On my Spanish licence I have C1 and C1E
The Brexit thread
- Yorick
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Re: The Brexit thread
As i have on my UK one. Its the folk that passed after Jan 97 that are limited to 3.5t and cant tow but the tow rule is getting binned this year as far as i know.
- wheelnut
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Re: The Brexit thread
Perhaps the government didn’t think cheap foreign labour was necessarily a bad thing? It is how the world has turned for many a century.
- Yambo
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- wheelnut
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- Pirahna
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Re: The Brexit thread
The pyramids were built by well paid Egyptians, no slaves required.
Talking of cheap foreign labour, there's a Facebook page for jobs in my local area, lots and lots of carers required. That's another area which is going to need to up it's pay rates.
- DefTrap
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Re: The Brexit thread
Nope, you can't blame the guests at your 'shit party' for objecting to the pile of shit you're about to serve them because they didn't try hard enough to stop your shit-based cuisine.Potter wrote: ↑Thu Oct 07, 2021 4:47 am I think it needs a line in the sand, regardless of what was said before Brexit, we're here, and the loudest voices seem to be agreeing that the UK is suffering because of the withdrawal of foreign labour.
If the government had put schemes in place to mitigate this, it would have been admitting that many Brexit voters were right all along, that they had failed to protect UK workers and the UK was indeed running on the back of cheaper foreign labour, encouraged, supported and protected by a proxy UK government sitting in Brussels.
So no plans were in place to support UK job seekers or young people looking to enter the job market, or support of certain vulnerable industries.
The Tory machine didn't want Brexit, they blindly ignored these issues, so why would they put mitigation plans in place for issues that they wouldn't admit even existed?
And Corbyn had been advocating Brexit for his whole political career, his limp wristed effort at an opposition to it was transparent and Brexit happened as a protest vote against both parties. Against the tories for being tories and against labour for abandoning them.
Parliament failed the UK public and blaming this mess on one political party just shows that you're trying exceptionally hard to ignore why it happened.
49% of the voting population thought this was a terrible idea, pointed out the terrible consequences and were told they were either fibbers or making a meal of it.
We can only deal with the here and now, which is what the brexit ostriches wanted all along I think, before they came up with a rationale that suited them anyway, blame the victims.
It turns out there is no brexit 'bus money'. Not a bean. Brexited away
It turns out the jobs available post brexit are actually great because your brexit-voting nan genuinely dreamed of your career slaughtering animals or shitting in a bag in the back of a truck in an M25 lay-by.
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Re: The Brexit thread
PM Theresa May, Conservative Party Conference October 2016Potter wrote: ↑Thu Oct 07, 2021 4:47 am I think it needs a line in the sand, regardless of what was said before Brexit, we're here, and the loudest voices seem to be agreeing that the UK is suffering because of the withdrawal of foreign labour.
If the government had put schemes in place to mitigate this, it would have been admitting that many Brexit voters were right all along, that they had failed to protect UK workers and the UK was indeed running on the back of cheaper foreign labour, encouraged, supported and protected by a proxy UK government sitting in Brussels.
So no plans were in place to support UK job seekers or young people looking to enter the job market, or support of certain vulnerable industries.
The Tory machine didn't want Brexit, they blindly ignored these issues, so why would they put mitigation plans in place for issues that they wouldn't admit even existed?
Boris, October 2021:I know a lot of people don't like to admit this - [for] someone who finds themselves out of work or on lower wages because of low-skilled immigration, life simply doesn't seem fair.
In the space of 5 years, two Tory PMs have spoken out about the issue of low pay and immigration. They have had plenty of time to prepare the UK for the effects of Brexit, while publicly recognising the issues.So what I won’t do is go back to the old, failed model of low wages, low skills supported by uncontrolled immigration
- Count Steer
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Re: The Brexit thread
Heard a good stat on the radio recently. It is estimated, given voting profiles, that 1 million Brexit voters are now dead. Didn't even stick around to enjoy the fruits of their labours.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
- irie
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Re: The Brexit thread
Loving how Brexit and Covid side effects are being conflated, pure quality.
"Truth does not change because it is, or is not, believed by a majority of the people." - Giordano Bruno
- Horse
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- Count Steer
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Re: The Brexit thread
What Covid side-effects?
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
- Horse
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Re: The Brexit thread
Guessing, truck drivers sick or isolating?
- Count Steer
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Re: The Brexit thread
Ah. Those truck drivers that are still here. I see.
At a tangent I found this on the CIPD web site:
'Statistics from early 2018 showed that while 72% of employers have a dedicated training budget, growth in this area was comparatively slow. More than half (55%) said that leaving the EU has had no impact on their training and skills development investment, while 20% said it had caused them to reduce it. This shows that some employers are dialling back on development and training, at the very time they should be investing heavily to mitigate against the real risk of the current skills shortage worsening post-Brexit.
Interestingly, organisations that employ EU nationals were significantly more likely than employers that don’t recruit EU nationals to be investing in training and seeking to recruit from a wider range of under-represented or disadvantaged groups, such as older workers or those from minority ethnic backgrounds. This strongly indicates that organisations which employ EU migrants were typically doing so as part of wider efforts to find the labour they require and to build workforce skills, not because they were failing to invest in UK-born workers or looking to cut costs.'
So 55% of employers planned to do nothing, 20% to reduce training and skills development. Meanwhile, the ones that employ EU nationals were more likely to invest in UK-born workers.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
- Yambo
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Re: The Brexit thread
Count Steer wrote: ↑Thu Oct 07, 2021 9:37 am Heard a good stat on the radio recently. It is estimated, given voting profiles, that 1 million Brexit voters are now dead. Didn't even stick around to enjoy the fruits of their labours.
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Re: The Brexit thread
Après-moi, le deluge. To quote a prominent forriner.Count Steer wrote: ↑Thu Oct 07, 2021 9:37 am Heard a good stat on the radio recently. It is estimated, given voting profiles, that 1 million Brexit voters are now dead. Didn't even stick around to enjoy the fruits of their labours.
- Horse
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Re: The Brexit thread
Really? In the last couple of years I've had colleagues from:Potter wrote: ↑Thu Oct 07, 2021 11:38 am Employers looking to save money on their workforce are the ones that dig around in all corners looking for people to recruit that won't demand high pay and packages. They're much more likely to recruit from older workers or those from minority ethnic backgrounds and then try to train them to do what they want them to do - it's cheaper.
Singapore
South Africa
Canada
Italy
France
India
and many more besides. Including Wales.
The company, as far as I know, didn't 'dig around' for them.
- DefTrap
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Re: The Brexit thread
We seem to be coming round to the fact that the UK has an arsey workforce who would prefer to sit at home on benefits, rather than work hard in the pig-killing and bag-shitting industries. Not that surprising is it?
So, it turns out that Brexit is just another way to have a pop at the workers. Now that there aren't any immigrants to have a pop at anyway. You got there in the end. Brexited away ....
So, it turns out that Brexit is just another way to have a pop at the workers. Now that there aren't any immigrants to have a pop at anyway. You got there in the end. Brexited away ....
- DefTrap
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Re: The Brexit thread
Maybe we just need to accept that there are some jobs folk don't really want to do in "this day and age" because they're a bit crap? And if the industries don't want to pour money into training and wages and the government refuses to help (to make a point?) then just let those industries die.
Market forces innit.
Abattoir worker wages start at 9.50 an hour by the way. Who wouldn't want some of that sweet, sweet Brexit gold? Seriously though - that's not a thrilling package when I could be at home in the warm dreaming of being a YouTube playa.
Market forces innit.
Abattoir worker wages start at 9.50 an hour by the way. Who wouldn't want some of that sweet, sweet Brexit gold? Seriously though - that's not a thrilling package when I could be at home in the warm dreaming of being a YouTube playa.
Last edited by DefTrap on Thu Oct 07, 2021 12:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Pirahna
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Re: The Brexit thread
The last team I worked in had people from France, Spain, Portugal and Italy plus a couple of native English speakers (me and another bloke but I'm half Irish). The only one of the Europeans left is an Italian girl, all the others have gone either home or to other jobs in Europe. We're talking £100k plus a year skilled IT people, definitely not the sort you'd easily replaced.
Apart from Covid and Brexit there's a global shortage of semiconductors which is helping to mask any skilled labour shortage. The auto industry has been forced to slow or even stop production in some areas for example. Any industry that t required a computer chip is struggling.