Dick Swiveller
Well-known member
- Sep 9, 2011
- 9,533
How many usernames has Berkshire Seagull gone through since this one in 2014?
What the Netherland electorate have done is fall for racist rhetoric spouted by the far right party that wanted their votes.hold on. Sangette refugee camp was closed by French in 2002, the following years saw rules to fine lorry drivers for carrying immigrants, laws changed around claims to discourage asylum seekers. 25% Netherlands just voted for anti-immigration party, Dublin is in flames over an immigrant related incident. this is widespread issue, its not popped up here because of one party. if we keep thinking this is a party political issue, fat chance of doing anything to address it, and fuel the resentment and hostility.
Good detailed response. Thanks. I've no objection to people claiming asylum from abroad. It would surely make the process more manageable that way. As for the backlog, I'm guessing this is simply a reflection of the increasingly large numbers? According to gov.uk, it seems there were about 52,000 in the first 6 months of 2023 so the number of arrivals is overwhelming the system by the looks of it. I suspect a lot (most?) of these cases are quite complex and often followed by appeals -- so I'm not sure how easy it is to clear the backlog. It will take years.Here's the solution you're looking for
Thought Cameron was cutting immigration down?
Its increased to over 240,000 in the last year...177,000 of these are students.How the hell can we have 177,000 students come here when our own students or wannabe students can barely afford it?
Sometime's you really wonder wtf is going on in this country...Taking foreign students money in a flash and shitting on our own students...facking shambles.
http://news.sky.com/story/1326030/immigration-significant-rise-in-last-year
Why's he a facking hypocrite?
He states clearly the issues here regarding talented engineers.Maybe if we had students that actually had potential in this kind of engineering then he wouldn't need to go elsewhere.Most of the students here are interested in dossing around doing pointless courses or joining groups of demonstrators to Appease the far left.
It's clear that universities here are for making money and to brainwash youngsters.
Are those figures for small boat crossings ?Good detailed response. Thanks. I've no objection to people claiming asylum from abroad. It would surely make the process more manageable that way. As for the backlog, I'm guessing this is simply a reflection of the increasingly large numbers? According to gov.uk, it seems there were about 52,000 in the first 6 months of 2023 so the number of arrivals is overwhelming the system by the looks of it. I suspect a lot (most?) of these cases are quite complex and often followed by appeals -- so I'm not sure how easy it is to clear the backlog. It will take years.
Good detailed response. Thanks. I've no objection to people claiming asylum from abroad. It would surely make the process more manageable that way. As for the backlog, I'm guessing this is simply a reflection of the increasingly large numbers? According to gov.uk, it seems there were about 52,000 in the first 6 months of 2023 so the number of arrivals is overwhelming the system by the looks of it. I suspect a lot (most?) of these cases are quite complex and often followed by appeals -- so I'm not sure how easy it is to clear the backlog. It will take years.
Here's the solution you're looking for
I'm afraid that your 'guessing at increasing numbers' and suspicions that 'most cases are quite complex' actually have no factual basis. I'm not sure what the 52,000 number is that you are quoting, but suspect that is boat crossings. The figure Sunak has been proudly announcing 'is down on last year'
The increases in the backlog are as a direct result of the Government policies outlined in my post above, and would be cleared and maintained by reversing those policies
That will absolutely solve the boat crossings, but not affect the overall immigration figures.
I propose a two part solution.
1a. Make being a parent an attractive proposition. Increased help with childcare, increased flexibility in the workplace etc. Being a parent at the present time is absolutely emotionally and life rewarding, but practically bloody difficult with parents often being short of both time and money.
1b. Enact legislation that forces employers to take in and train those entering the job market for the first time, rather than this current nonsense where employers are paying minimum wage and asking for “3 years experience”. Stop the disconnect between the labour available and what employers are demanding. Employers hate costs, but must bear responsibility for bringing the next generation through into the labour market. Smooth the path. Let’s help bring our own kids through into the labour market, and plug those skills gaps.
2. There are spots in the world, many even within Europe where there’s the need for working age people to join and integrate into communities. Rather than using Rwanda as a stick to beat people with, use diplomacy to discover where people/labour are needed and build voluntary emigration schemes to help people travel, settle and learn the language. I think there are plenty of people here who have enough of a sense of adventure to make a move, but who lack the confidence/resource to navigate the red tape independently. If we up the emigration figure, net migration can fall below zero quite easily.
I honestly believe that the above, coupled with the changes that the Conservatives have already made could swing net migration back to zero or even beyond.
Finally, I can also see why the Conservatives want to limit student visa dependents living in the U.K. to one, our universities long ago lost sight of the fundamentals of education to chase the biggest numbers they can. I don’t have a huge issue with this particular Conservative policy. If after uni people decide they want to build a life here, then absolutely they can apply for a work visa and/or full citizenship and be accepted gladly, but a university course is a fixed length entity, and in the same way that if I had a 2-3 year contract I’d fly home occasionally rather than uproot my family, I do feel the same could/should be the case for international students.
Between @watford zero’s work and the above, I reckon we could get migration down below zero in a fairly straightforward manner without any wankery about Rwanda at all.
How many usernames has Berkshire Seagull gone through since this one in 2014?
That will absolutely solve the boat crossings, but not affect the overall immigration figures.
I propose a two part solution.
1a. Make being a parent an attractive proposition. Increased help with childcare, increased flexibility in the workplace etc. Being a parent at the present time is absolutely emotionally and life rewarding, but practically bloody difficult with parents often being short of both time and money.
1b. Enact legislation that forces employers to take in and train those entering the job market for the first time, rather than this current nonsense where employers are paying minimum wage and asking for “3 years experience”. Stop the disconnect between the labour available and what employers are demanding. Employers hate costs, but must bear responsibility for bringing the next generation through into the labour market. Smooth the path. Let’s help bring our own kids through into the labour market, and plug those skills gaps.
2. There are spots in the world, many even within Europe where there’s the need for working age people to join and integrate into communities. Rather than using Rwanda as a stick to beat people with, use diplomacy to discover where people/labour are needed and build voluntary emigration schemes to help people travel, settle and learn the language. I think there are plenty of people here who have enough of a sense of adventure to make a move, but who lack the confidence/resource to navigate the red tape independently. If we up the emigration figure, net migration can fall below zero quite easily.
I honestly believe that the above, coupled with the changes that the Conservatives have already made could swing net migration back to zero or even beyond.
Finally, I can also see why the Conservatives want to limit student visa dependents living in the U.K. to one, our universities long ago lost sight of the fundamentals of education to chase the biggest numbers they can. I don’t have a huge issue with this particular Conservative policy. If after uni people decide they want to build a life here, then absolutely they can apply for a work visa and/or full citizenship and be accepted gladly, but a university course is a fixed length entity, and in the same way that if I had a 2-3 year contract I’d fly home occasionally rather than uproot my family, I do feel the same could/should be the case for international students.
Between @watford zero’s work and the above, I reckon we could get migration down below zero in a fairly straightforward manner without any wankery about Rwanda at all.
Because this is what they want, and in fact where you are wrong is that this isn't a big issue at all. In terms of small boats we're talking about a group of people you put in 1 football stadium, always front and centre of the news agenda, they don't want you to talk about more important issues like the covid enquiry which is barely mentioned (those few people that still find it a major scandal like myself find it gobsmacking what is being unearthed)Well said. Most people are more interested in point-scoring and angry whataboutery than actually engaging with the issue to find a solution. I’ve been a member of two political parties (not since the 90s) including quite a long stint with Labour. They did my head in.
I disagree with most of that apart from the final sentence.Because this is what they want, and in fact where you are wrong is that this isn't a big issue at all. In terms of small boats we're talking about a group of people you put in 1 football stadium, always front and centre of the news agenda, they don't want you to talk about more important issues like the covid enquiry which is barely mentioned (those few people that still find it a major scandal like myself find it gobsmacking what is being unearthed)
The small boats crossings went from virtually none to tens of thousands we see today, starting from around the time Boris Johnson was elected. That's Either a coincidence or deliberately engineered by them and their media machine to validate their ideology. The English channel didn't change in 2019, dinghy technology didn't change in 2019 so it must be latter reason
It's all deflection and distraction and that's despite being a government with reducing immigration as a bedrock of what they were elected on.
We really need a general election, I think millions would crawl through a tunnel of shite ala Andy Dufresne to elect these shysters out
Agree with much of that, especially "There are spots in the world, many even within Europe where there’s the need for working age people to join and integrate into communities. Rather than using Rwanda as a stick to beat people with, use diplomacy to discover where people/labour are needed and build voluntary emigration schemes to help people travel, settle and learn the language."
Up to retirement, I spent a total of more than 20 years as an economic migrant. and think it was the best thing I ever did. My father was an Irish immigrant too. I'd recommend working abroad to anyone who has the opportunity. It depends a lot on whether the would-be migrants are skilled or not. My caveats re skilled people are that
- it would do nothing to reduce what the government calls "irregular immigration". People arriving in small boats or via dubious student status are mostly unskilled or low-skilled. Skilled migrants can usually resettle legally, especially if they're medics or techies (etc.)
- I'm slightly uneasy about encouraging doctors and nurses to leave their home countries where they are probably needed even more than we need them here. It's a different case as it's EU, but I worked with a Hungarian guy for a couple of years who mentioned that his hometown used to have seven doctors surgeries and now they have two, because so many trained doctors and nurses had moved to Germany and the UK. You have to worry what's happening to Indian and African healthcare while their skilled people are (understandably) seeking much better salaries in Europe and the USA. Our gain is their loss.
You misunderstand. I am afraid that it is all about party politics.It’s confusing to me that people are point scoring saying “well, immigration is soaring, it’s the worst it’s ever been under the Tories”. This is absolutely true, of course.
But then if you say “well, the immigration is out of hand and needs to be brought under control regardless of who is in government”, you are - as one user ‘delicately’ put it in the Netherlands election thread, “xenophobic and racist”.
If people could put party politics aside they’d be stronger and more well-rounded people, regardless of which cabal they align with.
If we set aside how big an existential problem immigration (legal and otherwise) is, and (a slightly different issue) how we deal with asylum seeking, it IS a political issue, because the tories have weaponized it.hold on. Sangette refugee camp was closed by French in 2002, the following years saw rules to fine lorry drivers for carrying immigrants, laws changed around claims to discourage asylum seekers. 25% Netherlands just voted for anti-immigration party, Dublin is in flames over an immigrant related incident. this is widespread issue, its not popped up here because of one party. if we keep thinking this is a party political issue, fat chance of doing anything to address it, and fuel the resentment and hostility.
So you are happy that the moment the Government lurched far right, i.e. the moment we came out of the Brexit Transition period and Johnson took over as leader, the boat crossings suddenly happened when previously it wasn't even a thing and immigration numbers generally increased is just a coincidence?I disagree with most of that apart from the final sentence.
The bizarre idea that the government is deliberately engineering 'irregular migration' is a Trump-style conspiracy theory. Not heard that one before! I think the more successful and lucrative boat crossings become, the demand grows, and more traffickers are attracted into the market. Supply and demand. Also, the previous preferred methods like being smuggled on trucks and ferries have become much harder. Security has increased with things like infra-red detectors, and the penalties for deliberate people-smuggling by drivers have got far more severe.