Readers respond to the recent riots
Peaceful disruption of motorways brings three- to five-year prison sentences. What sentence will be given to those perpetrating racist violence in Southport?
Steve Cieslik, Chepstow
The real motive for these riots is racism. Using the murder of three young girls as a scapegoat to terrorise people because of their skin colour, religion or asylum status is horrifying and heartbreaking. These are not protests these are riots. This is not activism, this is terrorism. This is not patriotism, this is racism. It’s shameful to see the media twist a false narrative of what’s happening in the UK right now. Thank you @bigissueuk for sharing resources for what we can do as a community to help those in this time of need.
@amyadaams, Instagram
We need to support refugees and asylum seekers against this far-right hate and fascism! The British society we know is inclusive, is loving, is embracing, is caring. Wherever I go I talk about the amazing welcoming British people I know. Don’t let these thugs ruin British society and its image.
@nourmfj998, Instagram
If the reason for the ‘protests’ is illegal migration #StopTheBoats these ‘protests’ are pathetic. Gathering in random, irrelevant places with no purpose apart from disorder is pointless. 🤬
@RobBurberry, X
Access denied
Foot surgery last year saw me dependent on a wheelchair for a few weeks and gave me a new perspective on the difficulties faced by permanent users such as Anna Landre, who wrote for the Big Issue. Finding some places difficult and others impossible to access was bad enough, but my worst moment came at a library event, which I had reached via a lift to the top floor. The organiser cheerfully announced that, while no fire alarm was scheduled to go off, on no account should anyone try to use the lift if it did. Would I have been carried bodily down the stairs in the event of a fire? I do hope so, but in a panic situation, who knows?
Maggie Cobbett, Ripon
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Starmer’s sums?
I read with interest your article on housing: ‘How Labour’s target for 1.5 million homes will depend on the private sector’. Although Labour’s house-building plans are to be applauded, the logistics of their aim is daunting, effectively bringing on to the market over 1,000 new dwellings every working day for the next five years.
Although there are already houses in the process of being built, the acceleration of building plans does mean that this average is an under-estimate of the rate at which new dwellings need to be brought to market in the later part of the five-year term, as you don’t build a house in a day.
Barratt Developments’ quote of 22,000 homes a year is about 88 per working day, is very far off what is needed. Are the skills and labour force in place to manage this, and are contemporary modular/ prefabricated building techniques being explored to enable the targets to be met?
I believe the last time such a rapid building programme was achieved was immediately postwar when many of the houses were prefabs and we had extra labour from German and Italian prisoners of war!
Who is going to challenge the builders on their rate of construction and the reality of the targets being into place by Starmer’s Labour government?
David Sproxton, Bristol
Do you have a story to tell or opinions to share about the performance of Keir Starmer so far, or any of the topics raised? Get in touch and tell us more. Big Issue exists to give homeless and marginalised people the opportunity to earn an income. To support our work buy a copy of the magazine or get the app from the App Store or Google Play.