Do you want to discuss boring politics? (34 Viewers)

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Surely both overlap? ie. Changing who can come in also defines who is here legally.

Deportation for crime is common sense and should be non-negotiable. No second chances, fuck around and find out.

OK just to give the most common devils advocate: refugee arrives aged 6, commits a crime at 19, doesn’t know anyone in their “home” country or speak the language. Still deport?

You can’t retrospectively change laws no, you can change the rules for when ILR or citizenship is possible but you can’t remove right to remain or citizenship from those that have it without a huge legal battle.
 

tisza

Well-Known Member
Economic tests for arrivals seems reasonable to me. But for remaining?

Call me old fashioned, but I don’t think the government should be able to rescind basic privileges based on whether or not someone is deemed financially “positive”. There by the grace of etc etc.
EU does it.
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
Economic tests for arrivals seems reasonable to me. But for remaining?

Call me old fashioned, but I don’t think the government should be able to rescind basic privileges based on whether or not someone is deemed financially “positive”. There by the grace of etc etc.
Absolute minefield to negotiate. At what point does someone get deemed 'financially negative'? Is it the second they lose a job? Sounds like a situation rip for abuse from unscrupulous employers to me, threatening people with the sack unless they do extra hours for no extra pay etc. What about if a migrant gets to retirement age? Do they still have to remain 'financially positive' or is there a cut off point where they are deemed to have been financially positive for long enough?

At the very least it needs a time limit and conditions putting on it to even begin such a conversation.

With criminals of course I've no problem with them being removed, even if they've been here a long time (possibly having a points system like a driving licence depending on severity of crime - say 1 point for a minor offence up to instantly losing the right to remain for the worst offences like murder, rape and the grooming gangs).
 

rob9872

Well-Known Member
Its another area where data is fudged. You'll see plenty of data on short term impact of single male immigrants assumed to be of working age who haven't had the cost of education etc.
Well I'm not sure the 350 single males in our local Hilton have had made a huge contribution so far ;)
 

Mucca Mad Boys

Well-Known Member
Questions for those with this as their main concern:

Would you ever accept just changing who can come in and deportations for serious crimes, or are you at the point where you want people who are here legally and law abiding to be removed?

Yes, Denmark had v similar issues, made changes to their immigration system and it’s removed anxiety of the public over migration and it’s nullified their ‘far right’.

A hard-working immigrant nurse whose child also happens to have a rare condition that requires regular medical care would probably also be a net drain on the taxpayer. Out they go?

Meanwhile an Albanian drug dealer makes a killing on selling cheap coke in Earlsdon, goes out and buys himself a new BMW with the profits, and the taxman banks a major cut of the proceeds. Economic productivity ftw?

Frankly, yes.

I’m glad you use a healthcare worker as an example because the health and social care worker visa route has been used to drive up net migration. The scheme expected 6-40k visas to be issued when it was introduced. 146k visas have been issued for workers plus an additional 203k dependents. Drilling further into the data, there was a 1:10 ratio of workers to dependents for Zimbabwean applicants of this scheme, this is a huge flag.

Most of these visas are being granted to low income individuals who will cost the taxpayer money in the long run. The OBR projected that a migrant earning less than median salary (c35k) is a net drain to the economy. Again, once indefinite leave to remain is granted after 5 years, every new arrival has full access to the welfare state.

On a more fundamental level, it is wrong for the government to cut trainee spaces for domestic workers to then solely rely on low income migration from poorer countries.
 

mmttww

Well-Known Member
1000017444.jpg

Just finished this. If anyone's interested in things that drive all kinds of migration and less cash being available to fund services etc. I'd recommend it. Parts about how the US has essentially replaced 'offshore' through FATCA and CRS was pretty foreboding.
 

Mucca Mad Boys

Well-Known Member
View attachment 43739

Just finished this. If anyone's interested in things that drive all kinds of migration and less cash being available to fund services etc. I'd recommend it. Parts about how the US has essentially replaced 'offshore' through FATCA and CRS was pretty foreboding.

The bureaucrat who came up with the acronym knew exactly what they were doing naming it FATCA… 😂
 

fatso

Well-Known Member
Rape and sexual abuse of children is not an Islamic problem. You've got a very short memory. At least be consistent with your outrage. Both the Catholic church and Church of England were responsible for systematic abuse that was covered up for decades.
But that's historic, not currently still happening (as far as we know anyway)
 

tisza

Well-Known Member
Rape and sexual abuse of children is not an Islamic problem. You've got a very short memory. At least be consistent with your outrage. Both the Catholic church and Church of England were responsible for systematic abuse that was covered up for decades.
All basically covered by the "establishment" for the same reason - didn't want a few bad apples to tarnish groups/organisations as a whole.
 

Earlsdon_Skyblue1

Well-Known Member
Enjoying how we roll on here. Call someone an apologist for gangs that raped kids, openly threaten them, infer they're a paedophile themselves, then like their next post and go quiet.

all while no one else calls it out.

Never used Twitter, never really used FB so I think I just got a blast of what it's like if you do, and wander an inch or two off-piste. If this is how we talk to each other now then we're f*cked.

You did it yourself.

You spent months denying what was going on and attacking people for raising the issues. It wasn't even when the inquiry announced that you stopped digging, you kept going saying the victims wanted this to stay quiet - which was just nonsense and another pussy attempt to sweep it under the carpet. Even when accounts of survivors were shared - you ignored them.

I liked your post about what you wanted to happen to the perpetrators when finally pushed, because I agreed with it, but let's not pretend it wasn't well beyond time. You've made yourself look like a right twat, and a sympathiser to what has gone on with your behaviour. That's on you and nobody else.

If I were you, I wouldn't be getting cocky now, or crying once again to the admins to shut down people calling you out. Anyone who has been complicit in making this an awkward conversation should be held to account, and that's being generous. You're included in this.

A good debate is fair, but that hasn't been happening. Maybe we are starting to see signs, but there is a long way to go still. Sorry, but if someone is going to continue to try and water this down, then I'm going to come after you. It is as simple as that.

What's happened is a disgrace.
 

Earlsdon_Skyblue1

Well-Known Member
That issue with care workers sums it up. We refuse to pay decent wages and offer decent conditions for a vitally important job, can’t get British people to do the work, then baulk at foreigners coming in to do it instead.

I agree with this.

The issue is Brighton, the UK does not pay good wages. It's absolutely shite. Across so many fields. You would think someone looking after the elderly should be paid a respectable wage, but they aren't. Not the same, but it is similair principle for emergency workers, teachers, and other important roles.

It's a universal problem. I'm in the Czech Republic a lot. Many of the low income workers here are Ukranian. For them, the money is good. In the UK, the money is good for Polish people, or those from south Asia.

The UK needs to make wages for these jobs attractive enough, because at the moment the idea of doing a tough job for next to fuck all is not appealing for many. Especially when the benifit system is handing out money too easily, in my opinion.
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
Somebody decided to do away with the care sector as an active decision around 15years ago taking the decision locally to take the condition's of the workforce down.
 

fatso

Well-Known Member
That issue with care workers sums it up. We refuse to pay decent wages and offer decent conditions for a vitally important job, can’t get British people to do the work, then baulk at foreigners coming in to do it instead.
There's also a lot of able bodied British people who won't work as they can claim money from the state instead.
I personally know of a number of such cases, with some even getting new cars!
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
I agree with this.

The issue is Brighton, the UK does not pay good wages. It's absolutely shite. Across so many fields. You would think someone looking after the elderly should be paid a respectable wage, but they aren't. Not the same, but it is similair principle for emergency workers, teachers, and other important roles.

It's a universal problem. I'm in the Czech Republic a lot. Many of the low income workers here are Ukranian. For them, the money is good. In the UK, the money is good for Polish people, or those from south Asia.

The UK needs to make wages for these jobs attractive enough, because at the moment the idea of doing a tough job for next to fuck all is not appealing for many. Especially when the benifit system is handing out money too easily, in my opinion.
Welcome to the progressive left ESB
 

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