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is it hypocritical to believe in a strong welfare state but be against immigration?

yeah and that job seekers allowance really makes you live life to the fullest!

Indeed, although I did end up on the New Deal programme which meant I got a bit extra every two weeks and I did get a new suit out of it from the European Social Fund, which I was amazed to see is still a thing.

Places where there are cycles of deprivations have been ignored by the system for decades re former mill working towns. There is also a class/racial element as well, the industries that the traditional white working class used to do no longer exist and the new service industries, well there is a reason its mainly immigrants doing them.

And because I went to uni in Stoke on Trent a decade ago now, I am unsurprised that it is now known as the Brexit capital of the UK because of that cycle.
 
So true, at the moment the system is crazy, the taxpayer is subsidising wealthy corporations low wages and private landlords soaring rents rather than have rent controls, build more homes and have a decent minimum living wage.
Get rid of the buy to let mortgage market!


The lack of new houses is the fault of succesive governments.
 
Before I was a welfare worker I believed people should have it. After working as a welfare worker for two years before walking off that horrible job I wanted the government to get rid of it. I had HORRIBLE clients to deal with. I had one white chick who was 20 and pregnant with her 4th baby. She had a black kid, a white kid a hispanic kid and the one in the oven was another black kid from a stranger she met on the beach who bought her beer. Another chick would get a job, figure she made more being on welfare and quit her job. Another chick's welfare was running out (they only get 5 years worth) and so she brought in her 16 year old daughter who just had a baby to get welfare to keep it coming into that household. That has got to be one of the worst jobs I ever had.
 
^ Seriously, "chick"? Perhaps you could join us in 2018 and phrase that non-offensively instead.

Actually, the whole post is pretty disparaging, and comes across as both anti-woman and anti-poor. Perhaps you didn't intend it that way, but it does read that way.
 
^ Seriously, "chick"? Perhaps you could join us in 2018 and phrase that non-offensively instead.

Actually, the whole post is pretty disparaging, and comes across as both anti-woman and anti-poor. Perhaps you didn't intend it that way, but it does read that way.

Eh, "chick" is really old-school and isn't really offensive, although in these times, everything seems to be. These days, one can't even call a small female child "girl" anymore without someone's panties getting in a wad.

As for anti-poor? The post isn't anti-poor, it's anti "gaming the system." Most poor people are regular people fallen on hard times or raised poor (hard to get out of that without hard work and very good decision-making) but there are some - number unknown, who game the system.

My mother still tells stories of how people gamed the system (we were poor and on welfare). But for as many who were gaming the system for a check, others were gaming the system, which at that time had a lot of conditions such as no further education, so they could get OUT of poverty and get rid of welfare. Mostly - people worked under the table to bring in extra $$ and went to night school which back in the early 1960s was verboten.
 
going to night schol was forbidden? Do you mean by the state (as in it being illegal) or was it just a social taboo (as in one doesn't do that) ?
 
People attempt to "game" the system because the system is rigged against them. It is designed to trap them, to give them just enough to need more, without actually making it possible to attain what they need. It is a vile system, and the poor are the victims in it.
 
Especially with that first answer, all I'm hearing is "I'm better than they are".
It's easy to have self-respect when one isn't treated like they're less than human. That, too, is a fundamental flaw in our system. There are the people on top, the people in the middle, and the people at the bottom. In our system, the people on top tell the people in the middle that the people on the bottom are trying to usurp the position of the people in the middle. The people in the middle believe them, and press down harder on the people at the bottom, because while not everyone can be the people at the top, it's important to never be one of the people at the bottom. The people at the bottom aren't people, they're poor. Being poor in the United States is a grave sin.
 
Before I was a welfare worker I believed people should have it. After working as a welfare worker for two years before walking off that horrible job I wanted the government to get rid of it. I had HORRIBLE clients to deal with. I had one white chick who was 20 and pregnant with her 4th baby. She had a black kid, a white kid a hispanic kid and the one in the oven was another black kid from a stranger she met on the beach who bought her beer. Another chick would get a job, figure she made more being on welfare and quit her job. Another chick's welfare was running out (they only get 5 years worth) and so she brought in her 16 year old daughter who just had a baby to get welfare to keep it coming into that household. That has got to be one of the worst jobs I ever had.

I'd say by your experiences, you are for more money for education and sex education?
 
We wouldn't need as many immigrants if our own unemployed didn't think the lower jobs were beneath them, so ironically they could beat what they really have a problem with by taking the work.
 
Holy shit, you're not even ashamed of your elitism.

Let me tell you something about the welfare state and society: I myself was unemployed for quite a few years, after I had a pretty good job in the manufacturing of microchips. For the record, I was let go because of downsizing, not because I didn't do a good job. In fact, I got a very favourable recommendation letter. And despite that recommendation letter, I couldn't find another job for years. In three years, I was only invited to four interviews. And, yes, I even applied for cleaning jobs, and at McDonald's. I even had to go after the companies to return my portfolio after they rejected my application. This wasn't because I was a bad worker, it was because there were (and still are) by far more jobless people than there are job offers.

But, even though I knew that, years of being rejected still affected me, as did the social stigma that goes with being unemployed. It got so bad that for a while I just couldn't send out any more job applications, because I couldn't bear the rejection anymore. I had to go into therapy because of this. And, after some more years, I finally got a job, in retail, which I'm still holding today (almost seven years now), and I've actually been promoted to assistant manager of the store. And yet, I still only get minimum wage. I can live with that, because I'm single and don't plan on changing that, but I certainly couldn't feed a family with this kind of income.

So, I can very much sympathize with those people who probably came to realize that the chances of getting a better life are abyssmal, and not worth the effort, and they better try and make a living on the little they get from welfare. Because, even though some of them might make it out of unemployment, the vast majority of them won't.

And I get pretty sick of your own hypocrisy. Yes, being for a strong welfare state while being against immigration is hypocritical (even though based on the justified fear of cuts to welfare because conservatives and neo-liberals like to point the finger at immigrants in order to make those cuts). It's hypocritical to play poor locals against poor immigrants. But you are playing the working poor against the unemployed poor, and that is despicable.
 
While I sympathise with your situation (and you're hardly the sort of person I'm having a dig at) I make no apologies for my views. And thanks for answering my original question.
 
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