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Previously on "The immigrants aren't going home, they're signing on."

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  • bobspud
    replied
    brits take the p**s as well...

    It's not just the incoming peeps that get cash. I know a chap who paid to get his English mate back to england as he was flat broke, and hadn't been on the radar for a few years.

    He went to the DHSS and the first thing they gave him was a heating allowance for £1000 for the last three years. (not bad given that he was in a very hot place for those years) He has found a nice house over in a sunny country that they have agreed to rent on the basis that it is cheap by local standards and will soon be jetting off to claim his dole from a beach till things get back to a more normal position...

    Having worked for over 15 years but now sat on a bench for two months can you guess what I will be doing at the first opportunity???

    Why moan about it if you don't like supporting it then just stop working!!

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  • Purple Dalek
    replied
    Originally posted by Mich the Tester View Post
    If nobody wants them to claim benefits then they shouldn’t be made to pay tax and NI contributions.
    Absolutely. It's not their fault. Most of them won't have voted for this government. So why should they suffer.

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  • DieScum
    replied
    Not quite. Its more that they act selectively as and when it suits them, and if its examples you want then you could do worse than the freedom of movement and right to work issues. I'm not just talking about the newer countries and there is plenty of material available on this. DYOR.
    I can't really think of many other examples. I'm not sure they exist.

    I think the UK has and will continue to massively benefit from the EE immigration. In general, the young, educated, ambitious people in these countries aren't speaking German, French, German, Spanish or Russian. They're speaking English as their most important second language and have the experience of and cultural ties with the UK.

    It's like open source versus closed source. Free trade versus protectionism.

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  • Rantor
    replied
    Originally posted by DieScum View Post
    No he didn't. The rebate is currently 3 billion which is calculated as 2/3 of the difference between the mount contributed to the EU budget and the amount received from it.

    It's a relic of history and unjustifiable in the scope of an enlarged community, which the UK massively benefits from. Of course the CAP is rubbish as well.



    So it's not so much the the UK has opted in to things which others nations have not. It's rather that other nations haven't done what they were supposed to do when applying the EU policies that they signed up for?

    Maybe, got any examples you are thinking of?

    They have certainly adopted the euro, set up their borders according to Schengen. Those are the really visible things. What do other countries not do that the UK does?
    Not quite. Its more that they act selectively as and when it suits them, and if its examples you want then you could do worse than the freedom of movement and right to work issues. I'm not just talking about the newer countries and there is plenty of material available on this. DYOR.

    I'm no nationalist or europhobe but I can't see the point in Britain remaining engaged in something it sees as a perpetual threat rather than a platform for advancing your own national interests. I like living in mainland europe but its clear to me that all nationalities have plenty of the 'island mentality' we are supposed to specialise in but they play the game to their own advantage.

    Long term, the EU as an entity is on shaky ground as it is extremely wealthy and totally and utterly incapable of defending itself without the assistance of the US. Of course, its different this time, we're all civilised now etc.
    Last edited by Rantor; 8 January 2009, 23:09. Reason: Could have been viewed as mentalist

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  • mailric
    replied
    Anyone watched the TV programme called border patrol?

    They spot illegal immigrants entering the UK. They ask them to prove who they are and if they are legally in UK.

    One week they stopped a guy who they had no record of being legally able to enter the UK. He had no ID, no passport, couldn't speak much english, had no address and couldn't even remember his date of birth. He was visiting relatives but couldnt remember where they lived.

    So once they had tired of asking him to prove he was legal, they then had prove he was not illegal, if they were to be able to send him back where he come from.

    So... guess how they went about this?

    They sent him on his way and asked him to come back a week later with proof he was legally able to be here.

    Priceless.

    Do you think anyone has ever gone back and said "sorry, I can't find proof, your right i'm here illegally. You'll have to send me back. Besides, I don't like it here after all. Your weather's shlt"

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  • PM-Junkie
    replied
    Do you think "DieScum" is really an appropriate moniker, or are you a 12 year old?

    Frankly I am amazed anyone answers you.

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  • DieScum
    replied
    Please inform how huge this 'huge rebate' is since Blair handed a sizeable annual chunk back just before he left office in order to try to win concessions on the CAP(incidentally, he failed!) ? I don't think it is as huge as you think it is bearing in mind our annual membership is estimated to soon be 55 Billion pounds !!
    No he didn't. The rebate is currently 3 billion which is calculated as 2/3 of the difference between the mount contributed to the EU budget and the amount received from it.

    It's a relic of history and unjustifiable in the scope of an enlarged community, which the UK massively benefits from. Of course the CAP is rubbish as well.

    Britain actually complies with the directives/laws we have sign up to - this is not the norm from what I have experienced.
    So it's not so much the the UK has opted in to things which others nations have not. It's rather that other nations haven't done what they were supposed to do when applying the EU policies that they signed up for?

    Maybe, got any examples you are thinking of?

    They have certainly adopted the euro, set up their borders according to Schengen. Those are the really visible things. What do other countries not do that the UK does?

    Leave a comment:


  • MrMark
    replied
    Originally posted by dinker View Post
    We didn`t, Labour did.
    I believe it was the Tory party who were particularly keen on expanding the EU (as a misguided attempt to dilute the French/German alliance). For some reason no-one in the UK seemed interested in implementing the slow transition policy that had been carried out when Spain, Greece etc joined the EU. Maybe it was someone in the Labour Party who forced through a policy of immediate access to UK jobs market, or maybe it was the outgoing Tory regime. I certainly can't remember a UK politician of any note at the time objecting to it. It was all "Britain needs skilled immigrants to do the jobs the local people don't want to do..."

    Leave a comment:


  • Cyberman
    replied
    Originally posted by DieScum View Post

    I can think of a few exceptions - eurozone, schengen, in the past the social charter. The UK even gets that huge rebate from the budget which, in the expanded EU, is a massive budgetary exception.

    Please inform how huge this 'huge rebate' is since Blair handed a sizeable annual chunk back just before he left office in order to try to win concessions on the CAP(incidentally, he failed!) ? I don't think it is as huge as you think it is bearing in mind our annual membership is estimated to soon be 55 Billion pounds !!

    Leave a comment:


  • Rantor
    replied
    Originally posted by DieScum View Post
    I think it's more that allowing immigration for EE was/is in our best interests. They say it added 1% to GDP or something.

    I can think of a few exceptions - eurozone, schengen, in the past the social charter. The UK even gets that huge rebate from the budget which, in the expanded EU, is a massive budgetary exception.

    You argument doesn't stand up to any scrutiny.

    I'm not talking about immigration and you have just listed some of the things I was refering to. I would concur that the rebate is a good thing but not half as good as the CAP is to others.

    My point is that Britain is, and always will be, marginalised and embroiled in confrontation while the other nations play a different game. FFS, Britain actually complies with the directives/laws we have sign up to - this is not the norm from what I have experienced.

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  • DieScum
    replied
    We keep shooting ourselves in the foot by arguing for exceptions and then doing everything that we sign up to whereas the other countries play a subtler game to protect their own interests.
    I think it's more that allowing immigration for EE was/is in our best interests. They say it added 1% to GDP or something.

    I can think of a few exceptions - eurozone, schengen, in the past the social charter. The UK even gets that huge rebate from the budget which, in the expanded EU, is a massive budgetary exception.

    You argument doesn't stand up to any scrutiny.

    Leave a comment:


  • Solidec
    replied
    Why don't governments implement state funded apprenticeships to skill up the benefit scroungers. Why do we need eastern european construction workers? The pay is good, we have plenty of layabouts on benefits in this country. Pay them to train instead of paying them to sit on their sofa playing console games and we may require less skilled and unskilled labour from overseas.

    WHY ARE POLITICIANS SO DARNED USELESS! AARAAAAAARRRRGGHHHHHH!

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  • Rantor
    replied
    Originally posted by DieScum View Post
    Well we have much lower unemployment than the rest of the EU and importing workers was a huge benefit to our economy.
    Actually, I'm not that bothered about the immigrant good/bad thing, its more the whole EU thing. We keep shooting ourselves in the foot by arguing for exceptions and then doing everything that we sign up to whereas the other countries play a subtler game to protect their own interests.

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  • lightng
    replied
    Originally posted by xoggoth View Post
    Even when migrants do a good job, and I think most Poles/Czechs do, it is a way to duck real problems we have, like forcing some of the welfare dependent back into employment.
    I do think you're onto something there!

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  • dinker
    replied
    Originally posted by TimberWolf View Post
    We were foolish enough to let so many people in so we should pay the consequences.
    We didn`t, Labour did.

    Leave a comment:

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