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Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) - Travel (360) - Nairaland

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Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 2) / Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 / Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ehizario2012: 12:42pm On Dec 10, 2023
hustla:



LOL I think its pretty simple at this point.

You can go the PSW and try to find a sponsored job in your field for one year. If it doesn't work, you can go the Healthcare route

... Or just go the Healthcare route and save £2900 for PSW

I just think the new rules will just make companies choose local folks.

If a job is offering 35K, instead of increasing the salary to 39K and sponsoring you, why not give it to a citizen instead?

Also, PR to Canada /Australia, though not exactly easy to get but you can apply and remain in the pipeline. The EB visas for the US are also if you're patient and have the qualifications requured

Infact it's serious but God dey, that's enough for me to face tomorrow.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ehizario2012: 12:47pm On Dec 10, 2023
Lefty500:



Go on eBay, search for your laptop of choice and spec, under filter, choose open never used you should see good deals there.

I didn't have a good experience with refurb laptop, so I don't recommend it, even with excellent refurb, one key wasn't working, I bought it for my wife, she didn't see a reason to report to me since there's an alternate key that serve the same purpose (shift key).

But with open never used, I got a laptop worth £750 at £449, ASUS TUF Gaming F15, Core i5 11th gen, 512GB SSD, 8gb RAM , 4gb Nvidia Geforce RTX 2050, 2023 model. I just recently added 16GB RAM.

Just be careful, because refurb can also be listed as "open never used", check the rating of the seller, and reviews, check item description, and try and see the reason why the person is selling, also if it has any defect.

That's a massive deal. Top notch gaming device...

But eBay sent me a kitchen trolley instead of mobile tyre pump which I ordered!

I've messaged d seller, hasn't responded. Nawa

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ehizario2012: 12:51pm On Dec 10, 2023
triplo3:
[b][/b]


How can you claim no one is doing anyone a favour when the immigration numbers demonstrates people are coming in droves? If it was a 50/50 business deal like you say, shouldn’t direction be in both ways or fairly stable. I don’t just mean from Naija (India, China, Pakistan etc. are on the list). The truth is people will move from areas of economic hardship to areas with more opportunities…just like Osmosis. When you come and you start paying tax in the new system, were you not paying tax in the previous location? What did you get in return? If it’s not a fair deal, people would stop coming and enjoy their extra “money”.

That said, I think immigration should be sustainable, otherwise we overload the system and we get the same “unworkable” system some of us were running away from. When last have you visited a GP or house-hunted? There’s no doubt in my mind this “tiny-Island” is under a lot of pressure and it needs to be released somehow. I don’t like the uncertainty of the immigration laws (they should be fairly stable so people can plan and not be stranded), but how many countries are viable alternatives? Maybe Canada, Australia, USA…be things May even be changing in these countries as well. In terms of voting or making a change, not sure the immigrant vote/lobby is significant enough to move the needle.

Las las, everyone go Dey alright.

How I wish we could get our acts right as a country, doesn’t even have to be el dorado, just back to 2015 economic outlook and the influx from Nigerians won’t be as bad. God punish APC for forcing middle class Nigerians to flee their country!

Prior to 2015, my bosses who had 20 million+ in their accounts were not even thinking about relocation, it was all about going on famkly vacation and returning to the office.

But now, officers who have 50m+ in their accounts are still spending millions to Japa!

APC is a stupid government, a government of pain! Punish them!!!

5 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by heroshark(m): 1:05pm On Dec 10, 2023
Westves:
Hello, guys. Friend of mine recently relocated to the UK with his family. From the gory stories he's been feeding me, abroad ain't all that is propped up to be. Freezing temperatures, monthly rent of £600, comparative cost of living, tuition, catering singlehandedly for the family cuz his nursing wife doubles as a student, on top of that, has to raise the sponsorship fee

He hasn't been making much progress with finding caregiver jobs and his options are limited. Can't do construction under this weather. So my question is, what form of trade or occupation can he pivot into before it's too late? My guy is bleeding cash so we are kinda desperate here

I'm sure a lot of guys got easier landing so I'm looking forward to any helpful resource you guys can bless us with. He is a naija graduate, if that matters. Many thanks

Being a Naija Graduate or UK Graduate is irrelevant. Alot of Graduates are unskilled and quasi-literate/psuedo-literate.

People are different and have areas they can thrive in and it's important your friend identify areas he can thrive with some efforts.

I have met someone who did apprenticeship in Instrumentation and Control (I&C) he earns an astronomical amount, and currently works as an independent making roughly £20k per week for off-shore and £5-7k per week onshore. He doesn't have any higher education qualification and says that there is a huge shortage of talents in their field making them high demand.
His client includes both chemical plant, oil & gas sector and really any big production firm that requires instrumentation.

His apprenticeship to him 3years to complete and he is just 27years old

3 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 1:15pm On Dec 10, 2023
hustla:


Not saying UK is all bad but they need to be a bit flexible and try to have a set in stone migration policy, not this uncertainty.

It is their country though and they can do as they like until we fix ours

Btw, welcome back grin

The uncertainty is definitely not nice, however they have to be responsive, agile, same as
leading organisations.
If they have laws in place for years which allows them to plan based on the noted trends, and then these trends change dramatically, surely it would be reasonable for them (and any company) to adjust based on the new patterns.

If these patterns change or revert back, then they will likely adjust their policies again to suit.
Unfortunately migrants do get caught out in the process but it's not vindictive (apart maybe from T May - she was on a next level lol) - it's largely time and chance.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by justwise(m): 1:20pm On Dec 10, 2023
jedisco:


The reason I get triggered when people make frivolous statements moreso about the NHS is cos its a sector I know

If you know any GP, ask them to tell you the number of fit notes they issue daily and the kind of things they are issued for. You would begin to see this country differently.

Over 100,000 additional people go off work on longterm sick leave every month many of them would be on benefits and a good chunk would work cash in cash-in-hand hence cheating the system both ways. How many visa paying immigrants are on that list?
Where is the outrage about the ten of thousands of new benefit claimants monthly? What contribution do these make to the nation in comparison to immigrants?

ZERO!!

7 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ehizario2012: 1:23pm On Dec 10, 2023
Datakey:


I heard you are the oga of Iptv, abeg how do I watch matches

Seconded ooo. IPTV needed too

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 1:25pm On Dec 10, 2023
jedisco:


How many immigrants do you think form part of that 10%?

A fair amount. I'm not sure why you think that immigrants don't use the NHS. What about their dependants? Children will fall sick regardless of their residence status. A dependant child will use the NHS just as much as a British child, and rightly so.

I've come across people making comments like "I've paid my iHS, make I go book GP appointment and get all the blood work done, even though I no sick, at least I don pay for am".

Some migrants come here and overwork themselves and end up falling sick. Some come in pregnant or get pregnant. Some have chronic conditions. Some have conditions that were not diagnosed or treated in their home country and they come here and get the tests done and the condition treated.

There are many examples of the above scenarios, but because the UK does not include a health assessment in its visa process (unlike Australia and Canada I think), we automatically assume that immigrants are all fit as a fiddle. Compare the life expectancy figures in both countries.

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ehizario2012: 1:28pm On Dec 10, 2023
Zahra29:


I think people grossly underestimate how much migrants use the NHS. Apart from giving birth, many come into the UK with poorly managed or un/misdiagnosed conditions, also chronic conditions such as sickle cell, and I have come across many young people who have accessed health services far more in the year or 2 they have been here than the average young brit.

Interpreter services are common in some communities. It is estimated that around 1 million people in the UK do not speak English.

Free school meals are universal up to year 3, regardless of income or residence status.

Transport - I have even read posts here where there was no more space in the schools close to the family home by the time the parents applied, so the children were placed in a school further away and the council paid for a taxi drop off and pick up service for the children due to the distance.

I've never heard of this taxi drop off and pick up before, it's quite surprising.

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 1:30pm On Dec 10, 2023
jedisco:


The reason I get triggered when people make frivolous statements moreso about the NHS is cos its a sector I know

If you know any GP, ask them to tell you the number of fit notes they issue daily and the kind of things they are issued for. You would begin to see this country differently.

Over 100,000 additional people go off work on longterm sick leave every month many of them would be on benefits and a good chunk would work cash in cash-in-hand hence cheating the system both ways. How many visa paying immigrants are on that list?
Where is the outrage about the ten of thousands of new benefit claimants monthly? What contribution do these make to the nation in comparison to immigrants?

There is a lot of national outrage about people on benefits. That's why the argument has been that the economically inactive should be encouraged back into work to fill the vacancies, instead of increasingly relying on foreign labour.
The chancellor set out measures again in his statement to penalise benefit claimants who refuse to get a job.

The Tories are as hard on "benefits scroungers" as they are commonly vilified, as they are on immigrants.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ehizario2012: 1:35pm On Dec 10, 2023
Gerrard59:


Pre-2010 and till 2014, there was a massive return of Nigerians in the diaspora and they once dominated the discourse on Nairaland. There were tales and websites meant for them. Then, few Nigerians bothered to remain after their studies. Rather, they went abroad to study and returned for higher salaries and high-profile roles/jobs. Then, Access Bank and other companies organised aptitude tests in London for Nigerian students in British universities and successful applicants got interviewed and resumed in Nigeria after their graduation.

In 2015, the same people said GEJ was a bad choice and voted him out to install an incompetent feudalist. Now, the same people are selling their properties as married people to go back to the same UK.

God does not have to punish APC, but those who campaigned and voted for Buhari in 2015. My signature exists for a reason.

Can't agree less!!! 2011-2013, I knew of that period very very well.

Those who brought APC on us ehn, we leave u in God's hands!
Relocation wasn't on my plan at all, I had the means to relocate my family since 2020 but kept postponing, hoping for a turnaround till that drug baron took power this year and I decided to leave the country immediately.

2 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 1:45pm On Dec 10, 2023
ehizario2012:


I've never heard of this taxi drop off and pick up before, it's quite surprising.

Yeah me too, especially given how cash strapped councils are. I know they sometimes arrange taxi services if there is a severe special need, but I never realised that some councils also apparently arrange taxi services due to forced distance. I read it here but can't remember what council it was.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Goke7: 2:08pm On Dec 10, 2023
jedisco:


Entitlement.... hehe.. I laugh when people mention entitlement on this page.
The average immigrant many times doesn't even know his/her protected rights talk more of being entitled.

The fact is that an average immigrant needs to work in certain sectors or spend average of 5 yrs in this country to begin to understand what British entitlements means.

Dem don cast us finish for this place, that since our home country is no better we should not complain much. I once told my British pastor and his wife in church how much we pay for ihs, their face just turn red and almost passed out. They were shocked at the amount we immigrants pay into their system. I don’t blame our people much we are all coming from a system with almost no protected rights

5 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 2:19pm On Dec 10, 2023
Not sure if anyone heard this incredibly sad story, but the mother has now been charged despite her unimaginable grief and trauma.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-67674987.amp

It's not scare mongering when people are advised not to leave their young children home alone at any time, or for any length of time.

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by missjekyll: 2:24pm On Dec 10, 2023
I mean an experienced doctor ( you need 5 yrs of training to be a GP) can usually tell who is making things up or not, cant they?

Why are they not using this training and experience to save public money? Why are they abetting it by issuing fit notes they cannot stick their necks out on?
Surely fit notes cannot be based on vibes alone...
ReesheesuKnack:



The chancellor’s statement a few weeks ago mentioned how these loopholes will be closed.

No, doctors are not issuing frivolous sick notes. It is the ‘patients’ that are presenting with frivolous symptoms to get sick notes.

And it’s very easy to present with frivolous symptoms, especially if I want to keep out of work, knowing that I will not lose too much because benefits are there to resort to.

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by claremont(m): 2:24pm On Dec 10, 2023
ehizario2012:


Seconded ooo. IPTV needed too

https://getvbuy.com/

3 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by missjekyll: 2:32pm On Dec 10, 2023
This is beans , there are children who need 24hr highly specialised nursing care . The council pays for this because every child in this country has a right to life, healthcare, all the things in the unicef charter.
Compared to the cost of building a school, taxi fare is beans.

In canada, they kept a whole train station open for a single secondary school student for 6 years.
Thats how everybody should be valued.
ehizario2012:


I've never heard of this taxi drop off and pick up before, it's quite surprising.

2 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by profemebee(m): 2:55pm On Dec 10, 2023
Bless youuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu

Thanks for this....... **hugs**

iyatrustee:




Honestly, Goke needs to address issues from a logical point of view and not out of emotions.

He makes some good points, but has a way of twisting people's words in a sinister way.

Every side to this discussion have raised valid points. But while others present theirs objectively, he is subjective in his opinion.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by profemebee(m): 2:56pm On Dec 10, 2023
i no bother respond again.... no need.... lets stay on vibes!!!!

kwakudtraveller:

Lol na why I give up to dey answer am. I said "an argument" was lazy as he was narrowing the argument to us being oppressed but he interpreted it as me saying that all his arguments are lazy and he must agree with me. It just showed me that he was attaching emotions to a simple critical banter from opposing ends so I just gave up. It’s like saying just because we are immigrants then we must all agree on the same views especially when our country is no better.

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by profemebee(m): 2:58pm On Dec 10, 2023
i remember someone here told us about the taxi drop off services for her kids and she was asking if it was public funds..

I also know one, he was my airport pickup cab and told me he runs the school run for council.. and he even told me how much he is paid.. sweet money ooo.. i just cant remember

ehizario2012:


I've never heard of this taxi drop off and pick up before, it's quite surprising.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Poanan: 3:04pm On Dec 10, 2023
heroshark:


Being a Naija Graduate or UK Graduate is irrelevant. Alot of Graduates are unskilled and quasi-literate/psuedo-literate.

People are different and have areas they can thrive in and it's important your friend identify areas he can thrive with some efforts.

I have met someone who did apprenticeship in Instrumentation and Control (I&C) he earns an astronomical amount, and currently works as an independent making roughly £20k per week for off-shore and £5-7k per week onshore. He doesn't have any higher education qualification and says that there is a huge shortage of talents in their field making them high demand.
His client includes both chemical plant, oil & gas sector and really any big production firm that requires instrumentation.

His apprenticeship to him 3years to complete and he is just 27years old
Someone said he is looking for a care job or an immediate job to make ends meet and u brought up write up on skills and how irrelevant his education his. I don't understand ....

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by profemebee(m): 3:05pm On Dec 10, 2023
blesssssss youuuuuuuuuu

Nigeria that immigrants account for less than 1% of the total population lol

Deepest level of hypocrisy

A lot of things you're pushing for can't happen in your home country..

Someone was called a bastard and can't run for governor just because his maternal side was from the East.. even though his paternal clan is one of the most popular Lagos clans ever

The level of tolerance and tribalism within the same people is alarming in your home country and you're going on and on about how another country should run their policies..

I really don't understand if and why people don't look in the mirror...

Emotions will keep you running in circles.. you will never be objective



Goodenoch:


How you feel about your home country has everything to with the UK - in particular, how people view immigration and respond to it.

If in your own country there are impossibly high barriers for immigrants to come in and work or access public services, all while still paying taxes and various fees and you have never advocated for that to change, but you go to another person's country and you are casting their policies that are much more liberal despite being made more restrictive recently as inhumane, then it's hypocrisy.

Would you and your people back home tolerate the same numbers that you are saying are insignificant here? Not just from other countries o - even inter state and inter-region, do we not see even more stringent restrictions on 'foreigners' trying to get certain jobs/public offices? If you know all these but act shocked that Brits are being the same, then, again, it's hypocrisy.

You say they aren't doing us immigrants a favour, and I agree. But it's also on this thread that many (including you if I recall correctly) essentially said immigrants are doing the UK a favour and that the economy would collapse, and that 'what does the average brit even contribute?' So now that they are saying they don't want to do business again, why the lamentations?

3 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by justwise(m): 3:05pm On Dec 10, 2023
ehizario2012:


I've never heard of this taxi drop off and pick up before, it's quite surprising.

I know someone who resigned full time work just to do this for families paid for by the council. He makes far more money than working full time.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by hustla(m): 3:15pm On Dec 10, 2023
Zahra29:


The uncertainty is definitely not nice, however they have to be responsive, agile, same as
leading organisations.
If they have laws in place for years which allows them to plan based on the noted trends, and then these trends change dramatically, surely it would be reasonable for them (and any company) to adjust based on the new patterns.

If these patterns change or revert back, then they will likely adjust their policies again to suit.
Unfortunately migrants do get caught out in the process but it's not vindictive (apart maybe from T May - she was on a next level lol) - it's largely time and chance.


We move wink
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by triplo3: 3:25pm On Dec 10, 2023
jedisco:


You make some points but I find the bolded interesting. Are immigrants really the cause of NHS woes? I remember we were told same thing about the EU

Let me give a brief history of the NHS- its a sector that has always relied on immigrants. From the windrush arrivals of the 1950s who took on menial jobs. Then Asian and Nigerian medics of 1960- 1980s many of whom became GPs that virtually saved primary care from collapse. Some of the offspring of this group are quite popular e.g Kemi and Sunak. The 90s saw the influx of Eastern Europeans who took up roles in nursing, care, medicine e.t.c. Early 2000 were the Philipino nurses and recently its back to Nigerian and Asian medics again.

Let me ask...

1. What do you think would happen to the NHS wait times if all immigrants left the UK?

2. What happened in the care sector when Eastern Europeans stopped coming?

3. When was the last time you were in a GP waiting room? (no insult intended). Even in places which are quite diverse, look in any GP waiting room and observe the demography of people sat. The fastest growing age bracket in the UK is still the over 80s... In Healthcare, its a well established fact that in a system like ours, 10 % of users would use about 90% of resources. How many immigrants do you think form part of that 10%?



Awww so cute. How altruistic of these migrants from different countries coming to save the NHS out of the goodness of their hearts! No pay or compensation or security for their children’s future in a working system which has led to the rise of Kemi Badenoch and co. I used GPs as an example, but the impact in my view is not limited to Healthcare alone (although there’s no denying 1.5m net migration in two years would affect services). Also Housing is impacted (see what’s also happening in Canada). Schooling and other general services. What’s the plan for everyone? Or is the goal just to “save” the NHS with the migrant workers and pay no heed to the unintended consequences.

I know first hand the difference between public services 2009/10/11/12 and what we are going through now. I never heard anyone waiting 2yrs plus for elective surgery etc.

4 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by toughest007: 3:32pm On Dec 10, 2023
Zahra29:


The government is not stupid and if their stats show that dependants outnumber main applicants (both students and care workers) and they recognise that majority of these dependants do not work or pay tax while consuming public services, that is part of the reason it has introduced restrictions to curb numbers.

I am struggling to agree with the highlighted. Can you provide a link to the actual numbers?

Quoting the numbers and reference would always help eliminate the unnecessary back and forth when making a point.

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by toughest007: 3:33pm On Dec 10, 2023
LionInZion:


How so please?

MAs

For the year ending June 2023, there were 498,626 sponsored study visas granted to main applicants.

There were 321,101 work visas granted to main applicants in the year ending June 2023

Total = 819,727

Dependants

In the year ending June 2023, almost one-quarter (24%) of all sponsored study related visas granted were to dependants of students[b] (154,063)[/b]

In the year ending June 2023 there were 217,786 grants to dependants of people who had been granted a work visa.

Total = 371,489

https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/immigration-system-statistics-year-ending-june-2023/why-do-people-come-to-the-uk-to-study#dependants-of-sponsored-study-visa-holders

https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/immigration-system-statistics-year-ending-june-2023/why-do-people-come-to-the-uk-to-work#dependants-of-work-visa-holders

I've been hearing this narrative of more dependants than MA, and I keep wondering where it's coming from. Among the recent entrants to the UK that I know there are more singles than married. Am I missing something please?

Ah...and here we have it.

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by toughest007: 3:51pm On Dec 10, 2023
LionInZion:


Yea, in specifics, dependants of care workers outnumber the MAs. But your earlier post which I quoted said, "stats show that dependants outnumber main applicants (both students and care workers)"

You'd agree with me that's untrue.

And about Nigerian dependant numbers, that's also another point entirely which wasn't part of the post I quoted.

I have noticed this a lot. A few folks here move away from the context of the discuss and present an entirely different scenario. Others too quote one out of context just to drive a point. Spoils the taste of the debate.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 3:53pm On Dec 10, 2023
toughest007:


I am struggling to agree with the highlighted. Can you provide a link to the actual numbers?

Quoting the numbers and reference would always help eliminate the unnecessary back and forth when making a point.

This was my response the the OPs comment:

You're looking at totals but trends have been called out in specific categories namely post graduate students and health and care workers.

I think I'm looking at the same gov UK link as you and it shows that in the YE Sep 2023, there were 173,896 health and care dependants compared to 143,990 main applicants. Top 3 countries - India, Nigeria and Zimbabwe..Of the health and care visas, care workers accounted for 83,072 out of the 143,999 visas.

For student visas , there's been a spotlight on Nigeria because not only has the number of dependants exceeded the number of MAs : 60, 506 dependants in the YE Sep 2023 compared to 51,000 student visas, but it also represents a large increase of 59,079 in dependant numbers compared to 2019.

This is why restrictions on dependants were targeted at the above groups.


Also see below extract from Home secs statement:

In the year ending September 2023, 101,000 Health and Care Worker visas were issued to care workers and senior care workers, with an estimated 120,000 visas granted to associated dependants, the majority of whom we estimate don’t work, but still make use of public services

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by missjekyll: 3:58pm On Dec 10, 2023
Much as the tories want you to think your inability to access timely healthcare, get a schoolplace for your child is due to immigration, it is not.

Populations should increase with time . This increase is desirable inorder to provide the funds and human resources needed to power the economy, pay pensions etc.

Its been known for decades that the uk needed to build more houses , hospitals, train more staff. Funding was allocated for this in advance.

What we have seen in the past 13 years is funding cuts every year . What we are suffering now is the result of public services built for the population of 2010 being used by the population of 2023.

According to the ONS here , we did not even grow as much as expected, yet we are struggling https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/populationandmigration/populationestimates/bulletins/annualmidyearpopulationestimates/mid2021#population-change-for-uk-countries
triplo3:




Awww so cute. How altruistic of these migrants from different countries coming to save the NHS out of the goodness of their hearts! No pay or compensation or security for their children’s future in a working system which has led to the rise of Kemi Badenoch and co. I used GPs as an example, but the impact in my view is not limited to Healthcare alone (although there’s no denying 1.5m net migration in two years would affect services). Also Housing is impacted (see what’s also happening in Canada). Schooling and other general services. What’s the plan for everyone? Or is the goal just to “save” the NHS with the migrant workers and pay no heed to the unintended consequences.

I know first hand the difference between public services 2009/10/11/12 and what we are going through now. I never heard anyone waiting 2yrs plus for elective surgery etc.

7 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by toughest007: 4:02pm On Dec 10, 2023
ehizario2012:


I've never heard of this taxi drop off and pick up before, it's quite surprising.

Zahra29 is right. It's done. I was as surprised as you when I heard it the first time. grin
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Poanan: 4:04pm On Dec 10, 2023
triplo3:




Awww so cute. How altruistic of these migrants from different countries coming to save the NHS out of the goodness of their hearts! No pay or compensation or security for their children’s future in a working system which has led to the rise of Kemi Badenoch and co. I used GPs as an example, but the impact in my view is not limited to Healthcare alone (although there’s no denying 1.5m net migration in two years would affect services). Also Housing is impacted (see what’s also happening in Canada). Schooling and other general services. What’s the plan for everyone? Or is the goal just to “save” the NHS with the migrant workers and pay no heed to the unintended consequences.

I know first hand the difference between public services 2009/10/11/12 and what we are going through now. I never heard anyone waiting 2yrs plus for elective surgery etc.

When are you planning to leave the U.K to help decongest some of these over crowded facilities?

3 Likes

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