Keir Starmer

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Your disdain of low paid manual jobs and those that do them is really quite distasteful.
You are applying your own prejudices here and making up in your own mind that ey_tony has 'disdain of low paid manual jobs'. Where has he said that ? His critique is against the whingers.
 
It's interesting reading these debates from the other side of the globe. Here in NZ, we parallel the UK in so many ways and have many of the same (or similar) problems, many borne out of good intentions that have backfired. We have a bloke on our $50 note by the name of Apirana Ngata - one of the most notable Māori politicians of 100 years ago and a man with vision and foresight. His prediction of the welfare state on Maori has come to pass and led to comments such as these from 2009 (you probably couldn't be so non-PC nowadays): " Family Benefit for Maori was the most controversial aspect of the department’s work. Rather than supplementing hard work, the benefit demoralised Maori communities already vulnerable to drinking and gambling excesses. The men could spend their wages as they wished, regarding the benefit as covering family needs". Of course, it's not just Māori, but seems to have the biggest effect on that group and has set up generations of people who are incapable, dependent and entitled. This, at least in some part, seems to have led to poverty and disproportionate crime rates seen with Māori. However, the woke answer to that, today, in relation to crime, is to direct judges to be more lenient if you have Maori ancestry (like a grandparent or whatever), which, I'm sure will also backfire and have the effect of emboldening criminals. NZ opposed apartheid but is starting to introduce its own version, based on critical race theory, by the looks of it - it's not just the UK with problems!!
Don't the Maoris have a problem - having had their land stolen from them by colonialists?
They are not all layabouts either
https://www.twinkl.co.uk/teaching-wiki/famous-maori-people#cont-12
It can take generations for these things to work out. In the UK we are still failing to deal fairly with the Windrush generation, doubly misused as they also have the misfortune to be descended from slaves forcefully removed from Africa only a few generations back and latterly having to put up with bureaucratic indifference, racism and prejudice in the UK.
Populations don't shift and settle down overnight - many current problems around the globe are a consequences of actions from generations back.
 
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You are applying your own prejudices here and making up in your own mind that ey_tony has 'disdain of low paid manual jobs'. Where has he said that ? His critique is against the whingers.
I thought he was the whinger of whingers himself! One miserable moan after another! Deeply unwoke! :ROFLMAO:
 
There is more to life than chasing money, for some that becomes their life and nothing else maters but others get pleasure from the manual skilled aspect where they can see what they have done rather than handling paper and cannot see what they have done at the end of a day. For me a job had to be interesting and something that I could relate to rather than accepting promotion into more managerial roles which would have just bored me as I liked the challenges of engineering which has always had the oily rag attitude in the UK unlike in countries like Germany where enginnering was held in higher esteem.
 
You are applying your own prejudices here and making up in your own mind that ey_tony has 'disdain of low paid manual jobs'. Where has he said that ? His critique is against the whingers.

Quote :
"They're the people who contribute to the country's economy not the whingers in their low skilled ten a penny jobs that anyone with half a brain could do."
: Unquote

Sounds pretty disdainful to me!
 
Don't the Maoris have a problem - having had their land stolen from them by colonialists?
They are not all layabouts either
https://www.twinkl.co.uk/teaching-wiki/famous-maori-people#cont-12
It can take generations for these things to work out. In the UK we are still failing to deal fairly with the Windrush generation, doubly misused as they also have the misfortune to be descended from slaves forcefully removed from Africa only a few generations back and latterly having to put up with bureaucratic indifference, racism and prejudice in the UK.
Populations don't shift and settle down overnight - many current problems around the globe are a consequences of actions from generations back.
Here is another quote from the same paper: "There can be no doubt that Maori have, at times, been treated unfairly, patronised, exploited, duped and marginalised. We live, though, in times of reconciliation and reparation. New Zealand has established an unmatched record in this endeavour. Despite this, some Maori academics and politicians continue to blame past deeds for present depression and deviancy, thereby handing ‘victims’ a passport to languish. Teaching blame is the antithesis of teaching aspiration." There has been a huge effort to compensate and reconcile past wrongs, which have been fully acknowledged. It has now, some argue, become a grievance industry. If you look at the poverty and crime stats here, the argument is that some of the blame can be attributed to the welfare state. That is not saying all Maori are layabouts - that is your misinterpretation, but the stats are pretty clear and one of the proposals in 2009 were to reduce dependency on benefits in the short-term for the long-term good of that group of people. Sadly, the opposite seems to be happening as we have adopted the critical theory approach of oppressed and oppressor based on ancestry. It's a slippery slope.
 

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