You should know by now " baldy " in your year and a bit on TD you will score know pouints for picking up sppeling mistakkes :)Quote:
Originally Posted by The Bold Rodney
Printable View
You should know by now " baldy " in your year and a bit on TD you will score know pouints for picking up sppeling mistakkes :)Quote:
Originally Posted by The Bold Rodney
Well bloody good luck to em to ! at least theyre working for their money as opposed to the thousands of bloody Poles/ Lithuainiuns / Slovaks / who qualify for their handouts as they are in the EUQuote:
Originally Posted by astasinim
Just becos I dont use a spelll checker don't mean i cant rite, rite! :)Quote:
Originally Posted by nigelandjan
Your use of English is some of the poorest to be observed on the forum.Quote:
Originally Posted by The Bold Rodney
That's certainly a compliment coming from you "noodless"! :)Quote:
Originally Posted by English Noodles
Very true. These TEFL'ers are infesting the forum these days.Quote:
Originally Posted by Carrabow
If only by the kids looking at these idiot TEFL'ers, and deciding they don't want to end up like them in the future.:)Quote:
Originally Posted by Carrabow
Personally having met some of the TEFL'ers "noodless" referred to I find myself having to agree.Quote:
Originally Posted by Carrabow
One interesting factor or common denominator concerning these so called "teachers" here is that many (if not most) came from up North, UK North that is!
"Eee by gum" they'll never be a credit to any education system let alone LOS! :rofl:
Wait until you get the key to the "executive" toilets, that's where the real dirt is. You'll be telling us next you also have a index linked pension:)Quote:
Originally Posted by nigelandjan
Our " executive " bogs are a bit of our canteen sectioned off by studwork + plasterboard no windows and a tiny sink with no soap ,, those blue handtowels doubling up as bog paper ,, all lit up with a 20w bulb ,, as to the level of dirt in there I would,nt know its too bloody darkQuote:
Originally Posted by OhOh
I don't, Eastern Europeans dont come to the UK to claim benefit in general, they come to work. And they work longer, harder and better than many British people. I'd hire a Pole or Lithuanian over a chronic dole dossing British scumbag any day of the week.
Makes me laugh, the people who comment about Eastern Europeans "taking our jobs" are more often than not scamming benefits themselves. If they cant compete on a level playing field, and dont have any marketable skills, tough shit.
well I would too, but not for that reason; they are cheaperQuote:
Originally Posted by khmen
Your missing the point , the point I was making any EU subject CAN come here and claim as opposed to a non EU immigrant . When my missus was on an ESOL course which cost me £500 per term there were 3 single Lithuainian mothers there ( paying next to nothing ) sending their child benefits back home untill they could import their offspring into the UK . one of em had 5 kids another had 2 and I dont know about the third one ,, but no suprises as to who is paying to keep em here now'Quote:
Originally Posted by khmen
Put some names forward of people commenting about them and we,ll ask "them " to find out if and what they are scammingQuote:
Originally Posted by khmen
Well this does strike me as rather silly....
Quote:
£42M CHILD BENEFIT SENT ABROAD
CHILD benefit worth £42million is being sent abroad each year – while British families are being squeezed by the cash crisis, we can reveal today.
Most of the cash goes to eastern Europe, with Poland top of the list.
Every month more than [at]£2million is sent to Polish children, who already enjoy a higher quality of life than those living here.
Of the £42million sent abroad, £30million goes to youngsters in eastern Europe.
Payments are usually far more generous than any government benefits in those countries.
British benefits for Polish children are 515 per cent higher than local workers could claim on their own welfare system – which could explain the huge surge in claims here in recent years.
While the Warsaw government pays £3.30 per week per child, Polish claimants here get £20.30 for one child, a difference of £17 per week.
The British are paid benefit for every [at]other child is £14.75 per week, so a Polish family with three children can claim more than £200 per month.
The Government is now being urged to reduce the payments dramatically as the squeezed middle classes here prepare for having their child benefit removed.
Hundreds of [at]thousands of British families will lose all their child benefits from April 2013 when the Government will stop all payments if any householder earns enough to be taxed at 40 per cent.
Some hard-pressed families face [at]losing £200 a month.
However, this ruling is unlikely to affect most of the Europeans and [at]foreigners working in Britain and [at]claiming child benefit for loved ones in their native countries because their earnings [at]generally fall below the 40 per cent tax threshold.
As more eastern Europeans settle in Britain, the cost of paying child benefit to their families back home is expected to rise to a total of £45million per year by 2015.
Ukip leader Nigel Farage said: “Why should British taxpayers pay for people to have a higher standard of living in other countries than people in this country? The system is [at]simply unfair and needs to be changed.
“When the Prime Minister says we are all in this together I don’t think he meant [at]people from [at]Walsall to Warsaw.
“People are getting fed up with all these millions pouring abroad, [at]especially when so many more British people are being squeezed.”
The Sunday Express investigation into the escalating costs of child benefit for foreign workers’ families has [at]galvanised Tory MPs who see it as a key issue for the party conference in [at]Manchester this week.
As David Cameron arrived yesterday, senior Government figures were [at]planning a revolt against plans by the European Commission to make benefit tourism even easier.
That could see Britain hit with an extra £2.5billion in welfare payments, a move which threatens to derail our [at]economic recovery.
Employment Minister Chris Grayling and the equally Euro [at]sceptic Work and [at]Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith are preparing for a major battle in [at]Brussels to stop the European bureaucrats from grabbing yet more power from the British [at]Parliament.
Last night Robert Halfon, Conservative MP for Harlow, said: “This seems to be yet another case of benefit tourism with thousands of people getting generous benefits which they wouldn’t get in their own countries.
“It seems incredible that our country is once again financing this situation,” he added.
Philip Hollobone, Tory MP for Kettering, added: “There will be widespread outrage and incredulity that so much money is being gifted to EU migrants in child benefit when their children aren’t even living in the UK.
“It just goes to show the absurdity of EU rules that can waste British tax[at]payers’ money in this way and will strengthen the case for the UK leaving the EU [at]altogether.”
A spokesman for HM Revenue & Customs said: “Child benefit payments are in line with EU rules which have been in force for more than 30 years.
“We do not pay child benefit for children living in another EU member state until we are sure the claim is legitimate.”
The spokesman added that most of the [at]payments are made directly into bank accounts in [at]foreign countries.
1966 when i first arrived in england
i was surprised at how slack english workers were
i found it a walk in the park.
think you will find that very few europeans claim benifits
when living in the UK.
And likewise there are plenty of Brits in Spain etc, claiming benefits there.Quote:
Originally Posted by nigelandjan
I don't think much has changed - despite the article's suggestion that they're 'living to work'. The "Jobsworths" philosophy is cultural and too ingrained IMO. It's still a class-affected country where innovation and can-do spirit are the exceptions rather than the rule. Always polite, rarely helpful/useful was my impression of most Brits on the day-to-day workplace environment (during many years experience in the UK).
It has its redeeming features, but to suggest that the UK is a powerhouse of industry or quality products is a huge stretch.
And so they should ! they have paid in all their lives to the system , whether they claim in Spain or anywhere else within the EU it,s irrelevant THEY have paid into the system ,, Eastern European,s have,nt ,,,, anyway other than the winter fuel allowance I can,t see any other benefit they would be claiming .Quote:
Originally Posted by English Noodles
You indeed have a very valid point! :)Quote:
Originally Posted by DroversDog
They certainly have not paid in to the system in Spain, and maybe some of them have never paid in to any system.Quote:
Originally Posted by nigelandjan
Then they are not entitled to claim benefits in the UK.Quote:
Originally Posted by nigelandjan
What on earth are you talking about? There are plenty of Brits on state benefits of other European countries. I was unaware that other countries than UK had a winter fuel allowance though.Quote:
Originally Posted by nigelandjan
How many Brits do you suppose are claimants on the Spanish system who have not paid in to it? So you think it's fine for people from the UK to draw on other countries benefit systems, but you think it not okay that other countries citizens do the same from the UK system.
Speaking of "Farang shrinks" the system in Spain as part of the EU is covered by the European community and "maybe"? "noodless" do us all a favour and transport your talent somewhere else!Quote:
Originally Posted by English Noodles
Possibly Thai Visa? :rofl:
Bullshit "noodless" your incorrect as usual, that is unless you copy and paste! :)Quote:
Originally Posted by English Noodles
One way ticket on a "Banana Boat" was it? :rolleyes:Quote:
Originally Posted by billy the kid
No, Rodders. I'm correct. A person from another EU country is not entitled to any benefits in the UK unless they have lived and worked in the UK for at least 12 months.Quote:
Originally Posted by The Bold Rodney
If that is not correct, then please tell me what the case is.
What? So are Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Poland, Slovinia, Romania, Lithuania and Slovakia not part of the EU and 'European community' then?Quote:
Originally Posted by The Bold Rodney
And you "noodless" tell me the date the ruling was changed, which government (UK) changed it and why? :rolleyes:Quote:
Originally Posted by English Noodles
You're gonna have to Google this one for sure! :rofl:
Wow you really are dumber than Socal.Quote:
Originally Posted by The Bald Retard
WTF are you spouting about now "noodless" it was you who posted...Quote:
Originally Posted by English Noodles
So what exactly were you trying to infer?Quote:
Originally Posted by nigelandjan
It's late here (some of us have no need to scurry back to the UK) and I'm tired...answers on a postcard when you've had time to reflect! :)
p.s. You're sounding as pedantic as the "oldfart" lately, what's the problem missing LOS? :confused:
Nothing to do with "social" alias Gold Finger...answer my question please! :)Quote:
Originally Posted by English Noodles
It's wasn't a difficult question was it? :confused:
I think you may want to try reading through the thread again, this time try and comprehend who is saying what. You really are losing the plot (as usual), Rodders.Quote:
Originally Posted by The Bald Retard