//NJ - you sicken me.//
I’ll get over it. As I’m sure will you.
//Are you ashamed?//
Nope. It’s not my fault and I’ve nothing to be ashamed of. But it seems I’m stuck with my share of the bill just the same.
Few people today can be worse off financially than my parents were. But they managed to house, feed and clothe their children with no Housing Benefit, no food banks, no free school meals, no food vouchers. In fact nothing except “Family Allowance” which everybody with children was (and still is) entitled to. Until I was six we lived in two rooms in the top of a house. We had no bath and just a kitchen sink. The shared toilet was on the landing. My father was without work from time to time (no benefits for short term unemployment then) but still he and my Mum managed. Looking back I don’t really know how they did it, but they did. So please don’t tell me that I should be ashamed that some children, whose parents almost certainly have far more disposable income than my parents could ever dream of, are “going hungry”. It’s their parents’ responsibility to feed them, not mine. Today’s so-called “disadvantaged” parents don’t know the half of it.
//The charity UNICEF estimates that 2.5m British children, or 19%, now live in food insecure households.//
Well they would, wouldn’t they? They’d have nothing to complain about if they said everything was tickety-boo. Their 36 member “Executive Board” would have no reason to exist or find ways to spend their $5bn budget (mainly provided by national governments – i.e. the taxpayer). In any case the UN is always criticising the way the UK treats people here. It makes you wonder why so many are risking their lives in rubber boats in their clamour to get here. The UN should stick its reports on lampposts in and around Calais so that would-be migrants can learn how terrible it is here.