Originally Posted by
Inseriousity.
Maybe you're getting me mixed up with someone else but I've always been politically neutral when it comes to voting for the parties although I am a 'leftie' as you call it so I naturally support left-wing policies etc. If that automatically means I become a labour supporter then so be it but unfortunately, I had no choice but to vote labour as I found out that you vote on a local level not a national level and the Labour MP was the best choice for my area. I know you've said it before but I am fully aware that all 3 parties are the exact same so I'm not particularly a fan of anyone.
Now that I've got that out the way, I am not someone who preaches 'the poor won't be able to afford it' as I know that people go to university to make their lives better (whether that's a false assumption to make is a different debate altogether). I'm against the marketisation of education, which falsely tries to bring in competition under the assumption that bad schools will close and good schools will thrive, which they do not. At the moment, all universities are capped at £3,300 or something and if the fees were to rise to £6,000 for every university then I wouldn't actually complain that much as I'm aware we're in some deep **** that we need to dig deep to get out of. Instead the top universities will be charging £9,000 while the rest will have to charge £6,000 which just brings in an apparent 'competition' and it's more than likely that those who are left in the £6,000 a year universities will be mostly the poor and disadvantaged, which I think is wrong.
That's my stance on the university tuition fees rises, wouldn't want people to get a false impression.