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Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) - Travel (904) - Nairaland

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Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Viruses: 7:48pm On Nov 22, 2025
HustlaOfLagos:
grin

I remember when Justwise used to blame all and sundry for speaking about healthcare visas and saying Nigerians can switch to whatever career they want after 5 years even though the signs were there that the gov would soon start to target that sector.

I wonder if he still shares the same sentiment
I was among those that said this and no regrets.

Those in that route did not get there by choice, they did because it was the available option (sentiments aside, show me one person that his/her ambition in life was to leave Nigeria to do care work in UK). Saying they should bear for 5yrs and switch career after is to keep hope alive and save some from depression.

Do you really think there's someone that had a chance to switch visas but stayed because one person said 5yrs is not far?

Even the 15yrs now, some will change route, some will move to another country. For those that will remain, we will continue to give them hope.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by HustlaOfLagos: 7:57pm On Nov 22, 2025
Viruses:
I was among those that said this and no regrets.

Those in that route did not get there by choice, they did because it was the available option (sentiments aside, show me one person that his/her ambition in life was to leave Nigeria to do care work in UK). Saying they should bear for 5yrs and switch career after is to keep hope alive and save some from depression.

Do you really think there's someone that had a chance to switch visas but stayed because one person said 5yrs is not far?
The issue is -

1. A lot of folks did not even TRY despite MSc in courses like Data / Business Analysis, Cybersecurity, Cloud Computing, AI etc.

They switched immediately to HC and some even bought COS citing "the end justifies the means" and "all of us go gather get ILR after 5 years".

2. This trend reflected in the MAC analysis and the decision was made as a result and I do not believe your position of this being the available option. It's a "lazy" assertion that seeks to side bad decisions taken by loads of people.

One of my bones of contention at the time was that the HC was easy to get and makes people relax. Lots of those people would not go on to other roles after that 5 yrs as most are already old and would just rather not bother after that long HC stay

This has always been my position and I clearly clamoured that WE can do better than choosing the easy way out (We are kuku known for this)
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by HustlaOfLagos: 7:59pm On Nov 22, 2025
Zahra29:
Even if Canada and Australia wanted or managed to "poach" over 600k HCA (including dependants), the UK could simply open up a new care visa route - this time they could make it very strict from the outset e.g. no dependants, 20 years to ILR or no route to ILR, and it's almost guaranteed that the route would be oversubscribed in less than 1 week and from the very same countries that rushed it the first time around.
I wonder where you got the 600K stats from o shocked. I am referring to only the guys/students who came between 2020/2021 - 2025 who will be affected by this new policy

I honestly doubt that if there are more viable options, the route will be oversubscribed unless for folks who just want to come in, work for 3 yrs and move back to their countries or take out loans from the system and japa grin
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by babajeje123(m): 8:00pm On Nov 22, 2025
WanderingChild:
https://x.com/RupertLowe10/status/1991924018656788506?s=20

This Twitter thread is really eye opening. If we ever get a Reform or right leaning government, immigration policies will be worse.
That Rupert is a crazy guy. He hates any immigration with all his fabrics.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by HustlaOfLagos: 8:02pm On Nov 22, 2025
WanderingChild:
You said what? Hold my beer. They are worse. The US now has a policy in place where they can deny you visa (immigrant and non-immigrant) for being obese or having certain diseases like diabetes and hypertension amongst others.
Well, that is understandable, they do not operate the type of system the UK operates.

But at least, they have visa routes which give you your green card/PR from day 1. Please point me to any UK route that offers this from Day 1 grin

In actual fact, among the top English speaking countries that Nigerians like to migrate to, only the UK does not have this in place. Even their global talent route has specific "product led" clauses. They also charge the highest for visa renewal fees etc
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by HustlaOfLagos: 8:06pm On Nov 22, 2025
WanderingChild:
I am happy to see this argument. I remembered when we were here celebrating the MAC report because it said we made more contribution to the economy than Brits – we need to do better as a people in understanding how these British folks operate. Now we are seeing the true agenda of that MAC report. It was to set the tone for successive punitive policies.

If we had majority of our grads going on to set up businesses, create products, create jobs, or get high level paying roles, the discussion today would have been different. Imagine that we even had more of our grad leaving the UK to become highfliers elsewhere, the UK would have created a similar youth visa scheme like India for our grads.
The 2nd bolded part is exactly my point re the HC route, not because I have specific issues with people who choose to go that route. The purpose of Boris changing the student visa to include dependents / PSW was so that this could happen.

The reverse however happened as we started to seek the easy way out and get into low paying jobs which they clearly did not want as they expected that MSc holders would be highly skilled and go on to do these things.

The MAC report clearly stated this and analysed it.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by HustlaOfLagos: 8:07pm On Nov 22, 2025
justwise:
The system allows that, so that is what the Britsh wants
undecided
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by babajeje123(m): 8:08pm On Nov 22, 2025
HustlaOfLagos:
The issue is -

1. A lot of folks did not even TRY despite MSc in courses like Data / Business Analysis, Cybersecurity, Cloud Computing, AI etc.

They switched immediately to HC and some even bought COS citing "the end justifies the means" and "all of us go gather get ILR after 5 years".

2. This trend reflected in the MAC analysis and the decision was made as a result and I do not believe your position of this being the available option. It's a "lazy" assertion that seeks to side bad decisions taken by loads of people.

One of my bones of contention at the time was that the HC was easy to get and makes people relax. Lots of those people would not go on to other roles after that 5 yrs as most are already old and would just rather not bother after that long HC stay

This has always been my position and I clearly clamoured that WE can do better than choosing the easy way out (We are kuku known for this)
I agree with you, based on personal experience. A family friend was mad with me that I applied for PSW after studies and didn't even give HC visa a thought. Then, he had switched from student to HC visa in the usual way, if you know what I mean. Many didn't even complete their studies before they switched. Now, the matter don wear 'kon kon shu', and it's going to be a long ride except a miracle happens, in the order of Covid 19.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by HustlaOfLagos: 8:09pm On Nov 22, 2025
babajeje123:
That Rupert is a crazy guy. He hates any immigration with all his fabrics.
Honestly, in a lot of ways, you cant blame these guys.

Sometimes, you look at videos from Birmingham with certain demographics trying to impose Sharia law etc. Makes 0 sense but sensible immigration is still needed by all countries to poach ready made talent
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 8:11pm On Nov 22, 2025
HustlaOfLagos:
I wonder where you got the 600K stats from o shocked. I am referring to only the guys/students who came between 2020/2021 - 2025 who will be affected by this new policy

I honestly doubt that if there are more viable options, the route will be oversubscribed unless for folks who just want to come in, work for 3 yrs and move back to their countries or take out loans from the system and japa grin
Well the reality is that there are few or no viable options from comparable English speaking, western countries, and you know that many will take grab it to at least japa first, and then perhaps use it as a launch pad for Japa 2.0.

Lol, I didn't make it up - 600k is the government's estimate for the number that came in on the HC visa between only 2022 and 2024.See below, page 3 of the Command Paper:

"This extraordinary open border experiment was the legacy of the last Conservative
government. The bar to entry was lowered significantly. This was most evident in the
Health and Care visa. An attempt to fill between 6,000 and 40,000 jobs saw the arrival of
616,000 individuals from 2022 to 2024
. Over half were not even arriving to work in that
sector but were instead dependants of those who were. Fraud, as any constituency
Member of Parliament can tell you, was rife."


Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by HustlaOfLagos: 8:12pm On Nov 22, 2025
babajeje123:
I agree with you, based on personal experience. A family friend was mad with me that I applied for PSW after studies and didn't even give HC visa a thought. Then, he had switched from student to HC visa in the usual way, if you know what I mean. Many didn't even complete their studies before they switched. Now, the matter don wear 'kon kon shu', and it's going to be a long ride except a miracle happens, in the order of Covid 19.
They almost tore my clothes for not accepting HC visa in 2022

Personally advised a friend of mine around 2023 to rather go to the US on a visit visa than pay £12K for COS at the time. He is settled now after marrying and works as a Solutions Architect in the US while we are still chopping 10 portion here

grin
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by HustlaOfLagos: 8:13pm On Nov 22, 2025
Zahra29:
Well the reality is that there are few or no viable options from comparable English speaking, western countries, and you know that many will take grab it to at least japa first, and then perhaps use it as a launch pad for Japa 2.0.

Lol, I didn't make it up - 600k is the government's estimate for the number that came in on the HC visa between 2022 and 2024. See below, page 3 of the Command Paper:

"This extraordinary open border experiment was the legacy of the last Conservative
government. The bar to entry was lowered significantly. This was most evident in the
Health and Care visa. An attempt to fill between 6,000 and 40,000 jobs saw the arrival of
616,000 individuals from 2022 to 2024
. Over half were not even arriving to work in that
sector but were instead dependants of those who were. Fraud, as any constituency
Member of Parliament can tell you, was rife."


Yeah, this figure includes dependents smiley

I still maintain that the UK should be used by most as a stepping stone, not the final destination.

They have shown their hands time and again and will likely continue to do so.

After 10-15 years, who says they cant shift the goal post again?
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Viruses: 8:15pm On Nov 22, 2025
Raalsalghul:
Let me just state this here for the sake of posterity. Anybody on this group that thinks they should just accept the new terms (whether 10/15 years) and continue living your life, be ready to accept that you are not going to get that ILR. The goal post will continue to shift until it is out of your reach and impossible for you to attain.

The above is for those that think they can wing through it and continue living life.

So, all those money saved for mortgage deposit start redirecting it towards other endeavours and stop investing on British soil. Your visa fees and taxes are enough grin
They may change everything to rolling visas with no time to ILR. ILR will be on demand subject to certain requirements
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 8:21pm On Nov 22, 2025
HustlaOfLagos:
Yeah, this figure includes dependents smiley

I still maintain that the UK should be used by most as a stepping stone, not the final destination.

They have shown their hands time and again and will likely continue to do so.

After 10-15 years, who says they cant shift the goal post again?
💯
Everyone has liberty do what's in their best interest - both migrants and host country.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by babajeje123(m): 8:24pm On Nov 22, 2025
HustlaOfLagos:
Honestly, in a lot of ways, you cant blame these guys.

Sometimes, you look at videos from Birmingham with certain demographics trying to impose Sharia law etc. Makes 0 sense but sensible immigration is still needed by all countries to poach ready made talent
Absolutely! Sensible and quality immigration is needed. That said, it’s unfair on the part of the government to rescind on their promises they made when they threw opened their borders. It's highly insensitive and inhumane to apply the proposed laws retrospectively.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 8:31pm On Nov 22, 2025
babajeje123:
Absolutely! Sensible and quality immigration is needed. That said, it’s unfair on the part of the government to rescind on their promises they made when they threw opened their borders. It's highly insensitive and inhumane to apply the proposed laws retrospectively.
The government's position is that no promises were/are made while on a temporary visa and that the people they have made explicit promises to are those who have been given ILR. Page 4 of the Command Paper:

"We will not, and would never, take away settled status from those who have already been granted it. These are people who have been in our country for years, even decades. They
have families here. They have contributed to our society. Fairness is the most fundamental
of British values. We made these people a promise when we gave them settlement. We
welcomed them here permanently at that point, and we do not break our promises.
"
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by babajeje123(m): 9:05pm On Nov 22, 2025
Zahra29:
The government's position is that no promises were/are made while on a temporary visa and that the people they have made explicit promises to are those who have been given ILR. Page 4 of the Command Paper:

"We will not, and would never, take away settled status from those who have already been granted it. These are people who have been in our country for years, even decades. They
have families here. They have contributed to our society. Fairness is the most fundamental
of British values. We made these people a promise when we gave them settlement. We
welcomed them here permanently at that point, and we do not break our promises.
"
Zahra, you have always been anti-immigrant and that's very okay. However, you shouldn't deny that it's a common knowledge that after spending 5 years on a skilled worker visa, the holder of such has permission to apply for ILR. https://www.gov.uk/indefinite-leave-to-remain-tier-2-t2-skilled-worker-visa
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by babajeje123(m): 9:09pm On Nov 22, 2025
Zahra29:
The government's position is that no promises were/are made while on a temporary visa and that the people they have made explicit promises to are those who have been given ILR. Page 4 of the Command Paper:

"We will not, and would never, take away settled status from those who have already been granted it. These are people who have been in our country for years, even decades. They
have families here. They have contributed to our society. Fairness is the most fundamental
of British values. We made these people a promise when we gave them settlement. We
welcomed them here permanently at that point, and we do not break our promises.
"
The HS quote you highlighted is recent. We pray Nigel Farage doesn't win the next GE else he will rub your quote off with his bumbum.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Raalsalghul: 9:33pm On Nov 22, 2025
babajeje123:
The HS quote you highlighted is recent. We pray Nigel Farage doesn't win the next GE else he will rub your quote off with his bumbum.
People be thinking they're untouchable. grin
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 9:42pm On Nov 22, 2025
babajeje123:
Zahra, you have always been anti-immigrant and that's very okay. However, you shouldn't deny that it's a common knowledge that after spending 5 years on a skilled worker visa, the holder of such has permission to apply for ILR. https://www.gov.uk/indefinite-leave-to-remain-tier-2-t2-skilled-worker-visa
Lol, I'm not anti-immigrant. I am anti-mass immigration and abuse of the system because, well, look what it's led to, plus Reform lurking in the wings.

I'm not denying that the standard practice is that SWV typically leads to settlement after 5 years.

What I'm saying (or rather, what the government is saying - as the bolded quote is theirs, not mine) is that no guarantees are given and immigration rules and conditions can change up until permanent settlement.

The guidance says
"You may be able to settle permanently in the UK....."
Which falls short of an explicit promise, unlike the HSMP cohort in 2006
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 9:43pm On Nov 22, 2025
babajeje123:
The HS quote you highlighted is recent. We pray Nigel Farage doesn't win the next GE else he will rub your quote off with his bumbum.
Lol, not his bumbum 😂

It's not my quote. It's the government's from their recent statement.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by babajeje123(m): 9:46pm On Nov 22, 2025
Raalsalghul:
People be thinking they're untouchable. grin
That guy will be brutal. You can imagine him as PM and Rupert as Home Secretary 😄😄😄
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Goke7: 11:16pm On Nov 22, 2025
HustlaOfLagos:
No lies detected smiley

I honestly wonder though ... If all the folks in care are poached by Canada / Australia, what will happen to the UK then?

I predict this will be the trend over the next few years once word of this gets out and is commonplace. The same way Australia is brazenly poaching UK nurses, they will likely poach HCA with promise of better weather, pay, work conditions and residency
Even the Brits themselves are moving away from the country reason why I wonder why some immigrants just feel they must stay put in here with all the gaslighting and manipulation.

My two cents again if you’re still less than 40 and you’ve built good experience in the uk kindly explore other nations who will give you permanent residency in record time. The UK is broke and the carrying capacity to cater for all permanent residents keeps shrinking. Enough said.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by WanderingChild: 11:32pm On Nov 22, 2025
IMmigration As A Service (IMAAS)

Folks, I introduce to you the new subscription model that the UK and other countries will be rolling out in the coming years – IMmigration As A Service (IMAAS).

What is IMAAS? IMMAS is an immigration subscription model that places immigrants on limited visa (leave to remain) with regular extension to the visa necessary to maintain valid status. Immigrants on IMAAS have no route to ever getting ILR or citizenship unless by exception (subject to existing rules that may allow for this).

Is this possible? Yes. Countries in the middle east currently have this model at play. Application of IMAAS already exists in the UK for certain visa classes that do not offer you access to settlement and citizenship.

What are the implications of IMAAS becoming the defacto visa route in the UK? Many. First, it completes the process of SLAVERY 2.0 which the UK has tried to implement under previous governments. In SLAVERY 1.0 the slaves were paid by the masters for their loyalty. In SLAVERY 2.0, the slaves will be the ones paying the masters while offering their loyalty for free. With IMAAS, rights of immigrants will be permanently limited. Most immigrants will need to have a job in perpetuity to maintain status. IMAAS fees can be adjusted as the government pleases to either throttle immigration numbers or raise more revenue. Most importantly, under IMAAS, your historical residence loses meaning. Under current visa rules, time spent in the UK matters. Some families with school age kids who could not secure new COS due to loss of job but having spent more than 3 years with their families usually end up with free extended grants given to them by the Home Office recognising that some integration had already occurred. Under IMAAS, such considerations are no longer needed. Losing status will mean you are out of the country tomorrow. You disagree with your neighbour, and the police get involved? Goodbye to the UK.

Route to settlement and citizenship? Under IMAAS, accessing settlement and citizenship will now be based solely on recommendation. An entrepreneur who has a unicorn? Welcome aboard. A global talent visa holder who has groundbreaking research and wins a Field Marshall Prize? Welcome aboard. A long standing committed social worker who has been delivering care services to the elderly for the past 30 years in one NHS Trust, welcome aboard. Think of how the UK gives out all those MBEs and OBEs and DBEs, etc. Settlement and citizenship will follow such route. A few hundreds every year and everyone in check.

Is this the right choice for me? You will need to assess your immigration goals to arrive at a conclusion. You can always consult a qualified immigration lawyer for advice.

Is owning property and investing in pension worth it? You will need to assess your long-term financial goals to arrive at a conclusion. Please consult a qualified financial advisor for advice.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by jedisco(m):
babranancy:
My mum is 69 years and holds a uk visit visa. she came to the UK to visit me and fell ill so she was seen by the GP and the GP prescribed a medication for her. She went to the pharmacy to collect the medication but the pharmacist refused to accept her medication payment because she’s 69 years old so she’s automatically exempted from payment for her medication. I informed them that she’s on a visit visa but they refused saying that I should ask around and if I still want to pay, I can come later and pay.

Please what should I do?
Is she truly exempted from payment because she’s above 60 years?
I don’t want it to be that she’s using public fund and I don’t want anything that will affect her visa application in the future.
Please I need your suggestions. Thank you so much.
The pharmacy would honour the prescription type the medication was made on - in this case, it was a regular NHS one. Even if what you wanted to pay was the £9 or so, that's still an NHS service too. Ideally, there is a different prescription type for private scripts but this is hardly available and frankly, most prescribers don't know of it or even bother. If she had a private script, then she'd be charged significantly more including admin fees.

To me, I don't see an issue here. A relative of mine was in the UK recently and filled a regular med they had run out of. If you really want to chase it up, then you could go back to the prescriber and ask for a private script. But frankly, the pharmacy may still do thesame.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by jedisco(m):
Goke7:
Some of us said this countless times here that folks should look elsewhere but we were told that the Uk is still the best. Honestly I celebrate folks who have since used the Uk as the stepping stone to other places. They are the original MVPs and the wisest.

Hardworking and legal immigrants are being mocked 😜 imagine those on care visas facing the possibility of 15 yrs not even the 10 years that was originally tendered meanwhile the smarter ones have used their care experience to obtain PR in Canada and will be Canadian citizens in just 3 years while their counterparts in uk are filling online surveys that may never make any difference. Anyway each man to his own!
Hehe... folks said 'migrants like seeking utopia' with constant reminders stating 'it's not better elsewhere'. Like I said before, if a Suelette is telling you it's not better elsewhere, you should probably be looking elsewhere. Just like an abuser telling his victims not to leave cos other men are no better.


Oddly, just like with most things, many caught the wave. I have come across a few japa 2.0 crew members of late. On the Canada express entry thread, someone recently shared her move. Even in Cana, last few weeks, I met someone who came into the UK as a carer and in a year+ activated his 2.0.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by abuhusna1: 3:19am On Nov 23, 2025
Zahra29:
The government's position is that no promises were/are made while on a temporary visa and that the people they have made explicit promises to are those who have been given ILR. Page 4 of the Command Paper:

"We will not, and would never, take away settled status from those who have already been granted it. These are people who have been in our country for years, even decades. They
have families here. They have contributed to our society. Fairness is the most fundamental
of British values. We made these people a promise when we gave them settlement. We
welcomed them here permanently at that point, and we do not break our promises.
"
You are as mean as all the opportunist immigrants changing policies trying to deprive other people what they, their parents and grandparents benefited from. You have never spoken to support people Getting life easy in uk because you are settled. Old taker
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Fred2020:
Ì
Zahra29:
Even if Canada and Australia wanted or managed to "poach" over 600k HCA (including dependants), the UK could simply open up a new care visa route - this time they could make it very strict from the outset e.g. no dependants, 20 years to ILR or no route to ILR, and it's almost guaranteed that the route would be oversubscribed in less than 1 week and from the very same countries that rushed it the first time around.
You overestimate the UK's appeal. Immigration already fell by more than 50% with the little changes.

The problem with the current situation is that many have already invested a lot financially and socially and are in a delimma moving and potentially having time and money spent as wasted or staying and taking the hit.

Even the current rule if implemented as is, will lead to a sizeable remigration of the current in coming years for sure.

The UK isnt Dubia and the health care jobs are not as fanciful and well renumerated as people seem to think. Most people settled for it for the ILR, that is an open secret. There are not many who genuinely did a £30k Masters so they can work long hours on minimum wage in care. Some even paid a further £10s to land shoddy COS with no shifts. It's not the pay or the job that attracted them.

You strip the ILR or make it very distant, except the conditions of the job is significantly improved (which the councils cannot currently afford), they will stuggle to fill the roles with immigrants once the current pipeline dries up.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Cyberknight: 8:16am On Nov 23, 2025
Fred2020:
Ì

You overestimate the UK's appeal. Immigration already fell by more than 50% with the little changes.

The problem with the current situation is that many have already invested a lot financially and socially and are in a delimma moving and potentially having time and money spent as wasted or staying and taking the hit.

Even the current rule if implemented as is, will lead to a sizeable remigration of the current in coming years for sure.

The UK isnt Dubia and the health care jobs are not as fanciful and well renumerated as people seem to think. Most people settled for it for the ILR, that is an open secret. There are not many who genuinely did a £30k Masters so they can work long hours on minimum wage in care. Some even paid a further £10s to land shoddy COS with no shifts. It's not the pay or the job that attracted them.

You strip the ILR or make it very distant, except the conditions of the job is significantly improved (which the councils cannot currently afford), they will stuggle to fill the roles with immigrants once the current pipeline dries up.
At the bolded, Zahra's correct. If the UK opened up another care visa route today for 600k people under the new residence and ILR conditions, it will still be full and heavily oversubscribed by the end of the month. We all know that.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Cyberknight: 8:34am On Nov 23, 2025
babajeje123:
Absolutely! Sensible and quality immigration is needed. That said, it’s unfair on the part of the government to rescind on their promises they made when they threw opened their borders. It's highly insensitive and inhumane to apply the proposed laws retrospectively.
A bit of an unpopular opinion here: realpolitik is a thing and the government has chosen to exercise it in the pursuit of its interests. Tighter immigration control is here to stay whichever party wins the next GE.

We're lucky that we live in a liberal democracy so the government feels constrained to temper its exercise of realpolitik with a few concessions and the appearance of giving people a voice, but that doesn't change anything fundamentally.

Bottom line: If you are of an age or in a career/life situation that affords you other options, advisable to explore them if you hadn't already started doing so since May this year.
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Goke7: 9:58am On Nov 23, 2025
jedisco:
Hehe... folks said 'migrants like seeking utopia' with constant reminders stating 'it's not better elsewhere'. Like I said before, if a Suelette is telling you it's not better elsewhere, you should probably be looking elsewhere. Just like an abuser telling his victims not to leave cos other men are no better.


Oddly, just like with most things. Many caught the wave. I have come across a few japa 2.0 crew members of late. On the Canada express entry thread, someone recently shared her move. Even in Cana, last few weeks, I met someone who came into the UK as a carer and in a year+ activated his 2.0.
😂 You see that otapiapia abi na utopia people go find am tire now.

Some folks are just being lazy and I mean it, the signs were all there especially when the far right folks got haywire I don’t know what gave some immigrants the assurance that the rug won’t be pull off their feet. To add salt to injury the govt keep telling you that they are still consulting and telling to you fill online surveys while they implement the plan 😂. What manner of humiliation!
Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Goke7: 10:07am On Nov 23, 2025
The only small hope I see perhaps God willing is to allow folks still get ilr but sill ensure no recourse to public funds since all the headache is about benefits but that alone is already degrading but many migrants if not most won’t mind.

In all a new legislation or the courts may still be the deciding factor reason the govt still continues to say they are still consulting.
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