Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Screw the Penguins, let's talk about vaginas
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostI listened quite attentively to this without being at all convinced by the arguments. Ferguson seemed to be saying that current national debt and deficit levels had a great deal to do with welfare spending, mentioning US Medicare. He did not mention the way in which US military spending has run completely out of control in recent years, doubling to $600bn between 2000 and 2007. Neither did he mention the increase in UK (and presumably US) national debt arising from bank bailouts. I didn't hear the questions afterwards but hope someone picked him up on this.
Ten years ago, private companies informed us that Britain was woefully lacking in training and skills. Jobs would be increasingly high tech, those in other countries were well versed in it, and the British would lose out. Hence huge numbers went to university. Now, according to the private sector, people are ludicrously over-qualified, lacking in experience and lethargic compared with the Polish. "We need a good story", my old Permanent Secretary used to say. Well, the story changes to suit the wealthy, it is usually full of lies and policy is shaped on whatever the latest lie happens to be. It is still being argued that those from elsewhere are needed to undertake the high tech jobs and it has been extended to even the basic British jobs, such as they exist. The truth is that there were never huge numbers of high tech jobs and the skills were already here. At the same time, low paid jobs were systematically reduced in number and exported. This has always been about the private sector looking to reduce its costs wherever possible.
As we hear that seven million people are one bill away from being unable to pay, Maude who has issues far beyond repetitive hand washing, speaks of further reform to the Civil Service. Under his proposals, it will become an absolute hell. Again, it is the mantra that it should become more like the private sector. Poor performers will be sacked. On paper that looks like the proverbial good thing to Joe Public. However, much of that sacking will not be on the basis of performance. It will be based on unspoken factors that are buried under the guise of work performance. Whether someone belongs to a union, whether their pension is accumulating at rates the country no longer wants to support, whether they are perceived at 40 or 45 as taking the space of a younger worker, whether they have illness, whether the overall racial mix is right, and whether they are perceived by managers as a soft touch. The quota of 10% is the absolute give away. If you were really going to challenge poor performance, there wouldn't be a quota at all.
Currently, if someone is sacked from the Civil Service, there is a big question mark over whether they will be entitled to retain any of their accumulated pension. Now, then, employees will work with the fear that they will lose all their promised pension rights and largely for reasons of bias that are entirely out of their control. Meanwhile Permanent Secretary appointments are to be party political. In a nutshell, the anti-democratic social engineering of the private sector is about to be further applied to a significant part of the public sector. And as always it will be based on a "story" that is supposedly needed. A story peppered with lies.Last edited by Guest; 19-06-12, 15:27.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostTen years ago, private companies informed us that Britain was woefully lacking in training and skills. Jobs would be increasingly high tech, those in other countries were well versed in it, and the British would lose out. Hence huge numbers went to university. Now, according to the private sector, people are ludicrously over-qualified, lacking in experience and lethargic compared with the Polish. "We need a good story", my old Permanent Secretary used to say. Well, the story changes to suit the wealthy, it is usually full of lies and policy is shaped on whatever the latest lie happens to be. It is still being argued that those from elsewhere are needed to undertake the high tech jobs and it has been extended to even the basic British jobs, such as they exist. The truth is that there were never huge numbers of high tech jobs and the skills were already here. At the same time, low paid jobs were systematically reduced in number and exported. This has always been about the private sector looking to reduce its costs wherever possible.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostSomeone else will make those armaments for Saudi Arabia if we don't...
and maybe it is time that we in the UK simply stopped pretending that we are still some kind of global power and stopped acting as if this was morally acceptable.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by MrGongGong View Postindeed
and maybe it is time that we in the UK simply stopped pretending that we are still some kind of global power and stopped acting as if this was morally acceptable.
Additionally, both require more than three years of further education. I do remember even with a reasonable proportion of grant that there was that moment when three years was felt to have been enough. Librarianship was rejected on the basis that it would require another year and we simply couldn't afford it. With hindsight - closures etc - probably just as well.
But many are from backgrounds where three years of education on a loan has been bravery. It is not necessarily what they would have chosen but seemed sensible in a competitive world. They are now finding that even what they have achieved isn't a ticket into the professional classes. They might not even get to stacking shelves.
I heard last night of a family who are probably not atypical. They are as a unit what we were over 20 years ago but victims of these times. Both parents are in their 50s and have worked throughout their lives. They still have a chunk of mortgage to pay. She was made redundant last year. He has had a very long-term contract torn up and replaced by one under which his employment will cease in March. They have one son who is 24. He has a maths degree and has been unable to find work.
Both the mother and the son have been actively seeking work for over a year. She has experience but is being rejected on the grounds that she doesn't have a degree. He is being rejected on the grounds that he has no experience. They have absolutely no idea where they will all be by next June and fear the worst. Talks in Mexico are one thing but my feeling is that the Government has a maximum of two years to prevent meltdown, irrespective of what happens with the Euro.
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I graduated in 1985 with a music degree
I never expected there would be a "job" at the end at all (and there wasn't )
the idea that one studies something because its likely to bring financial rewards is a bit of a waste IMV
not everyone has the "nerve" to follow the thing they are most interested in
BUT
we really do only get one go at it ................ so being "sensible" can just lead to another life of missed opportunity and unhappiness
having been very ill in the last year made me realise that there really are more important things than having lots of money and you will be much healthier if you live on lentils and vegetables anyway
there are many young people of my daughter's generation who go to university to study a subject they happen to be good at in school , then realise part of the way in (and these days with a huge debt !) that they really aren't that interested in it after all ............ (I know several people who went to music college on this basis)
What IS foolish IMV is to waste your life toiling at something you hate for people who don't give you any respect
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI graduated in 1985 with a music degree
I never expected there would be a "job" at the end at all (and there wasn't )
the idea that one studies something because its likely to bring financial rewards is a bit of a waste IMV
not everyone has the "nerve" to follow the thing they are most interested in
BUT
we really do only get one go at it ................ so being "sensible" can just lead to another life of missed opportunity and unhappiness
having been very ill in the last year made me realise that there really are more important things than having lots of money and you will be much healthier if you live on lentils and vegetables anyway
there are many young people of my daughter's generation who go to university to study a subject they happen to be good at in school , then realise part of the way in (and these days with a huge debt !) that they really aren't that interested in it after all ............ (I know several people who went to music college on this basis)
What IS foolish IMV is to waste your life toiling at something you hate for people who don't give you any respect
Er...
Self-excoriation over....
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Budapest
I'll just say that perhaps everything I've been banging on about in this thread is connected.
Talking of which, news is just coming through that Julian Assange is seeking political asylum in Ecuador. You couldn't make it up! (and I'm disapointed that Assange does not trust European justice) Apparently, Assange is presently in the Ecuadorian embassy in London.
Some background to all this might be provided by the recent interview Assange did with Rafael Correa, the left wing populist president of Ecuador. If interested you can find the interview here...
The Julian Assange Show: Rafael Correa
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI feel our generation badly let down in the political and many of the lifestyle choices we made or introduced.
Serial_Apologist - Your story is a humbling one in many ways and inspires hope.
I had to give some thought to your criticism of the leaders of your generation because I have been saying that it is my generation that has been the problem. It could almost turn into a Python sketch. What I have concluded though is that lazily I have tended to think of those with influence in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s as respectively 'The 1940s, 1950s and 1960s Generations'. Of course, they weren't, having been born many decades earlier.
My conclusion - and I must say that it really surprised me - is that the vast majority of the movers and shakers born after World War One have badly let us all down. As to the whys and wherefores, there is probably a book in there somewhere!
Budapest - Once in a while an individual emerges who is so completely unusual that even those of us with views on almost everything feel nonplussed. For me, Julian Assange falls into that category.
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Budapest
Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostBudapest - Once in a while an individual emerges who is so completely unusual that even those of us with views on almost everything feel nonplussed. For me, Julian Assange falls into that category.
I believe I've already linked in this thread to Assange's interview last month with President Rafael Correa of Ecuador, which shows yet more examples of how much Wikileaks has influenced events worldwide (including the occupy movement).
Julian Assange's latest programme in his series The World Tomorrow, broadcast by Russia Today (RT), funded by the Kremlin, was an interview with Imran Khan, former cricketer and now a politician in Pakistan. I urge anyone interested in this stuff to see what Imran has to say. You can find it here on YouTube (and I can't help the adverts you get on YouTube thesedays)...
Last edited by Guest; 20-06-12, 21:28. Reason: explaining about adverts you get on nearly all YouTube videos thesedays
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