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#51
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On Sun, Jun 12, 2016 at 05:48:15PM +0100, JNugent wrote:
For a Bromley or Bexley commuter (and I would guess also for Kingston-upon-Thames), "[a] plan to freeze all TfL fares for the next four years, so you will not pay a penny more in 2020 than you do in 2016" is just a lie. Croydon too. -- David Cantrell | top google result for "topless karaoke murders" You know you're getting old when you fancy the teenager's parent and ignore the teenager -- Paul M in uknot |
#52
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On Mon, Jun 13, 2016 at 02:07:30AM -0700, solar penguin wrote:
On Monday, 13 June 2016 08:59:16 UTC+1, Recliner wrote: But I wonder why you cite Croydon, which does have TfL services, rather than Bromley and Bexley, which don't? Just to be pedantic: Bromley has TfL London Overground services from 3 stations in the borough. Apart from the old East London line, isn't the Overground charged as if it were a National Rail service? But in any case, vast swathes of Croydon aren't near enough to an Overground or tram service to be able to sensibly travel exclusively on TfL services. -- David Cantrell | Official London Perl Mongers Bad Influence The voices said it's a good day to clean my weapons |
#53
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In message , at 11:41:59 on Tue, 14 Jun
2016, tim... remarked: "We benefit" means the country's gross product benefits (as I said) but we get a big share of that. Remember that more trade equals more money going round of which we all get some, even if not as fair shares as many would like. And I see you ignored my last comment so I make it again The idea that we would lose all of that trade if we left the EU is simply preposterous As this is Usenet then nothing is ever going to qualify as "all" (unless it's something like "all of Queen Victoria's children are dead"). Even after trade negotiations with the EU, an exited UK will still have to manufacture goods to the standards within the EU, without ever having had a say in what those standards are. What may dry up quickest (but isn't necessarily a huge sum) is cross-border trade covered by the successor to the Distance Selling Directive, without whose safeguards consumers in the EU may be more reluctant to buy from us. There's also likely to be a big shakeup of travel ticketing (will CIV survive?) as the whole low-cost flights thing is a result off EU deregulation, and the allocation of slots is also an EU thing: http://researchbriefings.parliament....ummary/SN00488 -- Roland Perry |
#54
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In message , at 12:44:51
on Tue, 14 Jun 2016, David Cantrell remarked: But I wonder why you cite Croydon, which does have TfL services, rather than Bromley and Bexley, which don't? Just to be pedantic: Bromley has TfL London Overground services from 3 stations in the borough. Apart from the old East London line, isn't the Overground charged as if it were a National Rail service? No, it has special fares, even lower then underground ones. -- Roland Perry |
#55
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On Tue, 14 Jun 2016 12:44:51 +0100, David Cantrell
wrote: On Mon, Jun 13, 2016 at 02:07:30AM -0700, solar penguin wrote: On Monday, 13 June 2016 08:59:16 UTC+1, Recliner wrote: But I wonder why you cite Croydon, which does have TfL services, rather than Bromley and Bexley, which don't? Just to be pedantic: Bromley has TfL London Overground services from 3 stations in the borough. Apart from the old East London line, isn't the Overground charged as if it were a National Rail service? No, TfL sets the fares, and the mayor can freeze them. LO also honours the Freedom Pass all day, unlike other NR services. But in any case, vast swathes of Croydon aren't near enough to an Overground or tram service to be able to sensibly travel exclusively on TfL services. Not exclusively, but many Croydon residents benefit from TfL services, including the trams, buses and Overground. |
#56
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On Tue, 14 Jun 2016 12:40:37 +0100, David Cantrell
wrote: On Sun, Jun 12, 2016 at 05:48:15PM +0100, JNugent wrote: For a Bromley or Bexley commuter (and I would guess also for Kingston-upon-Thames), "[a] plan to freeze all TfL fares for the next four years, so you will not pay a penny more in 2020 than you do in 2016" is just a lie. Croydon too. Not if they use buses, trams or LO services. In any case, it's not a lie: he never promised to freeze anything other than TfL fares. Most boroughs are served by a mixture of TfL and NR services, and he only promised to freeze the former. |
#57
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In message , at 13:23:36 on
Tue, 14 Jun 2016, Recliner remarked: For a Bromley or Bexley commuter (and I would guess also for Kingston-upon-Thames), "[a] plan to freeze all TfL fares for the next four years, so you will not pay a penny more in 2020 than you do in 2016" is just a lie. Croydon too. Not if they use buses, trams or LO services. Travelcards and daily caps haven't been frozen, just single tickets. In any case, it's not a lie: he never promised to freeze anything other than TfL fares. Most boroughs are served by a mixture of TfL and NR services, and he only promised to freeze the former. His manifesto was ambiguous, also saying "Londoners won't pay a penny more for their travel in 2020 than they do today." With hindsight he should have been asked to clarify. Sadly (and mentioning no specifics) the majority of Stay/Leave propaganda is equally flawed at such a basic level. -- Roland Perry |
#58
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On Tue, 14 Jun 2016 13:38:48 +0100, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 13:23:36 on Tue, 14 Jun 2016, Recliner remarked: For a Bromley or Bexley commuter (and I would guess also for Kingston-upon-Thames), "[a] plan to freeze all TfL fares for the next four years, so you will not pay a penny more in 2020 than you do in 2016" is just a lie. Croydon too. Not if they use buses, trams or LO services. Travelcards and daily caps haven't been frozen, just single tickets. What about daily bus caps? In any case, it's not a lie: he never promised to freeze anything other than TfL fares. Most boroughs are served by a mixture of TfL and NR services, and he only promised to freeze the former. His manifesto was ambiguous, also saying "Londoners won't pay a penny more for their travel in 2020 than they do today." With hindsight he should have been asked to clarify. Sadly (and mentioning no specifics) the majority of Stay/Leave propaganda is equally flawed at such a basic level. Much more so. Much of it consists of outright lies, not just selective quotation or careful qualifications. |
#59
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In message , at 13:49:49 on
Tue, 14 Jun 2016, Recliner remarked: Travelcards and daily caps haven't been frozen, just single tickets. What about daily bus caps? Dunno. They could of course implement staged daily everything caps by having platform validators at locations with shared gate lines. -- Roland Perry |
#60
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David Cantrell writes:
But in any case, vast swathes of Croydon aren't near enough to an Overground or tram service to be able to sensibly travel exclusively on TfL services. But they probably live close enough to a bus route. |
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