Carolest59, I know it seems hard to believe that the campaign will change anything - we have little leverage after all. But it's worth a try, surely? The powers that be were no doubt encouraged to go even further after we all just sighed and rolled over when the first hike to the pension age hit us (though to be fair, a lot didn't even know about it!). Mine went up to 64 at that time - I can't remember the exact age as I picked up the information online, the authorities didn't feel the need to write and tell me about it. They no doubt realised then what a soft target they'd found, so up it went to 66. Yes, of course there has to be equalisation of the pension age, but no other country has done it to a timescale like this, meaning that one relatively small group of women are hit so hard and so unfairly.
The thing is, at the last demo I heard about women of my age who have worked since they were 15, are now on their own, in poor health, and relying on their own parents and foodbanks for help. This is shameful, and if going down to London and shouting about it raises awareness just a notch or two, it's worth it for me.
There are some glimmers of hope. WASPI has crowdfunded to enable them to pay one of the top UK employment law firms to look at the case and advise as to whether a legal challenge is worth pursuing. And the all party parliamentary group supporting them is the biggest ever and still growing.
Like you, I am irritated by the argument that we paid for a previous generation's pension, not our own. Well, someone is paying in now for ours and we're not getting it! If the NI pension contributions paid by both employees and employers are not going towards pensions, what are they being used for?