Crosswords1 min ago
Two Lots Of Brown People In Conflict
71 Answers
Mainly white police and politicians scared to act in case they offend a thug.
https:/ /www.bb c.co.uk /news/u k-62982 239
Get in about them with those long sticks, only thing they understand.
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Get in about them with those long sticks, only thing they understand.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Spicerack
// Not like gromit to find a way of blaming everything on the right. Personally, I blame the people who thought it was a good idea to 'rub the Right's nose in diversity'. //
Even for you that is a spectacular misread.
I am blaming Indian nationalism. The diversity in Leicester is natural. When the Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi immigrants came to the UK they settled where they could get jobs. It was never seeded as a experiment in diversity to rile the right. We had Conservative Governments throughout the 1950s and 60s when all that happened.
// Not like gromit to find a way of blaming everything on the right. Personally, I blame the people who thought it was a good idea to 'rub the Right's nose in diversity'. //
Even for you that is a spectacular misread.
I am blaming Indian nationalism. The diversity in Leicester is natural. When the Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi immigrants came to the UK they settled where they could get jobs. It was never seeded as a experiment in diversity to rile the right. We had Conservative Governments throughout the 1950s and 60s when all that happened.
Education.
//Lord Mandelson admitted: “In 2004 when as a Labour government, we were not only welcoming people to come into this country to work, we were sending out search parties for people and encouraging them, in some cases, to take up work in this country.”//
Blair's speech writer.
/Immigration, he wrote, ‘didn’t just happen; the deliberate policy of Ministers from late 2000…was to open up the UK to mass immigration’.
He was at the heart of policy in September 2001, drafting the landmark speech by the then Immigration Minister Barbara Roche, and he reported ‘coming away from some discussions with the clear sense that the policy was intended - even if this wasn’t its main purpose - to rub the Right’s nose in diversity and render their arguments out of date’./
//Lord Mandelson admitted: “In 2004 when as a Labour government, we were not only welcoming people to come into this country to work, we were sending out search parties for people and encouraging them, in some cases, to take up work in this country.”//
Blair's speech writer.
/Immigration, he wrote, ‘didn’t just happen; the deliberate policy of Ministers from late 2000…was to open up the UK to mass immigration’.
He was at the heart of policy in September 2001, drafting the landmark speech by the then Immigration Minister Barbara Roche, and he reported ‘coming away from some discussions with the clear sense that the policy was intended - even if this wasn’t its main purpose - to rub the Right’s nose in diversity and render their arguments out of date’./
Spicerack
The communities fighting are not from Blair and Mandelson's intake, they have been here for three or four generations. When Enoch Powell was at the Department of Health, he brought in asian immigrants to fill shortages of nurses and doctors in the NHS. It is the grandchildren of those immigrants who are now fighting each other.
// n 1963 the Conservative Health Minister, Enoch Powell, launched a campaign to recruit trained doctors from overseas to fill the manpower shortages caused by NHS expansion. Some 18,000 of them were recruited from India and Pakistan. Powell praised these doctors, who he said, 'provide a useful and substantial reinforcement of the staffing of our hospitals and who are an advertisement to the world of British medicine and British hospitals.' Many of those recruited had several years of experience in their home countries and arrived to gain further medical experience, training, or qualification. In 1968, the recruitment of overseas doctors was fuelled again by the predictions of further medical shortages by the Todd Committee, which recommended expanding medical schools. By 1971, 31 per cent of all doctors working in the NHS in England were born and qualified overseas. Overseas doctors remained central to NHS staffing throughout the last decades of the twentieth century, filling vacancies in locations and specialties that were unpopular with UK trained doctors. In 1997, 44 per cent of 7,229 newly registered doctors (under full registration) had received their initial medical education overseas. //
The communities fighting are not from Blair and Mandelson's intake, they have been here for three or four generations. When Enoch Powell was at the Department of Health, he brought in asian immigrants to fill shortages of nurses and doctors in the NHS. It is the grandchildren of those immigrants who are now fighting each other.
// n 1963 the Conservative Health Minister, Enoch Powell, launched a campaign to recruit trained doctors from overseas to fill the manpower shortages caused by NHS expansion. Some 18,000 of them were recruited from India and Pakistan. Powell praised these doctors, who he said, 'provide a useful and substantial reinforcement of the staffing of our hospitals and who are an advertisement to the world of British medicine and British hospitals.' Many of those recruited had several years of experience in their home countries and arrived to gain further medical experience, training, or qualification. In 1968, the recruitment of overseas doctors was fuelled again by the predictions of further medical shortages by the Todd Committee, which recommended expanding medical schools. By 1971, 31 per cent of all doctors working in the NHS in England were born and qualified overseas. Overseas doctors remained central to NHS staffing throughout the last decades of the twentieth century, filling vacancies in locations and specialties that were unpopular with UK trained doctors. In 1997, 44 per cent of 7,229 newly registered doctors (under full registration) had received their initial medical education overseas. //
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