StephenH
David Ginola
Whatever. You are going down a rabbit hole.
He’s talking like he's been already been down there for too long.
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Whatever. You are going down a rabbit hole.
The deal isn’t BRINO at all. It’s a stay of execution unless BRINO can be negotiated, that’s all. We haven’t even seen the political declaration yet!
Our bloated welfare state
I find the Swiss a little weird. There's something a bit Village of the Damned about them
I love Geneva and would move there in a heartbeat it my wife and factories would move as easily.OK it's just what you want... Why not move to Switzerland if that's your goal
If Im not mistaken, @Danishfurniturelover is talking about a pretty specific slice of society.
And much like my comments on immigration, its a regional thing, so your exposure/understanding will vary depending on where you live etc.
Where I come from being on benefits is a career choice, not a necessity. A decision made to NOT work, but instead get money for free.
Ive seen it, in close friends even. No attempt made to get an education because the plan was ALWAYS to get knocked up young, get given a place and then get given everything you need.
THESE are people completely able to work, but choosing not to. These are people that are literally an unnecessary drain on the state, deliberately so*.
And do you think their children will be any different? Id say chance are not. My friend is up to four kids now, none of which I imagine will do any different to her.
As I say, this is certainly a regional thing. I can point to whole towns where at least half the population is playing the same game - you may struggle to imagine such.
While I wouldnt see these people neutered, I certainly wouldnt be against squeezing their benefits and cushy lifestyle such that they find working more agreeable.
And, IMHO, Blairs government is entirely to blame for it.
*This is then compounded by having to find people who will work in place of these layabouts, who will also require state support (to a lesser or greater degree).
I very nearly agree with you. The aspiration of government should be to ensure that everyone has a chance to help themselves. It should provide for those who can not.I'm gonna sound like a dolphin fudging hippy here, but these people are victims, the system should lift them out of it, not punish them for it, they are a product of their environment and education (not just academic, but social and familial).
The aspiration of government should be to help everyone.
I very nearly agree with you. The aspiration of government should be to ensure that everyone has a chance to help themselves. It should provide for those who can not.
I'm gonna sound like a dolphin fudging hippy here, but these people are victims, the system should lift them out of it, not punish them for it, they are a product of their environment and education (not just academic, but social and familial).
The aspiration of government should be to help everyone.
Yes and no, for me.
They were given an education, opportunities, and threw it away (specific examples in my experience, for sure). Cant blame the government for that.
And unless something is done to break the cycle, its only going to get worse.
Her mum had 4 kids, two work, two dont. She now has 4, and never intended to work, and Im going to take a guess and suggest her kids will follow her example. Her daughter is 13 I think, 5 years before the next generation come along?
A familial failure of education, yes - but one knowingly supported by the government.
As I say, put the squeeze on the cushy life and lets see what a little motivation can do for them.
Blair made it far to easy, set this whole thing up with no foresight whatsoever.
Ive seen it, in close friends even. No attempt made to get an education because the plan was ALWAYS to get knocked up young, get given a place and then get given everything you need.
It's not about apportioning blame.
I agree the cycle needs to be broken, but I don't think the answer is to cut people out.
if it feels like punishment its hard to get buy in
....and allow the teachers to concentrate on pushing the academic kids further.Ive also mentioned before, but education needs to change as well. It needs to be recognised that not everybody is academically minded.
A good friend of mine, so far as school was concerned, was basically departed. He wasnt in the least academically minded, school didnt work for him. He ended up disillusioned and disrupted. Not helped by being treated as if he was an idiot.
Heres the thing though. At 11 years old, I saw him take apart a stereo, fix a broken part, and put it back together as good as new. Similar with other appliances, then bikes and such - he was building them from scratch, until at 16 he was fixing peoples cars on the side.
Quite clearly, and intelligence, logic and skill displayed he was never credited for. Because he wasnt "academic".
I think we need to break schooling up. Get the basics in, reading, writing, arithmetic - but from about 13/14 allow kids vocational options.
What I would have given to be able to drop school at 14 and go into an apprenticeship!
And when you think about it, why the hell not? My mate never went on to be an accountant, work an office, do anything with a GCSE, he went into the building trades as soon as he could. Albeit years later than he would have liked to.
Why not identify kids that would rather work with their hands, and have them leave school as ready made plumbers, electricians, mechanics, builders etc? Having served an apprenticeship and able to work full time from the off.
....and allow the teachers to concentrate on pushing the academic kids further.
You don't have to sample many teachers to find that, after disruptive behaviour, trying to cater for various levels of ability in a classroom is what will stop effective teaching.
Who do yo need buy in from? Its the governments job to do what is in the best interest, something they conveniently have the power to effect.
If they decide this is how it goes, then good for them. As I said, providing they offer opportunities, I think its fair.