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SilverNicktail t1_j3rtzkn wrote

One of those "uplifting" stories that's people trying to get along in a country the Tories have brought to its fucking knees. Good to see decent people, can't believe we have to put up with this shit for at least another year (the Tories are hard at work trying to rig that election too). Even then, FPTP means we're gonna end up with Tories Lite.

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writerfan2013 t1_j3rvspa wrote

It's absolutely shocking that anyone needs this kind of facility in the UK in 2023.

Well done that farmer but omg.

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whatatwit OP t1_j3s9egx wrote

It’s the affordability crisis is horrific isn’t it? This is what happens when the government doesn’t act in the interest of everyday folks and pursues always held ideological ideas to cut government through years of so-called austerity measures instead.

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Raptorman_Mayho t1_j3s8v40 wrote

Yea it reminds me of the stories you see out if the US a lot where neighbours give their live savings so a child can get cancer treatment.

Like that's ducked up it needed to happen.

At least this one is better as it's someone making good use of what they already have and can still be used for his cage project later.

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whatatwit OP t1_j3sc83w wrote

> At least this one is better as it’s someone making good use of what they already have and can still be used for his cage project later.

I assume that’s autocorrect! Unless there’s something you know about his cage project that I’ve not heard :).

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Aporkalypse_Sow t1_j3ui5iv wrote

Sounds like he's talking about a homeless solution you'd hear about over here in the USA in like Alabama or something.

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Odd_nonposter t1_j3wei9m wrote

In case you want your day ruined any further, /r/orphancrushingmachine collects this exact kind of story

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PhantomTroupe-2 t1_j3rtdfv wrote

Good for the farmer but that’s not very uplifting. The article is actually quite sad lol

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whatatwit OP t1_j3sbm65 wrote

The background situation of increasing inequality is tragic and deliberate but given that reality, it’s a good news story.

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Baman-and-Piderman t1_j3rv2c0 wrote

Council will shut him down in short order. No good deed goes unpunished!

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whatatwit OP t1_j3s8l16 wrote

I don’t think it will. He didn’t get any lottery funds but he is being helped a number of local charities for his Pathways care farm.

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jackieatx t1_j3us3cy wrote

Makes me cringe seeing so many churches with manicured lawns. Could easily share space with food gardens and emergency housing if they wanted to. Good on this guy for opening his doors

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whatatwit OP t1_j3rs3yh wrote


Farmyard Warm Room

> Anna Louise Claydon visits a farm in Lowestoft which is opening up a barn as a warm room this winter. Pathways Care Farm was once part of 130 acres of arable land. It's now just thirteen acres tucked away at the back of a housing estate. The farm gives vulnerable people the opportunity to learn through hands-on farming activities - including planting, cultivation, building restoration, animal husbandry and the basics of machinery maintenance. This winter, its doors have opened to the public for the first time. In 2020, director Geoff Stevens converted what used to be the coldest building on the farm into a fully insulated space with a kitchen and a log burner, in the hope of opening it as a cafe after the pandemic. Little did he know that he'd just created a community space for a problem he didn't yet know was coming: the cost of living crisis.

> Anna Louise joins Geoff by the fire to find out more about the new farmyard warm room. She finds members of the team out with the animals and hears how working on the farm has transformed their lives and helped them to re-build after difficult experiences. She also meets farmer Geoffrey Cooper, to hear about the original farm before most of the land was sold off for housing. He tells Anna Louise about his memories of working on the land with his father decades ago.

> Presented and produced by Anna Louise Claydon

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001gwsm


What's going on in the UK?

> The cost of living has been increasing across the UK since early 2021. The annual rate of inflation reached 11.1% in October 2022, a 41-year high, before easing to 10.7% in November 2022. High inflation affects the affordability of goods and services for households.

> Consumer goods and energy prices pushing inflation higher

> Consumer prices, as measured by the Consumer Prices Index (CPI), were 10.7% higher in November 2022 than a year before.

> Increases in the costs of consumer goods, underpinned by strong demand from consumers and supply chain bottlenecks, have been factors causing rising inflation. Food prices have also been rising sharply over the past year.

> Another important driver of inflation is energy prices, with household energy tariffs and petrol costs increasing. From November 2021 to November 2022, domestic gas prices increased by 129% and domestic electricity prices by 65%. Gas prices increased to record levels after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine and continued to rise during much of 2022 due to cuts in Russian supply. Electricity prices are linked to gas prices and have followed a similar trend.

[...]

https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-9428/


> Anti-poverty campaigners have warned the rise of “warm banks” over the winter is not a sustainable solution to the cost-of-living crisis and should not become normalised as food banks have.

> Warm banks or “warm spaces” – heated public spaces where people who cannot afford to heat their homes can go to warm up – are set to become a regular feature on Britain’s high streets as millions struggle with rising energy bills and the cost-of-living crisis.

> Just as community food banks have been set up to take donations and hand out emergency supplies to low-income families and individuals, warm banks “will give those unable to afford the exorbitant cost of home heating somewhere to go once the weather turns”, said The Independent. “Libraries, art galleries, community centres and places of worship could all be used in this way, giving people some respite from the cold,” the paper added.

[...]

https://www.theweek.co.uk/news/society/958436/warm-banks-a-worrying-winter-necessity


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K4m30 t1_j3verud wrote

In the future uplifting news will be the removal of hostile architecture to allow homeless people to sleep on park Benches. And everything is chrome.

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SidewinderTV t1_j3ul2ix wrote

>Log burner

I really hope he got a professional to set that up properly.

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