[Politics] Small boats, smashing the criminal gangs and the UK job market

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Paulie Gualtieri

Bada Bing
NSC Patron
May 8, 2018
10,637
There’s been a significant issue with who you are interacting with within the service and transport network industry since the likes of Uber came to town

Plenty of examples reported where the regular drivers login is utilised by family and friends with the vehicle dangerously on the road 24/7. There’s also the insurance implications that f there’s a crass, which is why previously there was a lot of Prius’s abandoned at accident scenes.

The same is rife in the food delivery industry where people sign up with their true credentials then rent out the delivery account to someone else for a percentage.

Both carry insurance risks but also security risk for mini cab users.

If there’s a photo always check and don’t assume
 




LamieRobertson

Not awoke
Feb 3, 2008
48,430
SHOREHAM BY SEA
How many on here do cash in hand jobs or are willing to pay someone cash? It'll be similar, where every they're from, there will be a community of them already over here and they'll be happy to work and pay using cash.
It'll be a selling point for a CBDC
The cash in hand bit always makes me smile….i get asked ‘’is it cheaper for cash’’an element of society expect it to be….i normally turn round and say ‘’no more expensive’’ 😉
 


LamieRobertson

Not awoke
Feb 3, 2008
48,430
SHOREHAM BY SEA
I am sure the poorly regulated job market is one part of the 'pull'. Along with multiple other factors, including many linked to our colonial past, our long history of being an open, tolerant society and also using immigration to our economic advantage. I am certain there are also multiple 'push' factors, including increasing access to the funding and information (via socal media) that increases the incentives, makes the journeys easier to organize and easier to contemplate. People have ALWAYS moved around. It's what humans do. It's a big part of how human societies have developed. But the world is changing quickly and more and more people having the option, and desire, to move is going to be part of that. Every migrant has their own story. Some will be bad people. Most will not. Like any other group of people (see also 'football supporters'). What the vast majority of those using small boats (a small minority of actual immigrants) do have in common is that they are desperate. And they are desperate for many reasons, all of which have their own validity.

We are lucky to be living in one of the most dynamic, successful, multi-cultural societies on earth. But you'd be naive to think that doesn't also come with some significant challenges.

My view is that, with regard to the media-hyped problem of people arriving in small boats, we are being lied to by all parties. They are all too scared to tell the truth, so they look for stop-gap slogans and stunts that will get them votes. 'Smashing the gangs' is about as likely to work as the Rwanda 'deterrent'. If there is the demand, there will be supply. And demand will only grow. In that respect the french chap is probably correct. I believe that the only way to 'stop the boats' would be to use such extreme methods that, as a civilized society, we would, quite rightly, find it abhorrent.

My personal view is that there is simply no easy answer, beyond all the dull stuff. Setting up 'safe routes'. Investing in better systems to process claims quickly and fairly. Investing in better support for integration. Ensuring that public services, housing etc is strong enough to cope. Working with other governments more cooperatively and less competitively. Basically we can't stop people heading here. We need to manage it (and we can) But nobody wants to say that. Any more than anyone wants to hear it.
Interesting post and far better constructed than i could probably manage

‘’My personal view is that there is simply no easy answer’’ 👍……no solution is going to be
 


Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat


Eric the meek

Fiveways Wilf
NSC Patron
Aug 24, 2020
7,134
An interesting view from France on the BBC reflecting on yesterday's tragedy in the Channel, where it's felt that "smashing the criminal gangs" won't solve the problem of small boat crossings, which is due to the pull of the UK's poorly-regulated employment market...

"He did condemn the smugglers, but most of his comments focused on the lure of what he views as Britain’s loosely regulated job market, that acts like a magnet, drawing young Eritreans, determined Sudanese, Afghans, Syrians and Iraqis to this coastline, convinced that they if they can just make it across this last, short stretch of water - or even half way across - they’ll end up in a country where they can find work, even without the right paperwork.​
In doing so, he touched on a widely-held belief here in France, which is that however much effort is put into tackling the smuggling gangs it will never be enough. That this is a crisis fuelled by the demands of tens of thousands of determined migrants, rather than by the profit-seeking motives of a loose network of criminals."​
It's not a perspective I've read before. Is it easier to get work in the UK, without proper credentials, than in other countries?
Sometimes, you need a fresh pair of eyes.

It may be that the tragedy in the channel has caused the French to tell us what we needed to be told. Maybe we were all too close and entrenched, on both sides of the argument.
 




Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
In the meantime, since July, with the dreadful Rwanda scheme cancelled, 300 civil servants have been freed up to actually start processing asylum claims. Hopefully, the lucrative scheme (for some hotel owners) backlog will go down rapidly and true asylum seekers can start work and contribute.

The result? 220 illegal immigrants have already been deported on one day.

 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,716
The Fatherland
It's not a perspective I've read before. Is it easier to get work in the UK, without proper credentials, than in other countries?
I read this in this week's Jay Raynor restaurant review

Royal China on London’s Baker Street, part of the well-known Chinese restaurant group of the same name, has lost its liquor licence and been fined £470,000 after 20 illegal workers were arrested there during inspection visits between 2018 and 2024. During the most recent raid in May, almost a third of the staff on duty at the time were found to be working there illegally.

A third of their current workforce were working illegally plus this has been an ongoing issue since 2018. I appreciate it is just one business but it suggests that there is not much will from certain employers to employ people legally...even when they have been repeatedly raided.
 


Guinness Boy

Tofu eating wokerati
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Jul 23, 2003
37,351
Up and Coming Sunny Portslade
So person posts something you don’t agree with and he must be pissed and should try AA ….hmm right o
Er no. Someone suggests locking a thread at 9.30 in the morning in case someone's drunk. Like I said, bizarre. And absolutely no relevance to the subject of the thread.
 




Mellor 3 Ward 4

Well-known member
Jul 27, 2004
10,244
saaf of the water
In the meantime, since July, with the dreadful Rwanda scheme cancelled, 300 civil servants have been freed up to actually start processing asylum claims. Hopefully, the lucrative scheme (for some hotel owners) backlog will go down rapidly and true asylum seekers can start work and contribute.

The result? 220 illegal immigrants have already been deported on one day.


Yesterday was (yet another) awful day - these are human beings.

However, was Rwanda really such a bad idea?

According to those 'on the ground' in the camps of Northern France, the threat of being put on a plane was acting as a deterrent to getting on a boat.

The article is an interesting read - and certainly our underregulated labour market is a draw.
 


Guinness Boy

Tofu eating wokerati
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Jul 23, 2003
37,351
Up and Coming Sunny Portslade
I read this in this week's Jay Raynor restaurant review

Royal China on London’s Baker Street, part of the well-known Chinese restaurant group of the same name, has lost its liquor licence and been fined £470,000 after 20 illegal workers were arrested there during inspection visits between 2018 and 2024. During the most recent raid in May, almost a third of the staff on duty at the time were found to be working there illegally.

A third of their current workforce were working illegally plus this has been an ongoing issue since 2018. I appreciate it is just one business but it suggests that there is not much will from certain employers to employ people legally...even when they have been repeatedly raided.
Perhaps because no one else wants those jobs?

Don't think there are a lot of British kids looking at careers and going 'I want to deliver takeaways for Deliveroo' or 'I want to work as a Kitchen Porter in a Chinese Restaurant' or 'I want to pick fruit in East Anglia'.

Not to mention there's the ongoing irony that many Brits who are 'against the immigrants' also think having an Indian or Chinese at the weekend is part of our culture.
 


Javeaseagull

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 22, 2014
2,829
The last I heard the housing costs for immigrants awaiting a decision amounted to 8 billion pounds a year. As always, follow the money if you want to find the culprits for this. Over 1,000 civil servants working on the ridiculous Rwanda Act should have been processing the applications of people wanting to stay is just one example of the last Governments priorities. I believe over 80% of applications are granted amounting to a colossal amount of wasted taxpayers money.
 






Sorrel

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
2,942
Back in East Sussex
Migration is supply and demand. There’s plenty of supply and the perception is that there is demand in the UK. To do something about it - should you want to - you need to address that demand in both perception and fact.
 


Eric the meek

Fiveways Wilf
NSC Patron
Aug 24, 2020
7,134
It would be deeply and profoundly ironic, that by promoting an unregulated job market, the Tories inadvertently created the conditions in which they, themselves lost control of our borders.

Perhaps most or all of our recent national embarrassments - austerity (exacerbated by lower tax take due to the cash economy), Brexit, 'take back control', 'stop the boats', the Rwanda fiasco, riots by the ignorant, prisons filling up with rioters, can all be traced back to the unregulated job market, a long-term flagship policy of the Tories.
 




highflyer

Well-known member
Jan 21, 2016
2,553
The last I heard the housing costs for immigrants awaiting a decision amounted to 8 billion pounds a year. As always, follow the money if you want to find the culprits for this. Over 1,000 civil servants working on the ridiculous Rwanda Act should have been processing the applications of people wanting to stay is just one example of the last Governments priorities. I believe over 80% of applications are granted amounting to a colossal amount of wasted taxpayers money.
Follow the money indeed. Except sometimes...you can't:

 




Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
Yesterday was (yet another) awful day - these are human beings.

However, was Rwanda really such a bad idea?

According to those 'on the ground' in the camps of Northern France, the threat of being put on a plane was acting as a deterrent to getting on a boat.

The article is an interesting read - and certainly our underregulated labour market is a draw.
The Rwandan scheme was deemed unlawful by the Supreme Court.

 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,716
The Fatherland
Perhaps because no one else wants those jobs?

Don't think there are a lot of British kids looking at careers and going 'I want to deliver takeaways for Deliveroo' or 'I want to work as a Kitchen Porter in a Chinese Restaurant' or 'I want to pick fruit in East Anglia'.

Not to mention there's the ongoing irony that many Brits who are 'against the immigrants' also think having an Indian or Chinese at the weekend is part of our culture.
I’m sure this is part of the reason. My point was more an example of the ease of finding work and how UK companies are willing to employ folk without the correct paper work even when they have been repeatedly caught out.
 




Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,778
Fiveways
I am sure the poorly regulated job market is one part of the 'pull'. Along with multiple other factors, including many linked to our colonial past, our long history of being an open, tolerant society and also using immigration to our economic advantage. I am certain there are also multiple 'push' factors, including increasing access to the funding and information (via socal media) that increases the incentives, makes the journeys easier to organize and easier to contemplate. People have ALWAYS moved around. It's what humans do. It's a big part of how human societies have developed. But the world is changing quickly and more and more people having the option, and desire, to move is going to be part of that. Every migrant has their own story. Some will be bad people. Most will not. Like any other group of people (see also 'football supporters'). What the vast majority of those using small boats (a small minority of actual immigrants) do have in common is that they are desperate. And they are desperate for many reasons, all of which have their own validity.

We are lucky to be living in one of the most dynamic, successful, multi-cultural societies on earth. But you'd be naive to think that doesn't also come with some significant challenges.

My view is that, with regard to the media-hyped problem of people arriving in small boats, we are being lied to by all parties. They are all too scared to tell the truth, so they look for stop-gap slogans and stunts that will get them votes. 'Smashing the gangs' is about as likely to work as the Rwanda 'deterrent'. If there is the demand, there will be supply. And demand will only grow. In that respect the french chap is probably correct. I believe that the only way to 'stop the boats' would be to use such extreme methods that, as a civilized society, we would, quite rightly, find it abhorrent.

My personal view is that there is simply no easy answer, beyond all the dull stuff. Setting up 'safe routes'. Investing in better systems to process claims quickly and fairly. Investing in better support for integration. Ensuring that public services, housing etc is strong enough to cope. Working with other governments more cooperatively and less competitively. Basically we can't stop people heading here. We need to manage it (and we can) But nobody wants to say that. Any more than anyone wants to hear it.
This is a really good post. Not sure I agree with your final sentence though: many do want to hear it, it's more that no-one wants to say it because they know what will come their way in doing so.
 


BadFish

Huge Member
Oct 19, 2003
18,216
I am sure the poorly regulated job market is one part of the 'pull'. Along with multiple other factors, including many linked to our colonial past, our long history of being an open, tolerant society and also using immigration to our economic advantage. I am certain there are also multiple 'push' factors, including increasing access to the funding and information (via socal media) that increases the incentives, makes the journeys easier to organize and easier to contemplate. People have ALWAYS moved around. It's what humans do. It's a big part of how human societies have developed. But the world is changing quickly and more and more people having the option, and desire, to move is going to be part of that. Every migrant has their own story. Some will be bad people. Most will not. Like any other group of people (see also 'football supporters'). What the vast majority of those using small boats (a small minority of actual immigrants) do have in common is that they are desperate. And they are desperate for many reasons, all of which have their own validity.

We are lucky to be living in one of the most dynamic, successful, multi-cultural societies on earth. But you'd be naive to think that doesn't also come with some significant challenges.

My view is that, with regard to the media-hyped problem of people arriving in small boats, we are being lied to by all parties. They are all too scared to tell the truth, so they look for stop-gap slogans and stunts that will get them votes. 'Smashing the gangs' is about as likely to work as the Rwanda 'deterrent'. If there is the demand, there will be supply. And demand will only grow. In that respect the french chap is probably correct. I believe that the only way to 'stop the boats' would be to use such extreme methods that, as a civilized society, we would, quite rightly, find it abhorrent.

My personal view is that there is simply no easy answer, beyond all the dull stuff. Setting up 'safe routes'. Investing in better systems to process claims quickly and fairly. Investing in better support for integration. Ensuring that public services, housing etc is strong enough to cope. Working with other governments more cooperatively and less competitively. Basically we can't stop people heading here. We need to manage it (and we can) But nobody wants to say that. Any more than anyone wants to hear it.
I think people have been persuaded that they don't want to hear it.

Actually it is the solution most agree with. Take control of the situation and then manage it.
 


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