • @howmanybeansmakefive
    @howmanybeansmakefive Před 14 dny +182

    As a Brit currently in America, hearing about 'inadvisably' long distances to drive in England is beginning to sound quite quaint to me haha

    • @alexrettig7402
      @alexrettig7402 Před 13 dny +23

      As an American who's driven the length of Britain I felt the same.

    • @SoloAdvocate
      @SoloAdvocate Před 9 dny +10

      I have a 3 and a half hour drive tomorrow and I am not even leaving my state of Texas nor even driving from one side to the other that would be near 10 hours. You could basically fit the entire UK in Texas with room to spare.

    • @quasinfinity
      @quasinfinity Před 7 dny +16

      America is a country where 100 years is a long time, and England is a country where 100 miles is a long way

    • @stuartrose2353
      @stuartrose2353 Před 7 dny

      Your a traitor

    • @stuartrose2353
      @stuartrose2353 Před 7 dny

      @@howmanybeansmakefiveand did the east India empire control the colonies or did the working class sharing piss Potts?

  • @natmorse-noland9133
    @natmorse-noland9133 Před 15 dny +37

    Brilliant work, Tom, the extra effort really paid off here.
    A little addition to your description of privatizing waste removal: I live in Chicago, which, contrary to conservatives' depictions of the city, LOVES to privatize city services, including waste removal; it has contracts with a couple different companies, including the creatively named Waste Management.
    Now, for several years studies showed that Chicago had one of the worst recycling rates of major US cities. The narrative was that we Chicagoans were too dumb or lazy to properly separate garbage from recyclables, so we kept hopelessly contaminating our bins of recyclables, which had to be dumped instead.
    TURNS OUT that the aforementioned Waste Management was contracted to deal with recycling as well as garbage. So they'd get paid once when they went to retrieve a recycling bin... and if that bin happened to be marked (by them) as contaminated, they'd get paid a second time to haul that bin to the dump. So there was a direct financial incentive for them to falsely mark recycling as contaminated.
    Just another example of companies' environmental destruction being falsely blamed on individual consumers.

  • @Alexander-yb1zc
    @Alexander-yb1zc Před 16 dny +1014

    My thought before clicking on this video. "I bet Thatcher is somehow involved".

    • @brianh9358
      @brianh9358 Před 16 dny +183

      Kind of like how a lot of the problems in the states started with Reagan.

    • @mauz791
      @mauz791 Před 16 dny +66

      The milk snatcher's legacy

    • @jaxkal9596
      @jaxkal9596 Před 16 dny +30

      She has been dead for a while gotta search for a new scarecrow

    • @davespanksalot8413
      @davespanksalot8413 Před 16 dny +89

      @@jaxkal9596she represents, and is now shorthand for, a particular ethos. Which is why she’ll remain a useful scarecrow for many years to come.

    • @davescott7680
      @davescott7680 Před 16 dny +67

      ​@@brianh9358Every US video talking about the US's problems. "So all this started when Reagan..."
      Every UK video talking about UK's problem's 'All this started when Thatcher..."

  • @Obez45
    @Obez45 Před 16 dny +884

    But Rishi somehow made 100 million pounds within the last year

    • @Obez45
      @Obez45 Před 16 dny +189

      @@Medusas_Barber Yeah he is a good business man when it's for his own personal gain but when it comes to the country those skills magically disappear and the outcomes for the UK are worse than any other time in history - how many times have cities actually gone bankrupt? We have sewage in our water again; we've gone full circle back to the 19th century. Where is he even getting the time to make so much money for himself while the country he's “serving” implodes? The optics are horrendous, I refuse to believe that there is no conflict of interests when making vast sums of money like that

    • @cj.wijtmans
      @cj.wijtmans Před 16 dny

      @@Medusas_Barber I hate it when parasites get called business man. Parasites suck real business men and trades people dry.

    • @bobby5678-ck2tc
      @bobby5678-ck2tc Před 16 dny

      @@Obez45 people who are European will always care more about their own people then your people that is human nature to care more about your own people before others it's like people have forgotten that we are different peoples fighting each other for resources that is what life is all about the western world has forgotten what life is about we have been in peace for 80 years that vast majority of the whole time or recorded history we have always been at war with each other welcome back to reality the boomer era is over it was a once in a lifetime thing that will not happen again until we decide to conquer other countries and take their resources.

    • @samotter9509
      @samotter9509 Před 16 dny +102

      ​@Medusas_Barber successful at giving his wife's company exclusive drilling contracts

    • @TomChaton
      @TomChaton Před 16 dny +63

      ​@@Medusas_BarberHow does that one statistic contradict anything they said?

  • @MartijnterHaar
    @MartijnterHaar Před 15 dny +48

    Uncanny how similar this situation is to the Netherlands. Specifically in 2015 something called the Wet Maatschappelijke Ondersteuning (WMO, Law Societal Support) transferred a lot of power regarding subsidies for things like wheel chairs, cleaning help, pedagogical services, etc. from the central government to the municipalities. Officially to "bring it closer to the people". But with it came of course massive budget cuts. And it also meant there are massive differences between municipalities now between levels of support. In the bigger cities it is usually okay, but in smaller ones a Scrooge-y "they don't need help; they should go work" alderman can make people's life hell.

    • @JJVernig
      @JJVernig Před 2 dny +1

      It's almost a three tier world. If the municipality is big enough you've got the means to build the bureaucracy to do it good, but if you're between 20k-150k it's too small to do that. The 10k almost know all their pappenheimers, and the help also gets mostly where it's needed...

  • @Antinumeric
    @Antinumeric Před 14 dny +44

    I think that all big IT contractors (Fujitsu, Oracle, IBM etc) should be unable to win contracts in the UK, they have proven time and time again that they are unable to deliver on-time, on-budget, or with quality.

    • @Jonathan_Doe_
      @Jonathan_Doe_ Před 5 dny

      Whoever runs the .gov and HMRC websites are really on it though. Find another country where you can do a cash basis self assessment tax return in like half an hour online, or get divorced, or renew a driving licence, with such ease.

    • @Antinumeric
      @Antinumeric Před 5 dny +1

      @@Jonathan_Doe_ That'd be GDS and I think HMRC in-house. They developed a set of really decent guidelines for making public facing government websites, when they are followed it's consistent and generally good. For non-public facing it's a minefield.

    • @TheSquidPro
      @TheSquidPro Před 4 dny

      What are some good companies for public systems internal and externally facing? Just to orient myself. @Antinumeric

    • @aidy6000
      @aidy6000 Před 3 dny

      Same with the privitisation of our armed forces catering, you should see the state of what we are feeding them!

    • @MintyFarts
      @MintyFarts Před 2 dny +1

      They should have to prove there are no local/national options before going with international companies. It's not just an issue of competence, but extraction of resources, security, and investment in industry workers.

  • @LexYeen
    @LexYeen Před 16 dny +357

    "...and a genuinely interesting pen museum." confirmed brit.

  • @bookbagfox
    @bookbagfox Před 16 dny +481

    Any tech person could have told Birmingham to not employ Oracle.

    • @silviasanchez648
      @silviasanchez648 Před 15 dny +87

      Yeah, as soon as he said Oracle I thought "they're fucked" and sure they were!

    • @Bobylein1337
      @Bobylein1337 Před 13 dny +91

      But whoever was in charge of the decision probably got a nice gift from Oracle.

    • @moosky7344
      @moosky7344 Před 13 dny +21

      Go for the cheapest quote, they're cheap for a reason

    • @etienne8110
      @etienne8110 Před 12 dny +15

      Some probably did.
      Buy you can t beat corruption with sound advices...

    • @kodragon6531
      @kodragon6531 Před 12 dny +5

      Yup

  • @yayaya6799
    @yayaya6799 Před 12 dny +61

    My home town of Woking went bust last year - total corruption, mostly speculating on property development rather than providing services for it's rate payers. If councils were companies criminal charges would be laid. Instead councils just refinance and kick the problem down the street, meaning we have even more suffering to come.

    • @tnteachertim
      @tnteachertim Před 10 dny +4

      @yayaya...
      No. Those "companies" would simply close their "Limited Liability" doors, paying NO debts or taxes, and reopen under a new name the next day....

    • @SomeGuyInAWaistcoat
      @SomeGuyInAWaistcoat Před 6 dny +3

      A lot of councils are involved with dodgy speculation schemes. Weirdly enough, the same people cutting off their money and making them raise their own are the ones who also destroyed the restrictions on council investments, making it easier to get involved in or taken advantage of by dodgy deals.

  • @dudere
    @dudere Před 15 dny +72

    "Drive an inadvisable distance", bro I live in the US. We had to put turns in the roads of Missouri because the endless miles of identical corn on both sides of the road kept hypnotizing people into thinking they were not moving. They would go made and pass out from driving through too much corn.

    • @spindle7397
      @spindle7397 Před 14 dny +1

      Haha sounds fun

    • @MugenHeadNinja
      @MugenHeadNinja Před 13 dny +11

      Non-US people really don't know how ridiculous it is to live in the US sometimes.
      Try living somewhere with no place to buy food or drink without having to drive 20 miles (32.19 km) one way (40 miles [64.37 km] altogether), and then it's even further for the closest job opportunities. It's unfortunately very normal over here, and we don't have the luxury of having decent public transportation in the majority of the country.

    • @elisabethmontegna5412
      @elisabethmontegna5412 Před 13 dny +6

      As an Iowan I feel obligated to point out that however bad the endless miles of corn are, at least it’s not Nebraska 😁

    • @dudere
      @dudere Před 13 dny +1

      @@MugenHeadNinja I think being killed by unending, unchanging, mind melting scenery is pretty ridiculous.

    • @tubthungusbychumbungus
      @tubthungusbychumbungus Před 12 dny +4

      ​@@MugenHeadNinja my family keep asking me if I'd like to move to America and I have to keep explaining that this exactly is simply not bearable living conditions

  • @kezia8027
    @kezia8027 Před 16 dny +411

    OF COURSE IT WAS FUCKIN ORACLE. As an Australian IT worker, I've been leery of oracle for over a decade now, and it is so saddeningly unsurprising that they've showed up to screw up yet again here. I am a little surprised they've upgraded from company grifts to entire cities now. That must be a nice pay increase for their C-suite.

    • @jo2lovid
      @jo2lovid Před 16 dny +47

      Oracle, SAP, whatever ERP is initially selected, will be promoted as a very cost neutral option. The client buys in to the proposal, and then the finessing process starts. Every little "enhancement" adds cost, changes the scope, requires more time and resources, adds complexity.
      And nekminute you are thousands/millions higher in costs, delays and under delivered deployments.
      So called client 'experts' are revealed to be thicker than two planks, and sometimes caught with their hands in the cookie jar.
      Incentives abound for those with signing authority.
      You can guarantee that a new ERP is going to cost at least 200% initial quote, and delivery will be twice as long as proposed.
      NZ has had its fair share of failed and wildly over budget systems.
      Incis, Swift, AT, Kiosk, Novopay
      Over promised, under delivered, poor deployment, wild scope changes.
      IT Project Management seems to suck everywhere.

    • @aalan4296
      @aalan4296 Před 16 dny +26

      Same applies with SAP. Pay a huge amount for a new SAP system, it cost double what the old system did in support costs and delivers half the capability of the old system. SAP then send in sales reps to try and sell you more SAP software to solve the problem that the original SAP installation caused.

    • @user-xi6nk4xs4s
      @user-xi6nk4xs4s Před 16 dny +9

      Not much has changed over the last 25 years it appears. Oracle, SAP or any other ERP software always causes major cost increases and disruption of the operations. Was that way at the end of the 20th century, and still is it seems.

    • @christopher9727
      @christopher9727 Před 15 dny

      ...
      Do you know Jesus Christ can set you free from sins and save you from hell today
      Jesus Christ is the only hope in this world no other gods will lead you to heaven
      There is no security or hope with out Jesus Christ in this world come and repent of all sins today
      Today is the day of salvation come to the loving savior Today repent and do not go to hell
      Come to Jesus Christ today
      Jesus Christ is only way to heaven
      Repent and follow him today seek his heart Jesus Christ can fill the emptiness he can fill the void
      Heaven and hell is real cone to the loving savior today
      Today is the day of salvation tomorrow might be to late come to the loving savior today
      Romans 6.23
      For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
      John 3:16-21
      16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. 17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved. 18 He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. 19 And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. 20 For every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved. 21 But he that doeth truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God.
      Mark 1.15
      15 And saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel.
      2 Peter 3:9
      The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.
      Hebrews 11:6
      6 But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him.
      Jesus

    • @StickyGelatin
      @StickyGelatin Před 15 dny +14

      @@jo2lovid it's not project management to blame. it is deliberate fleecing. the software is designed to be so bad that it requires additional deployment time and people to make it even work in the first place. most of the software errors I encounter when working with oracle ERP are so simple to fix, some literally one line of code, that there is no possible way that it is anything but deliberate

  • @alexjames7144
    @alexjames7144 Před 16 dny +1388

    Liverpool is actually a great example of why this is happening, in the last 10 years the conservative government have reduced the amount they give the Liverpool city council by over 90%, forcing them to massively hike up council tax.
    This video touches on some of the issues but isn't really making any inferences into how we have somehow increased tax to the highest point that it has been for nearly a hundred years on both national and regional levels, and massively reduced the amount of spending going towards public services. And yet, supposedly, we have no money and the government are struggling.
    We, the fifth richest nation in the world with a relatively small population to support, have no money despite spending less and taxing more. Where the fuck has the money gone?
    People are getting too bogged down in specific and small scale economic changes and not really questioning how, on a national scale, we are giving the government more and getting less back only for the government to claim that they are struggling. There are only really three possible ways for this to occur:
    1) The government are so fundamentally inept that they are simply losing or wasting all of the money by accident in an almost comedic fashion.
    2) The government are intentionally throwing money in a huge bottomless pit to the benefit of nobody for seemingly no reason to appease the bottomless pit.
    3) The government are weaponising an air of false incompetence to distract from the fact that they are quite literally pocketing the money themselves in huge quantities.
    Edit:
    I am loving the response this is getting, calling out corruption and inefficiency across the board. But the take away is that this is based in a broad range of factors that represent institutional failures at every level due to both greed and the inherent problems with capitalism, mainly the blatant inefficiencies and the fact that the end goal is explicitly to funnel money into the hands of the rich for personal enjoyment, and not into public hands for the good of the people.
    All 3 I pointed out are happening to varying degrees, as well as everything you guys have pointed out, some of which may be a combination of fall into one of the categories, but they're all interconnected regardless and I hope we can all agree that the solution is not minor reform, it's a complete economic overhaul.

    • @That0neSkrub
      @That0neSkrub Před 16 dny

      That's been the trajectory since Thatcher. The sinkhole the British dug by privatizing public services, and subsidizing and bailing them out instead of having them public, along with the Monarchy sapping wealth from the government and you have a recipe for a 3rd world country in the making

    • @_.seraphina._
      @_.seraphina._ Před 16 dny +91

      Possibly all 3 are happening at the same time

    • @darkpixel1128
      @darkpixel1128 Před 16 dny

      look into the teesside freeport, an utter s***show of naked corruption. The private eye have done a lot of reporting on it.

    • @OncleSpenny
      @OncleSpenny Před 16 dny +344

      4) the money all gets sent over to the private sector and funnelled upwards to near no benefit. The neoliberal decline in government capacity means everything must be contracted to the private sector, which can subcontract etc with massive profit margins taken at every step. This would show outwardly as increases in inequality, housing crisis, increasing stocks with declining real wages, etc

    • @alexjames7144
      @alexjames7144 Před 16 dny +105

      @@OncleSpenny DING DING DING! Sounds suspiciously like the politicians and their mates doing some laundry

  • @theicyridge
    @theicyridge Před 12 dny +12

    Community wealth building is probably the most important economic development of our times. It gives locals power even when larger levels of government don't support them, and has both left-wing objectives of working-class control and conservative principles of decentralization and efficient use of resources. If larger levels of government ever do support it, it could really change the game. Thanks for this awesome coverage.

  • @iacopo538
    @iacopo538 Před 12 dny +8

    I studied urban planning and finished both my Bachelors and Masters outside of the UK, which I don't particularly want to return to, at least partly because of the frankly dire state of local authority investment in public sector planning. You captured my sense of local economic depression so effectively in this. Every Christmas, when I go back, it seems my local authority has sold off another childhood memory or abandoned another treasured social space. Certainly my experience of speaking with urban planners who both work and have worked in my local authorities is one of desperation; there is such a sense of hopelessness. I think you could even be more explicit in tying Government's neglect of its local funding obligations to the disenfranchisement of the public and the decay of daily life throughout the country- the grime, the mess...
    It's really cool to see you briefly touch on the Preston example at the end there, because I think that the LA there also has some unique socioeconomic (and political) characteristics which empower the council to be a little more bold than others. While I've never been, from some further reading it does seem to have had a not insignificant effect- you can see that in the Indices of Deprivation data.
    If you happen to be in Vienna any time soon, then let me know and I'll very gladly try my best to explain how the post-War generation here was instrumental in the creation of the world's first true still-operating socialised housing system! And also complain about the hell that are town council economic assessment forms in the South of England.

  • @MostlyLoveOfMusic
    @MostlyLoveOfMusic Před 16 dny +605

    This feels like a Top Gear special

    • @Slug99
      @Slug99 Před 16 dny +150

      Tonight on Top Gear: Hammond finds out the local city council is bankrupt, May sees an old building 'That's it right there' and I move all my financial assets off-shore.

    • @kira6149
      @kira6149 Před 16 dny +24

      @@Slug99 jeremy clarkson would do that, wouldnt he

    • @rcnhsuailsnyfiue2
      @rcnhsuailsnyfiue2 Před 16 dny +4

      Presented by Ian Hislop

    • @Trenz0
      @Trenz0 Před 16 dny +15

      So I went to the worst city... in the woorrld.

    • @kenon6968
      @kenon6968 Před 16 dny +9

      more depressing and less racist, but yes

  • @purplemonkeydishwasher5269
    @purplemonkeydishwasher5269 Před 16 dny +228

    The IT system costs are like everywhere. Lack of knowledge by managers. Full of people with business admin, law and accountant degrees. But no senior managers who understand the systems. So big IT companies can run rings around them

    • @daydays12
      @daydays12 Před 15 dny +23

      not just ££££ costs - peoples' lives: see the Post Office scandal.

    • @therealrobertbirchall
      @therealrobertbirchall Před 14 dny +2

      Which is why the German economy is so stable. post ww2

    • @AUniqueHandleName444
      @AUniqueHandleName444 Před 13 dny +11

      @@therealrobertbirchall Yup. Engineers are running everything over there.

    • @therealrobertbirchall
      @therealrobertbirchall Před 13 dny

      @@AUniqueHandleName444 and look what a fantastic job they do

    • @2112jonr
      @2112jonr Před 12 dny +7

      The model is this:
      Charge out "consultants" at £1000 per day.
      Hire fresh out of uni students.
      Pay them the minimum salary you can get away with.
      Pocket the profit.
      Meanwhile, they fleece the decent permanent staff at their victim organisation for knowledge.
      Making them useful to the IT consultancy at the council's expense.
      Once council has to cut costs, offer to take over at a quarter of the salary.
      Then shaft them on support costs.
      Seen it SO many times.

  • @baronmeduse
    @baronmeduse Před 14 dny +8

    They go 'bankrupt' because central government throttles financial resources. As a matter of policy; the one they adopted in the very late seventies: monetarism. It's a policy choice since it is impossible for the UK government to 'go bankrupt', it is a sovereign currency issuer, i.e: is the only legal source of the currency it uses. Even though the original principle of this foolish theory was money supply control, this was already abandoned as a reality while Thatcher was in government. The same notion of restricted spending (and use of unemployment as a deliberate inflation tempering tool) is still in operation and also is the core methodology of EU economic policy baked into its treaty.

  • @Jordan-288
    @Jordan-288 Před 14 dny +33

    TLDR: Torries since the 80's at a national level have destroyed local council, with the assistance of a "moderate" Labour government in between

    • @SolarFlareAmerica
      @SolarFlareAmerica Před 12 dny +2

      moderate being code for rabid, from what I've heard lol

    • @terryj50
      @terryj50 Před 11 dny +4

      Yet it’s all Labour council who have gone under

    • @terryj50
      @terryj50 Před 11 dny +1

      Let’s see how well they all do under Labour not long now until they are in. No excuse then when they go under

    • @skurinski
      @skurinski Před 10 dny

      Let me guess. The answer is more leftism lol

    • @skurinski
      @skurinski Před 10 dny +1

      ​@@terryj50most of these cities are ruled by labour councils and mayors

  • @sarbe6625
    @sarbe6625 Před 16 dny +126

    isn't it kind of fucked up that a city can even go bankrupt in the first place?

    • @richardwills-woodward5340
      @richardwills-woodward5340 Před 16 dny

      Not if you import the Third World. what do you expect? Hardly the calibre of culture that built the industrial revolution, created the scientific method and invented most of the world's modernity. Why import people from cultures thousands of years behind our own and bankrupt yourself?

    • @camipco
      @camipco Před 15 dny +11

      sort of? It does play a somewhat useful role of (in theory) protecting anyone the city employs or contracts with, so the city doesn't just keep hiring people to do work only to have it then turn out they never get paid. I mean, I'm generally very much against the fiscal responsibility / austerity perspective on government, but I do think you need at least some of that. It is possible (although very far from the reality right now) to go too far the other direction from austerity, and bankruptcy provides a back stop for irresponsible spending by a city.
      I'm not saying this to disagree with all the points made in the video or claiming that these particular bankruptcies are the fault of irresponsibility on the part of the cities involved, just to say that eliminating the possibility of a city going bankrupt is not really a safe solution.

    • @richardwills-woodward5340
      @richardwills-woodward5340 Před 15 dny +5

      It makes people responsible, or it should do. Policies matter. It is political. Almost all councils that goes bankrupt are socialist councils. This is statistically noteworthy and significant.

    • @exfinen_2919
      @exfinen_2919 Před 14 dny +16

      @@richardwills-woodward5340 it's because, instead of a publicly owned company, private companies are contracted for the social service, benefiting private shareholders. If public company handled it, then local government would be the shareholder, making the service self-benefiting.

    • @Dacijo
      @Dacijo Před 14 dny +3

      I worked for the council for a little while around 2010, the money they would throw at the wall at the end of the financial year was silly.

  • @kezia8027
    @kezia8027 Před 16 dny +277

    Tom: It's got 5 wheels...
    me: 5 wheels!? Oh right, got to have a spare tyre.
    Tom: One for steering
    me: oh...

    • @CentristDad155
      @CentristDad155 Před 16 dny +2

      I rented a car in Newcastle and it did not have a spare tire. This was appalling to me as an American, when tire had an issue. Is this normal in the UK? I was told it was to save on the mass of the car or some nonsense

    • @DjDolHaus86
      @DjDolHaus86 Před 16 dny +10

      @@CentristDad155 Neither of the last 2 cars I've owned have had a spare, just a tin of puncture repair goo. I'm reasonably sure it's just a cost saving measure

    • @CentristDad155
      @CentristDad155 Před 16 dny

      @@DjDolHaus86 cool... And, in rental cars, just go ahead and throw a spare in the trunk. Are you certain the issue here is not a 'scarcity mentality'? ( That is the 4th term I settled on as the first 3 were more pejorative.)

    • @DjDolHaus86
      @DjDolHaus86 Před 16 dny +6

      @@CentristDad155 No, I'm fairly sure it's down to squeezing maximum profits from the product. I'm not saying I'm a fan, I'd much rather have a spare tyre than a useless tin of goo, I just think it's basic capitalism rather than any kind of mindset.

    • @CentristDad155
      @CentristDad155 Před 16 dny

      @@DjDolHaus86 Perhaps but I've gotten a spare tire in every other country I've rented a car in. I'm asking for your opinion here. I don't just make up stuff and pretend that it's facts. That's with the far left and far right in America do. I'm just saying I've noticed in the UK there's this mentality of we can have this or we can have that but not both. Hey how about we all just work an extra 10 or 15 minutes a day and then we can have both.

  • @Findecommie
    @Findecommie Před 15 dny +55

    It really is appalling how many problems can be traced back to Thatcher and Reagan, hard to think of any two people with a worse legacy in the last 75 years

    • @alicequayle4625
      @alicequayle4625 Před 13 dny +4

      Milton Friedman was their guru. Aka Chicago school of Economics.

    • @TAP7a
      @TAP7a Před 13 dny +7

      Friedman, Kissinger, Murdoch.... But this discussion is limited to people who held legitimate power and influence in the West, there are people like Pinochet, Pol Pot, Putin, Gaddafi and many others who actually had vast amounts of blood on their hands as a direct consequence of their orders, rather than an indirect result of the policies they advocated for. I don't think either are worse, but I do think these western ones have some additional disgust because their mainstream reputation is that of heroes, visionaries or great leaders, whereas the dictators' damage is better reflected in their reputation

    • @michaelmcfaul7761
      @michaelmcfaul7761 Před 11 dny +1

      Yes that’s right. Margaret thatcher who just got ousted from PM last week. No hold on a minute. Swee we at this old trope is so fucking boring

    • @alicequayle4625
      @alicequayle4625 Před 10 dny

      @@TAP7a Mrs Thatcher was big friends with Pinochet and they were both running their economies according to the dogma of Milton Friedman.

    • @alicequayle4625
      @alicequayle4625 Před 10 dny

      @@TAP7a Murdoch arguably holds more power than most heads of state.

  • @lucasschneider1894
    @lucasschneider1894 Před 15 dny +1

    Love the step up ! Thanks, it's great to see how the channel is growing and how methods are flourishing

  • @markroe6799
    @markroe6799 Před 16 dny +164

    I hate that just the mentioned Oracle has me immediately think "ahhh, yup there it is. That tracks."

    • @nhgh1756
      @nhgh1756 Před 16 dny +12

      lmao i had the same reaction. still salty over how they destroyed sun

    • @smalltime0
      @smalltime0 Před 16 dny +19

      IDK what you mean, Oracle DBMS has everything!
      Wait, you want the parts to work together?
      No no, that's not how anything works in Oracle.

    • @CentristDad155
      @CentristDad155 Před 16 dny +5

      Computer projects are complicated. A humanities major like this YT guy are unlikely to understand the complexities. These things fail when boutique requests and bizarre requirements are thrown into the project halfway through. You want an out of the box solution, that goes smooth as silk.

    • @smalltime0
      @smalltime0 Před 16 dny +20

      @@CentristDad155 This isn't Sun that we're talking about, its Oracle. Have you ever used Oracle? Of course you haven't. Its God-Awful

    • @MarkHershberger
      @MarkHershberger Před 16 dny +19

      @@CentristDad155 Of course computer projects are complicated. But when you have contracts that aren't a fixed price (whether it is software or the F-35), you run into cost overruns.

  • @bingbangbong5055
    @bingbangbong5055 Před 16 dny +239

    Next time a customer asks me why the library I work at is closing next month, I'll just point them towards this video...
    (As someone who works in council public services, yes, things are just as awful right now as this video suggests)

    • @richardwills-woodward5340
      @richardwills-woodward5340 Před 16 dny +7

      Because they're unproductive, over-paid and have far too large a pension for the wealth generated in the country. The public sector is 18% too large.

    • @alfsmith4936
      @alfsmith4936 Před 15 dny +6

      Just tell them landlords are struggling so they need more flats for immigrants. It's funny to watch people realise they've been shafted when they thought they were shafting you.

    • @Vonononie
      @Vonononie Před 15 dny

      @@richardwills-woodward5340once I would have agreed with you but I’ve been working with a council as a contractor for a few months. They are very focused on reducing costs, everything is up for review, nothing is untouchable. One problem is my team were working to a plan set out by the minister as it’s a government lead project. Then there was a reshuffle, new minister told everyone to stop, he took 6 weeks to get up to date, and has now completely changed direction. I’ve found this frustrating but was told by colleagues who have been there for some time that in the last 5 years this is how it’s been. They’ve never seen such chaos in government, ministers are on a revolving door, and there’s no clear direction. All local councillors wanted to do these last few months is spend money on things which could help them get reelected. All ministers want to do is blow budgets before the general election. All whilst we got an email saying that the council wasn’t going to supply washing up liquid to the kitchen anymore, could we bring in our own! Yes the pension liability is big but they pay less. If you take away benefits then you are either going to get no one or people who can’t get jobs elsewhere. I think many councils can find efficiencies but there are bigger problems at the top

    • @PhysicsGamer
      @PhysicsGamer Před 15 dny +32

      @@richardwills-woodward5340 I see you failed to watch the video.
      Or think, for that matter. How is calling a library "unproductive" at all sane?

    • @richardwills-woodward5340
      @richardwills-woodward5340 Před 15 dny

      @@PhysicsGamer Where did I state such a thing? It is of itself unproductive regardless, but it has a social use that should the individual engage with, could end inn a £42,000 salary which means that person has used the library to obtain knowledge to earn a salary that means they pay in more than they take out. Now, you could also argue it has a social good in that it provides knowledge, but this is just theory and has no proof. The ignorance of young people today and the disgusting views they hold of the country through brainwashing tells me they have never read a book. These libraries don't stop anyone from becoming another useful idiot for communist causes. Therefore, their purpose is in question. Book-reading is dead it seems, and only propaganda from social media seems to hold sway. A library is also only useful if it covers ALL subjects and does not engage in propaganda, as most public former educational establishments do. At best, libraries provide a local focal point for tea/coffee and computers for 'job-searching' by people with zero chance of achieving anything productive at all. They should not be in this position, but they have been hijacked by ideology and the third world. They should be places of learning. They are not. What is a library for if not learning?

  • @aishahb8336
    @aishahb8336 Před 7 dny

    This was an amazing video, really appreciate all the work you've put in this

  • @chqshaitan1
    @chqshaitan1 Před 7 dny

    Excellent video, very informative and eye opening, keep up the great work

  • @margaretf667
    @margaretf667 Před 16 dny +24

    The system is working exactly as designed

  • @christopherwaller2798
    @christopherwaller2798 Před 16 dny +130

    The premise of localism is that local authorities have the legal right to do loads of things, but also the legal obligation to do many of things, and the inability to raise money to actually do those things. And of course, people will blame their Labour council for cuts which are effectively passed on from central Government. What's interesting is that councils have cut staff over the last decade, but central government headcount has actually increased.

    • @richardwills-woodward5340
      @richardwills-woodward5340 Před 16 dny

      Councils charge more than ever before. We are taxed the second highest amount in history, yet services decline (in mostly Labour councils). it is a lack of competence not money. They are happy to spend on rainbows, diversity officers and anti-white racist policy, yet can't seem to find the money for the basics.

    • @sutenjarl1162
      @sutenjarl1162 Před 15 dny

      of course you blame labour they are still the same government entities as every other party that exists

    • @grimaffiliations3671
      @grimaffiliations3671 Před 15 dny +14

      and the central government could be doing a lot more to fund these localities without raising taxes. Taxes don't actually fund anything the central government does

    • @inphowatcher9748
      @inphowatcher9748 Před 15 dny +1

      And how is the central government funded?

    • @grimaffiliations3671
      @grimaffiliations3671 Před 15 dny

      @@inphowatcher9748 Every penny the government spends is created by the government. It simply extends its overdraft with the bank of England. So why does it tax at all? To create demand for the currency, and to control inflation by reducing our spending power. That's it. Taxes can't pay for spending because the spending comes first (or else we wouldn't have the money to pay the tax) and then some of that money is deleted via tax.
      I highly recommend checking out a book called The Deficit Myth, it mainly covers the US but it applies here as well

  • @laldoconcession9748
    @laldoconcession9748 Před 14 dny +1

    Great video as usual!

  • @MigrantFoodMindset
    @MigrantFoodMindset Před 14 dny

    Been waiting for your video! Thanks for another great one 😊

  • @jwmcq
    @jwmcq Před 16 dny +65

    It's actually really damn useful to have an accessible, well-researched, source for this stuff. You're doing a service, Tom!

  • @pedrolopes3542
    @pedrolopes3542 Před 16 dny +116

    It is not just the cities, it is the entire country that is collapsing. I know that because I saw that happen to my country in the early 2000's.
    All institutions managed by the government start to fail partially, taxes rise, but they can't keep up with expenses, people move away, companies shut down, there is a generalized sense of gloom. Decay becomes physically visible, in the facades of buildings, on the potholes in the pavement, the poorly patched infrastructure, in the lack of implementation of new technologies.
    It is not just the cities...

    • @semilorekaji-hausa2078
      @semilorekaji-hausa2078 Před 15 dny +11

      Which country? I live in Britain & would love to do some research

    • @liverbot4854
      @liverbot4854 Před 15 dny +5

      Which country is this?

    • @alexwood7678
      @alexwood7678 Před 15 dny +3

      Also interested

    • @moosky7344
      @moosky7344 Před 13 dny +4

      ​@@liverbot4854Greece or Venezuela i think, add the UK next 😢

    • @moosky7344
      @moosky7344 Před 13 dny +4

      It's like that up and down the UK, money is being directed elsewhere for other situations 😠

  • @v.e.8885
    @v.e.8885 Před 15 dny +1

    It's amazing to get so such an incredible well researched documentary on current issues in the UK when you live in Germany. Thank you for putting so much dedication into your work.

  • @phyllislovelace8151
    @phyllislovelace8151 Před 6 dny

    Thank you Tom. Just stumbled across your show today. Very interesting. Thank you.

  • @edis_coffee_lab
    @edis_coffee_lab Před 16 dny +71

    Production value quadrupled! Keep up your great work Tom.

  • @algorhythm1337
    @algorhythm1337 Před 16 dny +22

    As a Nottingham local, Ratcliffe-on-Soar isn't a Nuclear power station; it's a coal-fired one, and they're in the process of winding it down 😅

    • @isobelsheene51
      @isobelsheene51 Před 14 dny +4

      Wasn't sure whether to comment this or not 😅 Tom looked so happy in the behind the scenes video about it being a Simpsons-like nuclear power plant, I feel a bit sad to burst his bubble!
      It's actually one of the (or the?) last coal power stations in the country. And closing this year, apparently. I think Tom Scott did a video with it in not that long ago, too.

  • @samwiseshanti
    @samwiseshanti Před 10 dny +1

    This is an excellent video. Well done man!

  • @oldishandwoke-ish1181
    @oldishandwoke-ish1181 Před 15 dny

    Fantastic video, well done Tom and the team! More please.

  • @NovaExeRegent
    @NovaExeRegent Před 16 dny +193

    *Came here faster than the housing crisis did💀*

    • @user-ds8rj2vc4v
      @user-ds8rj2vc4v Před 15 dny +6

      Jokes on you, we've always been in a housing crisis :)

    • @kodragon6531
      @kodragon6531 Před 12 dny

      Yup

    • @danke1150
      @danke1150 Před 4 dny +2

      Housing crisis caused by mass immigration. We're importing more people every year than houses we have built in record years of house building. It's not possible or desireable that Britain build a million homes every year indefinitely. Closing the borders and sending millions home would be great for the housing crisis and benefit the British massively.

    • @user-ds8rj2vc4v
      @user-ds8rj2vc4v Před 3 dny

      @@danke1150
      Not solely caused by that, but yea, made it like 100 times worse.

    • @danke1150
      @danke1150 Před 3 dny

      @@user-ds8rj2vc4v It's almost exclusively caused by that. Blair opened the border and the Tories kicked it wide open.
      We went from an average of 25k immigrants a year before Blair to 250k a year under him and now 1 million a year under the Tories. This is not sustainable.
      Almost all of them need to be sent home.

  • @matthewblack2379
    @matthewblack2379 Před 16 dny +51

    That guy from Preston is needed everywhere

    • @pfftnuffinpersonalkid1541
      @pfftnuffinpersonalkid1541 Před 15 dny

      This was Jeremy Corbyn's program. Like usual, the "Left" were 100% correct, as even Militant was, but Centrists and "Moderates" and their media lackies would rather have their teeth pulled than do anything but bend over for the Tories and Tory narratives, because "Centrists" will always view the left as a bigger threat to their positions.

    • @harrymccann1054
      @harrymccann1054 Před 14 dny +6

      He also runs open mic nights at my pub as well as others, and organises lots of local events and always offers opportunities to the local businesses - incredibly active in the community too. Great fella.

    • @alicequayle4625
      @alicequayle4625 Před 13 dny +3

      I've read his book.

  • @AveryIsScared
    @AveryIsScared Před 12 dny +7

    As a Preston resident and a candidate in the local elections there, you've captured the passion that I have for Preston's way of doing things brilliantly.
    Preston is a city that works for the people of Preston, not politicians.

    • @stonehengemaca
      @stonehengemaca Před 8 dny

      Nice word salad. How does a city work for its politicians?

    • @andrewflynn1615
      @andrewflynn1615 Před 7 dny

      Total bull shit mate ! No council in this country works for the people !!! They just shaft them !!

    • @BooDooPerson
      @BooDooPerson Před 3 dny

      @@stonehengemaca personally enriching those and their families/friends rather than the residents as a whole? This is how a lot of cities work, and have for a long time???

  • @RossHbn
    @RossHbn Před 10 dny

    Fantastic breakdown. Subscribed.

  • @El_Rey_247
    @El_Rey_247 Před 16 dny +48

    I'm not a Brit, and I'm not certain how much of this applies to my local government's budgets, but it's a solidly made video and good food for thought.

    • @2112jonr
      @2112jonr Před 12 dny

      It applies to every council in the UK. The gov't has been shafting ALL of us.

  • @ViolentOrchid
    @ViolentOrchid Před 16 dny +14

    It's really weird choice to blame the people you chose to discriminate against for your financial issues. If you hadn't broken the law, the settlements wouldn't exist. Blaming the victims is actually continued discrimination.

  • @sreeyeshb
    @sreeyeshb Před 2 dny

    Your effort and analysis is commendable.

  • @PerksofQuirks
    @PerksofQuirks Před 15 dny

    amazing journalism - thanks so much!

  • @rossawilson01
    @rossawilson01 Před 16 dny +51

    The equivalent of £16k per adult in the UK was given to private corporations after the 2008 recession. Because they were "too big to fail". Socialism for the rich. That was the largest transference of public money to the private sector in history. And that money, is still with those people, who are buying up assets and increasing prices across the board. And it will not stop until the mega rich, those with more than 10 million or so, are tax far, far more aggressively to get it back. Your council operations and make-up and the way it works have nothing to do with this. It's all about the rich buying assets including government assets and putting up prices. It's actually very simple. Tax is the only solution, not the poor, not the middle classes, (like they want to) not even those with a couple of million pounds in the back. But the 1% of the country that has 20% of the countries entire wealth. If we had even 50% of that wealth back this entire country would enter a new golden age. Tell your councillors to pressure the government to massively increase tax to the 1% of earners and wealth holders.

    • @Gr0nal
      @Gr0nal Před 15 dny +9

      Massive transfer of wealth during covid as well.

    • @johnassal5838
      @johnassal5838 Před 12 dny

      Exactly the solution and also the secret to how the massive post WW2 economic boom in the US was fueled. Not losing to the Nazis or suffering direct bombing certainly helped but the top tax in the nineties percent forced the rich to allow money to fall to the working class and be circulated in unprecedented quantities leading to the unprecedented growth.
      And since that rate was literally keyed to those making more than twenty times the average income it literally meant that the elites had to allow the average to increase to get richer themselves where they freely get richer at everyone else's expense today.

    • @johnassal5838
      @johnassal5838 Před 12 dny

      Exactly the solution and also the secret to how the massive post WW2 economic boom in the US was fueled. Not losing to the Axis or suffering direct bombing certainly helped but the top tax in the nineties percent forced the rich to allow money to fall to the working class and be circulated in unprecedented quantities leading to the unprecedented growth.
      And since that rate was literally keyed to those making more than twenty times the average income it literally meant that the elites had to allow the average to increase to get richer themselves where they freely get richer at everyone else's expense today.

    • @johnassal5838
      @johnassal5838 Před 12 dny +1

      Exactly right. The solution and also the secret to how the massive economic boom in the US from the 1940s-60s was fueled. Not losing WW2 or suffering directly certainly helped but it was the top tax in the ninety percent range that forced the rich to allow money to fall to the working class and be circulated in unprecedented quantities leading to the unparalleled growth.
      And since that rate was literally keyed to those making more than twenty times the average income it literally meant that the elites had to allow the average to increase to in order to get richer themselves where they freely get richer at everyone else's expense today.

    • @ziploc2000
      @ziploc2000 Před 11 dny

      Yes. Same thins has happened in the USA. If we'd had Bernie Sanders as President instead of Trump in 2016 we might be on the way to getting that money back, he's the only politician who is always looking out fore the "little man"

  • @cancerino666
    @cancerino666 Před 16 dny +41

    Why? Nearly two decades of neo-liberalism.

    • @RichardEnglander
      @RichardEnglander Před 16 dny

      We have had more like 27 years of neoliberal Blairite globalism. It has fucked this land indeed.
      No solutions left within the liberal paradigm.

    • @mattysav4627
      @mattysav4627 Před 15 dny +11

      Why 2 decades and not 4?Do you think Tony Blair’s new labour, Margret thatchers “proudest achievement” is a break in neo liberal economics?

  • @V8Adam
    @V8Adam Před 12 dny

    Really interesting. Thanks for putting so much effort into this topic.

  • @jakek8687
    @jakek8687 Před 12 dny +1

    Hey Tom! Been a fan for quite a while off and on, but I gotta say, this video is an exceptional piece of work and you should be super proud of yourself and the team. This discussion of the long-term costs of corporate privatization vs. traditional job creation vs. explicit wealth reinvestment is an extremely important one and telling this story is quite hard and often horribly depressing. I'm proud of you! Keep at it, brother!

  • @IzzyTheDyspraxicArtist
    @IzzyTheDyspraxicArtist Před 16 dny +25

    My council, Stoke, has just put garden waste collection behind a paywall. You have to pay a annual subscription for the brown bin to be collected.

    • @thejdemon
      @thejdemon Před 15 dny +9

      Been like that for over a year in many places, you've been lucky to have free garden collection as long as you have.

    • @akatheking82
      @akatheking82 Před 15 dny +5

      Been like that in Sweden since forever - AND we have the highest incomtaxes in the world...

    • @damionkeeling3103
      @damionkeeling3103 Před 11 dny +2

      That's good, Auckland, NZ forced everyone to have a bucket sized plastic bin for food scraps instead of allowing those with compost heaps to opt out. 440,000 were sent out to homes and around 40% max of the city actually use them so over 260,000 wasted bins made, paid for and taking up space in people's homes. The 'service' isn't free either, every household is charged the equivalent of £40 a year and given that the city had met its quota for food scrap collection it knew the majority of the city wasn't going to participate and the scheme was just a tax hike.

    • @GeoffRiley
      @GeoffRiley Před 11 dny +3

      Warrington has been charging for garden waste collection for years. In our case, green bins must have an appropriate sticker for the year, or they won't be emptied. The buying a sticker idea is a little better than a blanket charge on everyone, though, because people without gardens don't have to pay. The stickers have serial numbers to attempt to detect forgeries. 👀

  • @steckbrogames
    @steckbrogames Před 16 dny +18

    Me going ‘wait for it, wait for it” when you started breaking down LA income and the government grant. Something so many people just don’t understand.

  • @DrBingusCheeseburger
    @DrBingusCheeseburger Před 6 dny

    Wow this was great, thanks for the hard work!

  • @thewaywardgrape3838
    @thewaywardgrape3838 Před 15 dny

    Really interesting video. Thanks for sharing! Got my subscription 👍

  • @daibach
    @daibach Před 16 dny +20

    It's late stage capitalism in action. Tory "austerity" (while the deficit has grown) followed by a failing economy = no heavily reduced money from central government, increased costs due to inflation and an ever increased need for the local authority to support it's citizens.
    Saved you 45 mins of waffle

    • @bramvanduijn8086
      @bramvanduijn8086 Před 15 dny +1

      Seriously, this could have been a four minute video.

  • @JAI_8
    @JAI_8 Před 16 dny +120

    When are you and Gary Stevenson going to speak to each other in a video on a topic like this, for example; how the “bankruptcy” of a major UK city is an example of the hollowing out and dispossession of government by the rich ruling class? One of Mr. Stevenson’s favorite subjects, the phenomenon of the dispossession of the middle class at the same time as the self-destructive “government” lead “privatizing” efforts to impoverish the government and the state itself at all levels is a worthy topic for you both to share your viewership with.
    I look forward to seeing anything that might result from your collaboration.
    Thanks for this video. Unbelievable really for someone born in the 1960s; all-too-believable however for someone who reached adulthood in the Reagan-Thatcher-Mulroney (I grew up in Canada, and Mulroney was an ideological neoliberal privatizer and a close manly best buddy of Reagan … and formed a close friendship of regularly expressed mutual admiration with the Iron Lady too) and I have grown increasingly dismayed to see the nonstop massive accumulation of upper class wealth at the same time as an adoption of an unquestioned identification of the economic and ideological interests of the wealthiest members of our democracies with those of the average citizen, even as the life of the average citizen has gotten progressively measurably worse while the lives of the wealthiest get clearly objectively visibly different, better, and measurably so by orders of magnitude as every decade has passed since the 1980s.
    Well … let us know if there’s any work with anyone ready to provoke some fiery organization, resistance and efforts to make change that might recapture and redistribute some of the vast wealth and power hoarded among the wage earning, hard working voting supporters of democracy in our countries.
    Cheers!

    • @Timmakesmusic
      @Timmakesmusic Před 16 dny +25

      The exact same thought was on mind as I watched this, especially where Tom talked about the 'Preston model'. Keeping money circulating between regular people rather than being syphoned off to the very richest fits right in with Gary Stevenson's arguments about the tragic consequences of spiralling wealth inequality.
      If Gary is correct, local government bankruptcy is an inescapable consequence of an ever greater proportion of the money supply being captured by the super rich. As households have less money, the tax base shrinks while costs continue to rise due to asset price inflation. No matter how prudent they are, no council can remain solvent when budgets are continually falling and prices constantly rising.

    • @JAI_8
      @JAI_8 Před 16 dny +8

      @@TimmakesmusicVery keenly observed and explained.
      I was hoping a little of Gary’s seeming revolutionary spirit and theoretical explanatory power might be suitably combined with some actual people’s experience and testimony like Tom did here.
      We shall see; and can only hope to look forward to such a combined energy in the near future !

    • @richardwills-woodward5340
      @richardwills-woodward5340 Před 16 dny

      Councils charge more than ever before. We are taxed the second highest amount in history, yet services decline (in mostly Labour councils). it is a lack of competence not money. They are happy to spend on rainbows, diversity officers and anti-white racist policy, yet can't seem to find the money for the basics.

    • @therealrobertbirchall
      @therealrobertbirchall Před 14 dny

      The best work going on to address the failures of the government in London is to breakup the British state int it's component parts. Scotland and Wales can run their own affairs thank you very much. The mess the English have gotten us into is entirely due to their ex colonial hubris where they imagine they are 'special' because they had an empire, of which my friend your ancestors and mine were part the creation of as well as the victims of. They, the Anglo's, believe they won ww2 single handed, forgetting about the millions of Russians, Indians , Canadians, etc who also fought the axis And dont forget they won the world cup in 196?. Free my people

    • @richardwills-woodward5340
      @richardwills-woodward5340 Před 14 dny

      @@therealrobertbirchall Without the British the english speaking world would have likely become history. Russians were on the same side as Germany - they were communists. They were not trying to eradicate the tyranny of communism. English speaking culture is unique on earth and in human history. It created the modern world and I am tired of being attacked for our success like Israel. The Canadians are of english stock (or were before the Third World arrived). The same as the US. Its entire Constitution is the expression of the Bill of Rights 1688/9. Its legal system is English in nature - the common law. Everyone had empires, but the British were the best at it and did it in a way that made its ex-colonies want to stay connected to Britain in some way, achieved by no other empire. It ended peacefully, like no other empire. British history is why you eat the way you do, tell the time, turn the lights on, have modern healthcare, universities, museums, tv and an endless list of things. It is also why the world has any concept of rights and has contract law. If you are in Britain then it is England you owe your own liberty to. So get back in your box and close the lid....tightly.

  • @permafrostyx
    @permafrostyx Před 14 dny +2

    Nice work tom

  • @caramelfish1307
    @caramelfish1307 Před 3 dny

    Brillant video, thank you for the information.

  • @cinemaipswich4636
    @cinemaipswich4636 Před 16 dny +10

    Fujitsu (post office) and Oracle (local councils) were forced upon the Tories for outsourcing to private companies. The Tories foist upon local government all manner of things that Westminster should fund. Westminster would have a lot more income to distribute, if they taxed "The City" and income in Tax Havens. Only the rich and the landed gentry get away with that. The property owners should be assessed to pay a yearly land tax, on investment properties.

  • @pablodonner5213
    @pablodonner5213 Před 16 dny +7

    Community wealth and wealth redistribution? What a marvellous nobel idea, if only we had a word for it

  • @euansmith3699
    @euansmith3699 Před 12 dny +3

    I was going to watch this video, but then realized I don't need more gloom in life. Instead, I'm off to watch a Warhammer 40k Lore video. That won't be so grim and dark.

  • @memyselfiamweird
    @memyselfiamweird Před 15 dny +1

    First of all - fantastic video; I think this style suits you quite well. I hope it wasn't too stressful overall to produce, though!
    I went to UCLan back in the late 00s-early 10s; while I enjoyed my time at the Uni itself, I really didn't enjoy Preston as a town. My friends and I joked about how sad and unloved it was, nicknaming it 'Depress-ton".
    Over the last few years, however, I've been hearing more and more positive news coming out of Preston - whether about the Preston Model, or some other initiatives they seem to have - and it all sounds very hopeful. I hope Preston flourishes; that it does well and does indeed become a model for other places to follow.
    More power to you, Preston.

  • @Ribeirasacra
    @Ribeirasacra Před 16 dny +24

    Oops 0:55 Thurrock has not only gone bankrupt it moved. Still great work. First time watching something produced by this channel

    • @Gr0nal
      @Gr0nal Před 16 dny +5

      I thought I was crazy, I knew Thurrock was in Essex but assumed the video was just right and I was wrong.

    • @alfsmith4936
      @alfsmith4936 Před 15 dny +2

      what a Thurrock hockup

    • @Ribeirasacra
      @Ribeirasacra Před 15 dny +1

      @@Gr0nal Just a glitch in the Matrix. The other maps it is located in the correct location.

  • @riadleb7947
    @riadleb7947 Před 16 dny +24

    Nice documentary, i like this new direction you're going.
    The sound, when filming, is a bit down compared to the background sound.
    We like to enjoy your fabulous British accent 😅
    Keep up this type of production
    Cheers

  • @Acehigh-Jenkins
    @Acehigh-Jenkins Před 12 dny

    Thanks for the wonderful video

  • @stribb
    @stribb Před 6 dny

    I was really impressed by this documentary: thanks Tom and the team!

  • @blu3622
    @blu3622 Před 16 dny +10

    Just wanted to say that your additional effort was evident in this video. It seems like each video that you make is better than the previous ones 👏

  • @Rac3r4Life
    @Rac3r4Life Před 16 dny +19

    What an interesting video. As an American, I didn't know how UK local government works. Its not too dissimilar to what we have in the US.

    • @Mitjitsu
      @Mitjitsu Před 16 dny +5

      UK government is much more centralized than the US. Central governments meddling with local councils is where the fundamental problem lies. They mandate certain things, while also making it increasingly hard to raise the funds. The most badly run councils are going bankrupt now, but it will extend to the better run ones as time goes on.

    • @mharley3791
      @mharley3791 Před 16 dny +12

      It is radically different than the way it works in the United States. In the US, states have the power to raise additional funds to fund whatever they want. They can raise taxes, they can sell bonds, they can sell land. They aren’t obligated to do most services and when they are the federal government requires them to do such a service the the federal government has to provide the funding. States have way more autonomy in the US Than the UK (10th amendment).

    • @rachelnotluf4585
      @rachelnotluf4585 Před 15 dny +2

      @@mharley3791 This video is about local governance, though (not state/regional).

    • @quantummotion
      @quantummotion Před 15 dny +4

      ​@@rachelnotluf4585the comparison is apt for this conversation. The point of the conversation is that in the UK, the federal government dictates things to cities and towns with little flexibility at the local level. In Canada and the US, both have middle tier governments (states/provinces) that have constitutional authority to raise taxes without federal government involvement and it's that middle tier that is responsible for cities, towns, counties. The focus of a state/province is necessarily more focused within the border of that state/province. In the UK, central government dollars for cities are competing with requirements for the Navy, the Foreign Service, etc. Middle Tier government with a focus INWARD, provides SOME insulation to this central competition of dollars.

    • @mharley3791
      @mharley3791 Před 15 dny

      @@quantummotion exactly this

  • @thehightower5579
    @thehightower5579 Před 15 dny

    Just started watching this but it really professionally put together, well done!

  • @rhiannonthea
    @rhiannonthea Před 13 dny

    Another great video! So interesting and informative 👍 props to you for going to the significant effort you did for this one 👏

  • @antoinee.bachmann6409
    @antoinee.bachmann6409 Před 16 dny +10

    The trip format is a pleasant novelty, cheers!

  • @ezralittle
    @ezralittle Před 16 dny +17

    Great video! Coincidentally, I grew up in Northamptonshire and went to university in Preston, so I appreciated seeing some coverage of both places here! Even back in 2010 when I was a part-time library assistant with Northamptonshire county council, things were bleak for us - most libraries were closed in 2005-2010, and I watched my colleagues go through horrendous cuts to jobs that left us battling to keep the libraries open to our service users with so few of us left. The few people I know still living there have few jobs prospects unless they can drive a long commute/find remote work, and the town centre of Northampton is depressing to say the least. Preston is an underrated little city and if it wasn't for my career choices, I would have been there a lot longer!

    • @henrydemonfreid1985
      @henrydemonfreid1985 Před 16 dny +3

      Northamptonshire County Council went bankrupt twice in 2018. The council also got a lovely new block of offices in 2018. Go figure...!?

    • @johnstanton8499
      @johnstanton8499 Před 14 dny

      @@henrydemonfreid1985Yes in the eighties the health authority in Northampton closed St Crispin Hospital tefing the patients out in the community and promptly built a new office block for themselves at Northampton General Hospital

    • @eleanorwalmsley635
      @eleanorwalmsley635 Před 11 dny +1

      Preston and it's people are awesome

  • @nadine3193
    @nadine3193 Před 15 dny

    Loving the new style of video ❤

  • @dylanjaramillo3168
    @dylanjaramillo3168 Před 13 dny +5

    As an American, I google mapped these locations and was shocked at how close they are. I understand the UK is a smaller place and you guys aren't used to driving but it's an interesting comparison between car centric and public transit centric places.

    • @green41011
      @green41011 Před 13 dny

      And that's exactly why it works over there, but will never work here

    • @whatisrokosbasilisk80
      @whatisrokosbasilisk80 Před 20 hodinami

      @@green41011 Omg so true, there is definitely no way that public transportation could ever work in America because distances long lmfao

  • @bookbagfox
    @bookbagfox Před 16 dny +13

    I'd never heard of Militant before. Wish we had more politicians in the UK who actually cared about the poor.

  • @k-majik
    @k-majik Před 16 dny +6

    This might be your best ever video, I was fascinated (and frustrated, in a productive way) throughout.

  • @grahamdavid007
    @grahamdavid007 Před 14 dny

    superb journalism - thank you Tom

  • @LeeHarrison89
    @LeeHarrison89 Před 12 dny

    Quality video Tom! I love what Preston are attempting to do.

  • @professortruffula4889
    @professortruffula4889 Před 16 dny +4

    Really excellent video, especially getting to hear from people in local government themselves!

  • @stevenrowlandson9650
    @stevenrowlandson9650 Před 16 dny +7

    Fat cats and robber barons mismanaging their bailiwick is part of it. Low pay and extreme home prices and rents is also part of it. Government being allowed to borrow is also a big part of the problem.

  • @Matt-es1wn
    @Matt-es1wn Před 3 dny

    So glad for UK content on nebula. might have to subscribe again

  • @TuneYourOrgan
    @TuneYourOrgan Před 12 dny

    Great vid!

  • @john_mega
    @john_mega Před 16 dny +5

    The Labour council of Glasgow refused to settle the equal pay backlog dispute while in office. This then fell on the SNP council to resolve. Guess who is blamed for the gap in council funds?

  • @nathfish8656
    @nathfish8656 Před 16 dny +6

    Im thrilled you came to Preston, hope you enjoyed it. Interesting to learn about whats going on here to.

  • @thelatemickb6927
    @thelatemickb6927 Před 14 dny

    This is an excellent channel. Brilliant reportage.

  • @wen6519
    @wen6519 Před 13 dny

    I apologize for commenting before the video is done. these traveling segments and interviews with experts and common folk are so NICE; I like Tom's general content with explanations and one man show, but this is aldo such a nice addition. Despite this being a sad topic, i am having a really nice audiovisual experience. Thank you for your hard work, Tom and anybody else who collaborates on this channel.

  • @workinprogresssince1974
    @workinprogresssince1974 Před 16 dny +5

    Fantastic explanations for the layman. Thank you for your hard work in producing this video. 10/10

    • @moosky7344
      @moosky7344 Před 13 dny

      Fancy meeting you here 😊 i live in that city with the biggest bankruptcy situation, Labour run cease pit

  • @jackrenshaw2236
    @jackrenshaw2236 Před 16 dny +4

    This felt really professional, great documentary! Also a really articulate argument against privatisation 👍

  • @jamesjackson4127
    @jamesjackson4127 Před 13 dny

    Great video, I love the effort, it is informative but not 'overproduced' 👍

  • @eugenio1542
    @eugenio1542 Před 14 dny

    Fascinating and well done. Thanks 👍😊

  • @salchipapa5843
    @salchipapa5843 Před 16 dny +77

    British mail is privatized? Holy hell. I tend to hate conservatism for many of the reasons pointed out in this video. Exellent upload, Tom. Thanks for sharing with us.

    • @darryljones3009
      @darryljones3009 Před 16 dny

      It had been publicly owned since 1660 in the reign of Charles II. Even throughout the 18th and 19th centuries when the government thought welfare was evil and taxing the rich was tantamount to robbery they still didn't sell it off.
      Neoliberalism is ideologically capitalist in a way that would baffle the very people they claim descent from, lacking even a glimmer of pragmatism.

    • @RichardEnglander
      @RichardEnglander Před 16 dny +18

      That's neoliberalism

    • @Oricalkos123
      @Oricalkos123 Před 16 dny +7

      As matey said, conflating conservatism with neoliberalism shows you probably don't know what you're talking about.

    • @Arimaquinador
      @Arimaquinador Před 16 dny +6

      Also privatized in my country, because "private is more efficient". Service declined so quick there are discussions going on to buy it again to public sector - but EU blocks that.

    • @RichardEnglander
      @RichardEnglander Před 16 dny

      @@Oricalkos123 they don't care. They will always twist to suit biases rather than adapt their ideology and worldview.

  • @Jack0a10
    @Jack0a10 Před 16 dny +4

    Ehhyy Preston!! They are also currently rebuilding a historic pedestrian bridge which has been sorely missed for the past half a decade

  • @imicca
    @imicca Před 2 dny

    Thank you for the video!