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Mandy
Joined: 07 Feb 2007
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 12:38 pm Post subject: Regarding last night : Immigration & multiculturalism |
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I totally agree with George about this.
There was one caller who said there should be no immigration controls (i.e. totally free movements globally). That rang alarm bells, and puts the issue into a debating context : whether nations should have immigration controls {as I believe they have to}, and if so, on what basis, e.g. need (such as refugees), wealth (if you have "x" in the bank), hiring capability (if you employee "y" number of people), skills (if you have certain skills/qualifications .. i.e. a point system like in Canada), family links (if relatives are in the country), quota system (random annual draw, like the US has), ministerial discretion (i.e. who you know, or which minister you suck the toe of, or if your "employer" makes donation to the party in power) etc.
Note : George didn't say he agreed with the caller.
The "isolationists" would set the hurdle so high that it would be effectively a blanket ban on immigration from their non-preferred countries. And even worse, they may try to "encourage" non-favoured people to leave (which is effectively ethnic cleansing, i.e. a War Crime).
Over to the forum ..
p.s. Sorry to non-limpet likers .. |
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Colston
Joined: 23 Jan 2007
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 1:00 pm Post subject: |
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When someone mentioned that Britain was full he mentioned looking out of an airplane window whilst flying over Britain to see the wide empty spaces...
...I like those empty spaces. |
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Mandy
Joined: 07 Feb 2007
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 1:02 pm Post subject: |
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Those empty spaces tend to be farm land, and there is / was the European Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) which gave farmers 000's of pounds a year sometimes so they DO NOT grow things.
When 1st responders can't afford houses, wouldn't it be better that a relatively small amount is turned to houses for the people who need it and who make this country tick, and who come to your rescue when in need ? Wouldn't this country benefit from that, rather than artificially restricting the supply of property so the rich get richer, and the wealth divide increases (and you pay more taxes via stamp duty and inheritance tax .. i.e. a family will likely lose their home when someone dies) ?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/business/6544577.stm
"Property woe for public workers
Public sector workers such as teachers, nurses, police and firefighters cannot afford to buy homes in seven out of 10 UK towns, the Halifax bank has said. "
Just like in the USA, the more people in the country, the larger the "tax base" on which the nation's survival depends, which also means that for "infrastructure" costs (e.g. cost of BBC propaganda), the cost per person would be less, so all would benefit.
p.s. Issue of green field land could be argued independently of immigration .. i.e. even with no immigration, is it right for so much land to be legally restricted to farm land use only. That could be another thread ...
Note : If you break down or are lost in those empty spaces, you wouldn't like it then .. i.e. they look nice from high up, but down there you have all the problems of a lack of infrastructure, e.g. drainage/toilets, phone / internet connection, mobile coverage etc.
I don't think you really would like it living in empty / under-developed space .. with very few neighbors or shops to visit. |
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faceless admin
Joined: 25 Apr 2006
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 1:22 pm Post subject: |
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A lot of the empty space in the north of Scotland was caused by the ethnic-cleansing that took place during the Highland Clearances. |
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Mandy
Joined: 07 Feb 2007
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 1:29 pm Post subject: |
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well said faceless .. I also wonder how many millions of britons live overseas (some, or many ?, as a byproduct of overseas colonisation) .. so empty spaces is a byproduct of that. So why shouldn't we open up these empty spaces to make like more affordable to all britons, including the ones overseas who might want to return if only they could afford to.
Note that many britons are now leaving the uk after selling up due to high costs in Britain .. i.e. effectively driven out (even if by the carrot of a big pay-off when buying "relatively" cheaply overseas)
Actually, this discussion just made me realise : High house prices encourages multiculturalism via economic factors (i.e. wealthy foreigners moving in, locals cashing in and moving overseas, and as a dis-incentive for Britons overseas to come back to the UK).
Welcome to Maggie/Blair's Briton : only the wealthy live it up, and the rest run around trying to survive by serving the wealthy.
p.s. High house prices only give the illusion of wealth. It actually is a "hidden" way to raise a huge amount of tax for the government, and it is also a wealth redistribution from the younger generation to the older generation {which is the reverse of what is ideal}, and in the end people end up with huge debts and enslaved to the banks/mortgage providers. |
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til661
Joined: 11 Feb 2007
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 3:30 pm Post subject: |
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And how do you propose to confiscate private land?
The idea that the solution to housing problems is to bulldoze the countryside is ridiculous. There are already measures that are capable of dealing with this. The problem being that the Government is destroying them, e.g subsidised city housing, the destruction of the council house base. Building in the countryside is not only impractical but pointless, what would be the purpose of building housing for key workers in these places...they'd be too far away from their jobs. |
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Mandy
Joined: 07 Feb 2007
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 3:34 pm Post subject: |
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til661 wrote: | And how do you propose to confiscate private land? |
Who said anything about confiscation ? The existing land owners would LOVE to build on that land, but legally are not allowed to do so. The only reason most don't build on their land is government restrictions forbidding it. If you are not in the UK, you may not realise that there is something in the UK called "Planning Regulations" where you can't do many things on your own land.
til661 wrote: |
The idea that the solution to housing problems is to bulldoze the countryside is ridiculous. There are already measures that are capable of dealing with this. The problem being that the Government is destroying them, e.g subsidised city housing, the destruction of the council house base. Building in the countryside is not only impractical but pointless, what would be the purpose of building housing for key workers in these places...they'd be too far away from their jobs. |
Why don't we let the "market place" / "economics" decide ?
Using emotive language like "bulldoze the countryside" is not helpful .. the idea isn't to build on ALL countryside .. but to allow the land-owners to decide if they want to build on their land .. i.e. let supply and demand find it's natural equilibrium.
Also, when the housing base increases, some of the people in urban areas could decide to move to these new properties, reducing the price of the urban properties and allowing key workers to live more centrally (including due to reduced demand in urban areas) |
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til661
Joined: 11 Feb 2007
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 3:39 pm Post subject: |
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GG_Fan wrote: | til661 wrote: | And how do you propose to confiscate private land? |
Who said anything about confiscation ? The existing land owners would LOVE to build on that land, but legally are not allowed to do so. The only reason most don't build on their land is government restrictions forbidding it. If you are not in the UK, you may not realise that there is something in the UK called "Planning Regulations" where you can't do many things on your own land.
til661 wrote: |
The idea that the solution to housing problems is to bulldoze the countryside is ridiculous. There are already measures that are capable of dealing with this. The problem being that the Government is destroying them, e.g subsidised city housing, the destruction of the council house base. Building in the countryside is not only impractical but pointless, what would be the purpose of building housing for key workers in these places...they'd be too far away from their jobs. |
Why don't we let the "market place" / "economics" decide ?
Using emotive language like "bulldoze the countryside" is not helpful .. the idea isn't to build on ALL countryside .. but to allow the land-owners to decide if they want to build on their land .. i.e. let supply and demand find it's natural equilibrium. |
Because the 'Marketplace' is fundamentally amoral and is only driven by profit. The idea that the 'market' will solve things is a nonsense. if it is profitable every square inch will be built on. Not because the system intentionally wishes to cause harm but because quality of life, happiness etc are an irrelevance subsumed by profit motives. |
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Mandy
Joined: 07 Feb 2007
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 3:41 pm Post subject: |
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til661 wrote: | Because the 'Marketplace' is fundamentally amoral and is only driven by profit. The idea that the 'market' will solve things is a nonsense. if it is profitable every square inch will be built on. Not because the system intentionally wishes to cause harm but because quality of life, happiness etc are an irrelevance subsumed by profit motives. |
Are you a socialist or a communist or a capitalist ?
If you have so little faith in the "marketplace", why did you raise the issue of how to "confiscate private land?" i.e. do you believe in private land ownership ? |
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til661
Joined: 11 Feb 2007
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 3:43 pm Post subject: |
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I don't think i fit clearly within any of them. But for the purposes of convenience i'll say Social Democrat. but this is getting somewhat off topic. |
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Mandy
Joined: 07 Feb 2007
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 3:46 pm Post subject: |
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Social Democrates believe in a marketplace ... with regulations. The issue here is that the regulations (limiting building) is too restrictive .. and government's efforts to relax this is too little, too late.
Only communists seem to have your extreme opinion of the "marketplace", where you don't seem to consider government regulation of the marketplace. I totally disagree with your opinion that the marketplace is "fundamentally amoral". Only lack of regulations / rules / morality abuse the marketplace, i.e. extreme right wing policies. |
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til661
Joined: 11 Feb 2007
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 3:49 pm Post subject: |
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Ummmm, maybe because you didn't mention government regulation did you you said let the market place decide, so try and make yourself clear.
You're getting confused, the government regulation of the market is not 'the market' it is government regulation. the market as an entity is fundamentally amoral hence the need for regulation. |
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Mandy
Joined: 07 Feb 2007
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 3:52 pm Post subject: |
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My earlier posting said "is it right for so much land to be legally restricted to farm land use only."
The issue is where does the government draw the line as to how much "green belt" or "brownfield" land to release every year. Not a total free-for-all (after all, there is conservation areas)
til661 wrote: | the market as an entity is fundamentally amoral |
I don't agree. The market is as moral as the people buying / selling in the market. You seem to assume all people are amoral. I believe most people are moral, but that there are bad-apples who need to be regulated. |
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til661
Joined: 11 Feb 2007
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 4:03 pm Post subject: |
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It is amoral for the simple reason that the only purpose of its existence is to create profit. Harm/benefit are an irrelevance, in exactly the way a corporation is an amoral entity. shell don't destroy villages in africa for fun they do it for profit and the harm caused is irrelevant. Note i didn't say immoral. |
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faceless admin
Joined: 25 Apr 2006
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Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 4:05 pm Post subject: |
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bad apples? The entire system is based on greed. |
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