Phuket's Koh Kaew Market To Rise From The Ashes
-
Recently Browsing 0 members
- No registered users viewing this page.
Announcements
-
Topics
-
Latest posts...
-
9
The '50-50 Race' Pre-Election Polls Were Phony
You could also look back at 2020 and say the same thing; WI 49.4/ 48.8 GA 49.5/ 49.2 AZ 49.4/ 49.0 PA 50.0/ 48.8 All razor thin wins for Biden. But wins nonetheless and they made Biden the winner. Time to stop obsessing over the numbers and deal with reality. -
66
Trump's Sex Crime Cabinet
You just cannot help yourself . You cannot converse without the abuse . So, I will bail out of this discussion with you -
24
-
109
Help needed with one question about UK frozen state pension.
Maybe Les in his Youtube is correct? I have just had a look at this telegraph article written on 14th Aug 2024. I had to give my email address and form a password to read it. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/pensions/state-pensions/what-is-frozen-state-pension-how-unfreeze-it/?ICID=continue_without_subscribing_reg_first Here is a copy of some parts:- How can I unfreeze my state pension? If you move to a country eligible for state pension rises for more than 183 days a year, your state pension will “unfreeze” and jump to the amount you’d be entitled to if you’d stayed in an eligible country the whole time. It will also start to increase annually with the triple lock. However, this cannot be backdated, so any money you missed out on when you didn’t live there is lost. For example, if you get the full new state pension but left the UK in 2020, you’d still receive state pension payments of £168.60 a week (the rate it was in 2020). But, if you moved back to the UK, or to another country where uplifts are provided, your pension would be increased to £221.20 a week, the full rate for 2024-25. You wouldn’t receive anything for the increases you missed. If you spend more than half the year in an eligible country, you’ll still get annual increases even if you spend the rest of the time in one that isn’t. If you scroll down to the FAQ What if I return to the UK and then leave again? When you return, your state pension will be topped up to the full level for the duration of your time in the UK – but it will freeze again at that rate when you leave. For example, if you claimed your state pension in January 2020 and left the UK for a country not eligible for increases, it would be frozen at £168.60 a week. If you returned to live in the UK in 2024, you would start getting the current rate for 2024 to 2025, of £221.20. If you lived in the UK until 2030 and then left, your state pension would be frozen again at the 2030 rate. If you visited or came to the UK temporarily, you would get £221.20 rate until you left, when it would revert to the rate you were getting when you initially left – £168.60. -
66
Trump's Sex Crime Cabinet
Look at what you wrote. Take the time to THINK about what you wrote. Then you will see that what you wrote is completely insane! If you don't want to be seen as lacking intelligence, perhaps stop making arguments IN FAVOR OF RAPE! -
5
Met a girl 5 years ago
I heard and met a few government workers and Nurses who never fooled around, only focused on their work, and be good girls. No kids, no dept, So if your question was, do these girls exist? Yes, You should know by now, and if there is no red flags, I would not worry. I only managed to be friends, and never attempted to fool around with them -
5
Met a girl 5 years ago
Being honest I don't read people very well because I have autism. Nothing she says appears to be wrong or untruthful however I ask my self how did she go 33 years without a boyfriend. And she's not unattractive not missing fingers. Most decent western women i won't even get a look in. -
3,925
LTR Visa is Now available for Long Term Residency
Totally anal IMHO. But that's Immigration not BOI, right?
-
-
Popular in The Pub
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now