by ferrarilover » 21 Dec 2010, 16:40
Nothing is cheap these days, I can accept that. I don't like it, but I can just about live with it. We live in the most expensive country on earth and we bend over and take it for the glory of being English (although it is a bloody tough job sometimes). What really gripes me is that nothing is good value for money anymore. It used to be (all of 10 or 12 years ago) that stuff was still more expensive in England than anywhere else, but at least it still represented reasonable value. £4 for a cinema ticket was still double what it cost in The States, but at least, for a 120 minute movie, it was decent enough value. Now, at £8 for a 120 minute movie, its appalling value.
I was looking up airline tickets to Florida this mornflake (for no good reason) and I was utterly apoplectic to find that US Airlines were happy to fly me from LHR to MCO (Heathrow to Orlando International) for £151 return. That's staggering value. Call it 6000 miles, that's a penny and a half per mile, in a 747, with a homosexual to feed me free champagne and offer me a warm, soothing towel. However, not content with the idea that I might like a good value holiday, That Nice Mr Cameron is demanding a further £252 per ticket in bloody tax. Suddenly, my reasonably priced holiday in the sun has gone from £151 to £403 in air fares alone. Now extrapilate this. I have a friend who I might like to take on this holiday to Florida. She has a house out there, so, our fortnight (at the tax free price) could be had for £700 all in, for two of us, over Christmas, lovely, excellent value. Now add on That Nice Mr Cameron's pound of flesh and suddenly the frigging flights alone come to £106 more then the whole fecking holiday.
GRRRRRRRRRRRR.
That said, the three greatest value products in the world?
I'm offering a prize to anyone who can tell me all three, in no particular order.
Matt.
Nothing is cheap these days, I can accept that. I don't like it, but I can just about live with it. We live in the most expensive country on earth and we bend over and take it for the glory of being English (although it is a bloody tough job sometimes). What really gripes me is that nothing is good value for money anymore. It used to be (all of 10 or 12 years ago) that stuff was still more expensive in England than anywhere else, but at least it still represented reasonable value. £4 for a cinema ticket was still double what it cost in The States, but at least, for a 120 minute movie, it was decent enough value. Now, at £8 for a 120 minute movie, its appalling value.
I was looking up airline tickets to Florida this mornflake (for no good reason) and I was utterly apoplectic to find that US Airlines were happy to fly me from LHR to MCO (Heathrow to Orlando International) for £151 return. That's staggering value. Call it 6000 miles, that's a penny and a half per mile, in a 747, with a homosexual to feed me free champagne and offer me a warm, soothing towel. However, not content with the idea that I might like a good value holiday, That Nice Mr Cameron is demanding a further £252 per ticket in bloody tax. Suddenly, my reasonably priced holiday in the sun has gone from £151 to £403 in air fares alone. Now extrapilate this. I have a friend who I might like to take on this holiday to Florida. She has a house out there, so, our fortnight (at the tax free price) could be had for £700 all in, for two of us, over Christmas, lovely, excellent value. Now add on That Nice Mr Cameron's pound of flesh and suddenly the frigging flights alone come to £106 more then the whole fecking holiday.
GRRRRRRRRRRRR.
That said, the three greatest value products in the world?
I'm offering a prize to anyone who can tell me all three, in no particular order.
Matt.