ChatterBank5 mins ago
Young Mans Letter From Home Office For Deportation
A young man appeared on Good Morning Britain this morning with a letter ordering him to leave the uk within 10 days or be jailed.
He was born and reared in the uk and is as much a uk citizen as Theresa May!
Now it transpires that it was an error which was "apologised for" in a curt email from the Home Office.
This country is run by a clown government and a Home Office that is totally incompetent.
These are the people who are negotiating our exit from the E U. God help us!
He was born and reared in the uk and is as much a uk citizen as Theresa May!
Now it transpires that it was an error which was "apologised for" in a curt email from the Home Office.
This country is run by a clown government and a Home Office that is totally incompetent.
These are the people who are negotiating our exit from the E U. God help us!
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by needawin. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Mistakes happen - that's why they put rubbers on the end of pencils.
One instance of human error does not automatically guarantee that the entire Home Office and Government are incompetent.
Don't get me wrong, there are powerful arguments to back up that viewpoint - but this instance is not one of them.
One instance of human error does not automatically guarantee that the entire Home Office and Government are incompetent.
Don't get me wrong, there are powerful arguments to back up that viewpoint - but this instance is not one of them.
Maybe it was indeed an error................or someone employed in the Home Office who cannot resist seizing an opportunity to create dissonance. Be the same individual who "grants" citizenship to criminal illegals no doubt. Question is... who is taking this toerag down? The civil service is riddled with disaffected 5th columnists. How else could you explain the constant repeat of both twisted scenarios?
KARL - //Errors/mistakes are made, no big deal - I wonder if such tolerance is exhibited every time one is made and regardless of its weight. //
I, and everyone else who has posted, had made no inference that the error was unimportant.
The importance of an error is variable, but errors still happen.
I, and everyone else who has posted, had made no inference that the error was unimportant.
The importance of an error is variable, but errors still happen.
"Knowing something is wrong is not the same as being responsible for coming up with a solution."
I'm not suggesting the OP should be responsible for coming up with a solution (though as, presumably, he is part of the UK's electorate, it could be argued that he is). I'm simply asking what alternative he might propose. It's easy to say "This is no good, that is rubbish, they are useless". But it doesn't make for a very fruitful debate.
"//The civil service is riddled with disaffected 5th columnists//
Lol that is the second funniest thing I have read today!"
I'd share in your amusement were such a suggestion not so plausible.
I'm not suggesting the OP should be responsible for coming up with a solution (though as, presumably, he is part of the UK's electorate, it could be argued that he is). I'm simply asking what alternative he might propose. It's easy to say "This is no good, that is rubbish, they are useless". But it doesn't make for a very fruitful debate.
"//The civil service is riddled with disaffected 5th columnists//
Lol that is the second funniest thing I have read today!"
I'd share in your amusement were such a suggestion not so plausible.
It's likely that this wasn't due to some pen-pushing jobsworth Home Office official. I would wager that this was down to a miskeyed entry into a database on their mainframe.
The government handles millions of records about all of us, and computers don't make mistakes. Coders, developers, systems administrators and testers make mistakes.
Sometimes these mistakes come to light in cases like these.
The government handles millions of records about all of us, and computers don't make mistakes. Coders, developers, systems administrators and testers make mistakes.
Sometimes these mistakes come to light in cases like these.
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