Originally posted by vetran
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Reply to: Make Britain Great Again
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Previously on "Make Britain Great Again"
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Originally posted by vetran View Post
You might want to look at those exchange rates.
Note after significant disruption post brexit.
https://macstrucks.co.uk/the-ongoing...king-industry/
https://www.ons.gov.uk/employmentand...ers/2021-10-19
The study further highlighted that more than half of those surveyed had already moved at least some parts of their operations to the European Union.
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Originally posted by BlasterBates View Post
No, your calculation is wrong. German truck drivers earn £36,000 (USD 46,000) and according to this website UK drivers earn £32,300 (EUR 38,000).
https://www.eurowag.com/blog/the-eco...-across-europe
Note after significant disruption post brexit.
https://macstrucks.co.uk/the-ongoing...king-industry/
https://www.ons.gov.uk/employmentand...ers/2021-10-19
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Originally posted by vetran View Post
a below average response then.
So Truck drivers in Germany earning £30,000 (near the UK average wage at the time) for a worker that had a fairly rare certificate and worked long hours signals a great reward.
The Polish truck drivers most of us met were here for a reason.
https://www.eurowag.com/blog/the-eco...-across-europe
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Originally posted by BlasterBates View Post
Truck drivers in the EU get paid more than in the UK:
https://www.freightwaves.com/news/10...the-most-money
So Truck drivers in Germany earning £30,000 (near the UK average wage at the time) for a worker that had a fairly rare certificate and worked long hours signals a great reward.
The Polish truck drivers most of us met were here for a reason.
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Originally posted by edison View Post
Minimial chargeable cost to you as a customer maybe but Amazon spent approximately£235B on technology and infrastructure expenses in the last five years, i.e. massive investment.
In contrast, the NHS was given £2B in Spring 2024 for technology transformation. In 2022, £2B was also allocated to improving electronic patient records, something the NHS has been grappling with since at least the late 90s.
I was offered a role at one of the largest NHS trusts in the country a few years ago and turned it down after concluding it all sounded very tulip. I have several friends who work in NHS IT including what used to be NHSX, that was responsible for technology transformation. They do some interesting things but the stumbling block always seems to be so many old systems, taking years to sort out anything to do with data sharing and 'cultural resistance' as tech is done to users.
I really don't know what the answer is or whether comparable countries with large public healthcare systems have much better technology.
https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/insight...nd%20medicines.
so £181 billion with 15% to be spent?
Having just used the NHS extensively it is still disorganised and offering poor customer service away from medical staff. Clinically individuals appear good.
Updating service standards to the levels you would expect in most modern service industries would reduce cost and improve customer experience. Data sharing was tulip as well.
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Originally posted by vetran View Post
The thing about many left wing people miss is the multinationals use imported labour to depress labour rates and thanks to Gordon B'ruin's subsidies getting the UK tax payer to pay This was frequently EU labour at cut rates, everyone was shocked when the truck drivers finally got paid above minimum wage when the eastern European drivers left.
I suspect many of the workers are employed illegally and still claim, there is little sanction. Personally I would start teams call based back to work clubs that tie people up during the day so they lose their 'grey economy' jobs.
https://www.freightwaves.com/news/10...the-most-money
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Originally posted by vetran View Post
The real problem is organisations doing things badly. Technology gives you massive opportunities to save costs and improve service. Those companies that won't use it to do that will wither.
Amazon provides a superb service at minimal cost. I remembered how much better they are when I placed an order for an obscure part and was offered a week's delivery, no portal, no phone number etc.
In contrast, the NHS was given £2B in Spring 2024 for technology transformation. In 2022, £2B was also allocated to improving electronic patient records, something the NHS has been grappling with since at least the late 90s.
I was offered a role at one of the largest NHS trusts in the country a few years ago and turned it down after concluding it all sounded very tulip. I have several friends who work in NHS IT including what used to be NHSX, that was responsible for technology transformation. They do some interesting things but the stumbling block always seems to be so many old systems, taking years to sort out anything to do with data sharing and 'cultural resistance' as tech is done to users.
I really don't know what the answer is or whether comparable countries with large public healthcare systems have much better technology.
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Originally posted by SueEllen View Post
ID cards have been brought during WW1 and WW2. The government tried to keep them after WW2 but were challenged in Court, up to the House of Lords, due to how a police officer was demanding ID papers from a man so they were abandoned in 1952.
Major's government wanted to introduce them, then Blair's government finally did for foreign nationals. They were made to abandon them due to legal challenges.
Many people don't want all their information co-ordinated on one UK government database. Scandals plus simple things like credit scoring show what can go wrong when companies and organisations are given access and control to our person information.
Imagine having that co-ordinated to one database. If you had the same name and birth date as someone else who is a fraudster you could easily be mixed up with them every where if there was one database behind it. At least now when credit referring agencies make mistakes government bodies don't rely solely on their data.
Maybe the Government could do Births, deaths,emigration/immigration,deed poll,gender change, divorces and issue a unique number then police it?
HMRC & NHS have pretty much given up.
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Originally posted by WTFH View PostJust want to check something here: 49% of voters should be ignored because it’s “the will of the people”, but now 14% of the voters should define how the country is run because of some reason or other.
The man is like Trump - a complete imbecile and a joke, but one who knows how to manipulate the media and the easily influenced.
Reform and the Greens need to do likewise in 2029 to get more elected MPs.
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Originally posted by cojak View Post
I’ve never understood why the parties don’t push mandatory photo ID for all citizens. Unregulated working practices mean that people disappear into the system. This often a push for migrants leaving France as it’s difficult to find work without proper documentation.
Major's government wanted to introduce them, then Blair's government finally did for foreign nationals. They were made to abandon them due to legal challenges.
Many people don't want all their information co-ordinated on one UK government database. Scandals plus simple things like credit scoring show what can go wrong when companies and organisations are given access and control to our person information.
Imagine having that co-ordinated to one database. If you had the same name and birth date as someone else who is a fraudster you could easily be mixed up with them every where if there was one database behind it. At least now when credit referring agencies make mistakes government bodies don't rely solely on their data.
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Just want to check something here: 49% of voters should be ignored because it’s “the will of the people”, but now 14% of the voters should define how the country is run because of some reason or other.
The man is like Trump - a complete imbecile and a joke, but one who knows how to manipulate the media and the easily influenced.
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Originally posted by vetran View Post
I suspect many of the workers are employed illegally and still claim, there is little sanction. Personally I would start teams call based back to work clubs that tie people up during the day so they lose their 'grey economy' jobs.
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Originally posted by GJABS View Post
In which case you would see the rich supporting them - which you don't. The rich only support the Tories, in the main.
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