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How To Quickly Clear The Number Of Illegal Immigrants In Your Country

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webbo3 | 10:42 Sun 25th Aug 2024 | News
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How to quickly clear the number of illegal immigrants in your country, let them stay

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13777037/Labour-amnesty-add-44-000-illegal-migrants-welfare-bill-say-Home-Offices-calculations-Tories-say-cost-taxpayer-18bn.html

More mouths to feed more money more potential terrorists

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They'll rubber stamp them and then tell us they've solved the issue and expect us to believe them.
12:23 Sun 25th Aug 2024

yep that was well predicted.

I just posted this in another thread ;

'The truth is that we are walking towards a grim dystopic future rather dutifully, marching along without - for the most part - daring to raise our voices in objection.

Every person I met last week in Middlesbrough lamented the level of immigration, the consequential crime levels, and how we are not allowed to talk about it for fear of being called racists.'

 

Rod Liddle,  The Spectator.

They'll rubber stamp them and then tell us they've solved the issue and expect us to believe them.

We knew exactly what they would do.  

But it's part of the government's strategy to put right all the problems, that they had no idea even existed prior to the election.

 

The next government should declare any such rubber stamping invalid, so no one who presently thinks they have a right to be here from the fake "amnesty", doesn't, and then deal with the issue properly.

I do see it only says "may" do so, at present. Maybe they'll prove to have more sense than the article suggests.

"We knew exactly what they would do."

Indeed. Rubber stamp everything that is causing a problem and claim to have solved in ten minutes what the Conservative government failed to do in ten years. Trouble is, there are consequences.

Example 1: The train driver's demands were met (i.e. hefty pay increase with no change to working conditions). Consequences:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cj9le7vdw91o

"Train drivers at London North Eastern Railway (LNER) are set to strike every weekend in September, October and two in November, union bosses have announced."

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvg49v5k771o#:~:text=Rail%20workers%20expect%20the%20same,drivers%27%20union%20Aslef%20on%20Wednesday.

"Rail workers expect the same terms as those offered to train drivers to end their strike action, the boss of the RMT union has said.

Mick Lynch told the Times, external he expected a "parallel, synchronised offer" to that offered to drivers' union Aslef on Wednesday."

Example 2: Junior Doctors' pay demands met by 22% increase. Consequences:

https://www.lbc.co.uk/news/junior-doctors-strike-again-despite-pay-rise/

"The head of the junior doctors' union is said to have threatened fresh strikes next year, despite his members getting a 22% pay deal this week."

Example 3: The government announces an effective amnesty by fast-tracking asylum claims from up to 90,000 illegal immigrants, of who probably 60,000 will be allowed to remain. Consequences:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-53699511

"As of 19 August, 19,294 people had crossed the Channel in 2024."

As well as this, I don't quite know how these people, when they have been granted permission to remain, will suddenly become self-sufficient. Will they all immediately find jobs and accommodation? I've an idea they may simply add to these numbers:

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/i-wouldn-t-wish-this-on-anyone-the-food-delivery-riders-living-in-caravan-shantytowns-in-bristol/ar-AA1pmfRY?ocid=msedgntp&pc=ASTS&cvid=714bcce076754b95bd6aa43b0a5e5337&ei=112

"Two lines of dirt-encrusted, ramshackle caravans stretch along both sides of a road close to the motorway that winds its way into the heart of Bristol. 

This is the grim encampment where about 30 Brazilian delivery riders working for large companies such as Deliveroo and Uber Eats are forced to live to make ends meet.

Celia Campos, 45, has been living in a caravan next to the sluices for a year. “We left Brazil in search of something better,” she says in quickfire Portuguese. “But most of us can’t make those dreams come true."

The harsh living conditions, long hours and low pay lead to mental health problems in the encampment. “I was depressed for a year. It was horrible,” says Campos. “I wouldn’t wish it on anyone. If you work, work, work and have no life… that’s where depression comes from.

Just what the country needs.

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