I take it you didn't see the programme either.... It highlights that the benefit system is all wrong if it is better to be unemployed rather than employed. Surely it should be possible to make it better to work? ...
Saw the programme and as expected the immigrants worked harder and earned more than the local yahoos and whingers. The waiter could have gone the distance but his in-bred mindset got in the way.
But If you say loose your job and take up a job in a restaurant - would a future employer see this as messing up your CV?
If you didn't see the programme I don't understand how you can comment on what it highlights or what hours the participants worked. There was no indication during the programme that any of the workers concerned worked longer than usual hours, just that some appeared willing to do a decent day's work for a decent day's pay and others weren't.Granted I didn`t see the programme. ... This programme highlights what a few selected workers maybe working very long hours make....
Maybe it has a lot to do with their dignity as human beings and their wish to contribute to society and keep their families off the bread-line, rather than exist on benefits at the margins of society and whinge.... Of course immigrants have more incentives as they are there to make as much as possible to save and take home to their home countries.
I don`t imagine any asparagus worker is making £140 + a day without working very long hours.If you feel that he is on a 8 hour day..then he is on £17+ an hour .This is incredible as farm workers are typically on minimum wage or in reality less.
I wouldn't say so, not given the times we are in.
It depends on your qualifications and where you are starting from - three of the people asked to work in the restaurant had bar / catering experience.... Would it look as if your career was going downhill?
I hope this is a typo. Otherwise this carpenter would, after an apprenticeship, be about 101 years old............ He had worked for eithy yeqars on the continent so he is not a dosser
If you didn't see the programme I don't understand how you can comment on what it highlights or what hours the participants worked. There was no indication during the programme that any of the workers concerned worked longer than usual hours, just that some appeared willing to do a decent day's work for a decent day's pay and others weren't.
Maybe it has a lot to do with their dignity as human beings and their wish to contribute to society and keep their families off the bread-line, rather than exist on benefits at the margins of society and whinge.
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