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Topic: Boycott Esso and BP fuel filling stations

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Boycott Esso and BP fuel filling stations

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in order to force the price down for both petrol and diesel. The cost of fuel is becoming a joke but no one is laughing. If Esso and BP lose business they will be forced to lower their prices. The rest will follow. It makes a lot of sense. The Government ought to be ashamed of itself too. They could help by reducing the amount of duty which they slap on every litre of fuel. 



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Its the duty that's the killer isn't it?

What is wrong is only those that can afford it can they buy newer 'cleaner' vehicles. Those scratching a living pay more car tax, and in real terms higher fuel bills.

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We are looking at duty of 57.95 pence per litre. That's so obscene. The big smokescreen is the news stories related to the current chaos on the railways. Not everyone travels by train. No train drivers equals no trains. That information is being suppressed.

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The boycott appears to be working. I've been on the Petrol Prices website and discovered that fuel can now be purchased much cheaper from a number of filling stations.
Happy days!

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ian
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the cost of living is quite scary. To break even and raise any kind of a family and fit in all the requirements is simply mind numbing and back breaking. We have two full time jobs in our house and 2 younger children and we cant get by beyond making the ends meet. And like most I suspect, the debt we have and the pensions and insurance will just about cover costs. you are born with nowt...

Fuel all round is becoming a luxury item. I imagine many state pensioners and lower earners and such simply get by on fumes in the summer and blankets int he winter.

perhaps global warming will at least lower winter bills...if you believe its not a conspiracy of course !!!!!

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Same. After a bitter disgusting divorce and 2yr court battle to keep my children as they wanted, all the while living under the same roof as she refused to move until court forced her - I'm discovering what single parenthood is all about. What kind of mess do we live in that on 25k a year I can barely feed them? - I don't go out peeing it up a wall every week, and in fact I have to ref 3 matches a week just to keep ticking over. This time of year is a nightmare 3-4 months of pre season. It's not like I have masses of debt other than what the divorce caused either. Our society is not geared towards single parents, finding work that is suitable for time, not type (who cares right when you need cash!), is near impossible. And then there's the childcare costs that make it pointless. The flexi working and voucher scheme is a smoke screen that in reality can't be used, if it is used to full benefit - you'll be out on your ass, HR will find a way and replace you with someone who can work 6 days a week!

I regularly get down to the range in the car showing 10 miles. The killer is renting, it's destroying all generations and impacting the millenials even more so. The inequality gap is ever widening, oh please bring back the 90s, the world seemed such a brighter place where you could achieve anything. Brexit is a real chance to get this country off its knees, but with the Tories being puppets to big business I doubt this will happen.

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ian
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yep. I, well aware of the territory .

You gotta have a very supportive childcare network which often involves bringing together a plan similar to a deep covert international spying operation with informants, safe houses and miracles of planning and rescues as the seconds to disaster tick down.

I know there is some controversy and difficulty working out the value of benefits vs working hours and salaries. The middle class and the average salary are both woeful if you happen to have raised a family. so to the single parent.

The difficulty of doing everything well or adequately is so stressful.

I know that a single parent of 2 for example working 24 plus hours can have a net income of way about the average single person salary.

However, even thought this may to some at times to be unfair when compared to say a professionally qualified graduate with 10-20  years working experience; one really has to look broader and deeper berfore arriving at a reaction

The single parent is often totally alone and has the great responsibility of raising the next generation of our great civilisation. In many ways I applaud a social and civic system that meets the thresholds of market values that children need to have access to. The issue as always is that there are good custodians , not so good, and down right charlatans. This is however true no matter who you are or what class you belong to.


I know a single parent of eastern European recent immigration of 3 children who takes home almost exactly what I do working 24 hours in a warehouse.

I wish her good fortune and luck with every decision she has to make because its still not enough to raise kids on.



-- Edited by ian on Tuesday 12th of June 2018 10:33:05 PM

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Its ridiculous when relatives of mine find it cheaper to fly from Newquay in Cornwall to Doncaster to visit, as it is now too expensive to bring the family up by train or by car. Money is being squeezed out of the system and being polarised to the top. The gap between the ordinary working population and the top 10% is equivalent to what it was in the Victorian era.

I'm 62 and when I think back I cant believe what we have allowed to happened to our Society during my lifetime. The downward spiral for working people started in the late 1970's in my experience.

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Ian that's exactly true, if only more people had your views. I'm totally isolated down here, you don't think about these things in your early 20s when you meet a southern lass and up sticks. I've got friends of course, all Dads and work fulltime. It's 'usually' the mum that gets the kids, who tend to have a network of likewise individuals, either stay at home / work part time married etc, or single mum parents. This society is not geared up for the dude to have the kids end of.

If the ex ever said don't wanna see them anymore I'd be off back to Rotherham like a shot, it's the only thing keeping me down here, the children, having a continued part time relationship with their mother.

I don't know if people remember, might have been back in the MM days, she had a brain hemorrhage back in 2011 a year after getting married when the kids were toddlers. She came out pretty well from it in the context of what it was and others you see with similar. Up to that point I had a thriving I.T. business and was self funding an I.T. degree course.

Life throws these things at you, what really gets my goat is the help or right structures aren't there to get out of the hole. My biz suffered due to the care of her, the 2 little ones and the elder step son, and all I want now is time to build up again. Even getting a job is nightmare, not only for kids care, school hols etc. Seems everyone want you available 12hrs a day 6 days a week. I'm not even going into the nepotism I've experienced the last 3 interviews, talk about making up the numbers it really is infuriating.

As your point about the next generation. I have sacrificed no end, to make sure my 2 who are bright as buttons have the drive and ambition to succeed, they already do and will be going to university, mortgage and be outstanding members of society, that I have no doubt whatsoever. They know the mistakes I made and will be better adults for it, they also know life changes and throws you curve balls. OK, I won't have material things to leave them by way of inheritence but I'm giving them something more valuable. Besides when I retire in 25yrs it will be commonplace that what you have the government will take for care, they're already doing it and it will get worse.

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Asda now selling diesel at £1.28 per litre and unleaded petrol at £1.25 per litre at 318 stores. The price war has now begun.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman will discuss oil and other issues today as their teams face off in the World Cup.
Oh, the irony. And here's me thinking it was all about the football.

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Great to see people voting with their feet/cars and staying away from Esso and BP fuel filling stations. You get a better deal buying fuel from Asda, Morrisons etc.

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A drop in the wholesale price of oil means Asda’s new national fuel price cap is now 122.7p a litre for unleaded and 126.7p a litre for diesel.
Esso and BP will not like that.

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Tesco are lagging behind slightly with unleaded at £1.23.9 litre and diesel at £1.26.9 litre. Come on Tesco you can do a little better. Your staff buy fuel as well.

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