/// She argued that if she were to leave London she would have lost a network of friends that support her when she is unwell with depression, diabetes and high blood pressure. ///
What probably sticks in most people's craw about this is that Ms Nzolameso, who appears to have done little or no work in her life and seems unlikely ever to do so, can afford to live in just about the most expensive areas of the country because the taxpayer is picking up the bill for her accommodation. Meantime, a young couple both working hard in decent jobs and...
Aye, any paddy who goes to live in Westminster(where she can't afford to live) and pops out little paddy's (she can't afford to have) as fast as her womb will allow, can sling her hook too.
This is typical Tory thinking. It is one thing to voluntarily move to another area but to be forced to uproot & move to unfamiliar territory. The solution is quite simple, start lowering the rents on these properties. I regard myself as extremely fortunate that I live nowhere near London. It seems to me that authority has gone completely mad. What is it about London that makes it SO special ? If I go to a brickyard & buy a brick it is the same brick you will find all over the U/K so because a house is in London why are houses so expensive compared for example with a house 'up north' ? In my humble opinion it is time it was all sorted out.
For what my opinion is worth, I agree wholeheartedly with AOG.
This woman deliberately uprooted herself from the Democratic Republic of the Congo to come here and claim asylum. How come moving thousands of miles away from friends and family did not affect her depression/diabetes/high blood pressure, yet moving a mere few miles will?
Asylum seekers like this woman who take and then demand even more make my blood boil. I wonder what the legal aid bill will cost this country?
/// You have skirted around the real issue here but don't have the kahounas to actually say it. I gave you more credibility and honesty! ///
I have not "skirted around the real issue here" as you so incorrectly put, it is because I haven't addressed the issues that your mind thinks that I should have addressed, so in your frustration and disappointment you have chosen to attack me for things that I have not said but what you would have liked me to have said.
Again, balders, if it were up to me like, being British would be a more fluid concept. A privilege which I could bestow on people I liked, and, more importantly, remove from whingey trouble-making types I didn't.
Someone asked where the Father was,
//The *family* came to Britain from the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1998 and claimed asylum. Ms Nzolameso now has British citizenship. She separated from her children’s father in 2007 but they still have contact with him, although this too would be harder if they moved to Milton Keynes//
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