Brexit voters are not thick, not racist: just poor

tay

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Across the United Kingdom, Luton is known for two things: its international airport — a hub for budget flights — and racial tension.Luton is one of the few places in the U.K. where those identifying as “white British” are in the minority (45 percent). Located 50 km north of London, its population of 200,000 has been shaped and reshaped by waves of immigration over the last 100 years: Irish, Caribbean, South Asian, Eastern European

Around a quarter of the population is Muslim, mostly originating from Pakistan, India and Bangladesh. There are no reliable statistics for the exact number of Eastern European immigrants in the area, but it is widely accepted they have made up a significant proportion since 2004.

Traditionally, Luton was considered a bellwether town: Until 2010, when a Labour MP was elected, the seat for Luton South was won by the party that went on to form the national government in every election since 1951.

As voters headed to the polls in June to cast their vote on whether the U.K. should leave the European Union, national divisions were reflected in Luton. A large portion of the town’s white working class population is disenchanted by immigration, and many support the far right. Meanwhile, its sizeable immigrant community were largely expected to vote Remain.

And yet — even as national debate became increasingly racially charged and politicians fanned fears about immigration — Luton voted to leave the EU by 56 percent, significantly more than the national average of 52 percent.

“Everyone is worried about work, worried about their jobs,” says Darren Carroll, a painter-decorator in his 50s. “They’re looking for someone to blame, and that’s why they voted out.” Formerly an English Defence League (EDL) activist (the far right movement was founded by his nephew), Carroll is now a member of the British Labour Party and is dedicated to improving community cohesion.

While Luton used to be an industrial town — known for its hat-making factories in the 17th and 18th century — it has become impoverished since the local Vauxhall car plant shut down in 2002 after years of declining profits. Several of Luton’s districts are now ranked among the poorest 10 percent in the country.

Today, it is an island of deprivation in a sea of affluence. Bedfordshire, the county in which Luton is located, is home to mostly leafy, green constituencies, a far cry from the deprived estates of this former manufacturing hub.

While the U.K. as a whole experienced a drastic spike in hate crimes in the week after the referendum, police did not note a similar increase in Luton. Many in the town believe that might be because tensions were already high before the vote.

“To be honest, for Luton, hate crimes and expressions of discontent with the immigrant community are such a regular feature of life,” says Adams.

On top of the long-running racial standoff between the town’s white and Asian communities, tensions between Asians and Eastern European immigrants are rising, especially as the new arrivals move into what had previously been Indian or Pakistani enclaves.

Meet the immigrants who voted for Brexit – POLITICO
 

Blackleaf

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Luton is your typical Brexit-supporting town: economically deprivation and overrun by immigrants and Pakis, making the whites a minority.

Luton Town FC, who are currently second in League Two, are known as the Hatters because the town had a massive hat-making industry which dominated the town in the 18th century. Hats are still made in the town today but on a much smaller scale, an example of the loss of a once-thriving industry which leads to economic depression.






While the U.K. as a whole experienced a drastic spike in hate crimes in the week after the referendum,
No, it didn't. That's a Remainers' lie.
 

tay

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There could be help along the way if the Brits vote correctly......


A Labour government run by Jeremy Corbyn would borrow £15bn a year to build houses across the country – half of them council homes – as part of a £500bn programme of public investment, new policy papers have revealed.

It would aim to build one million homes during a five-year parliament and guarantee housing tenants – especially those in the private sector – new safeguards, including secure three-year contracts and protection from “unreasonable rent increases”.

Despite the huge sums, Corbyn’s team insists that government borrowing will be “highly efficient” and a good deal for taxpayers because of the boost to the economy from construction, job creation and rental income.

The documents, released by the Corbyn campaign as it seeks to fend off the challenge to his leadership by Owen Smith, say that the net cost to the public sector will be £10bn a year, because two thirds of the construction bill would be labour costs, meaning extra tax revenues for the Treasury.

The papers say that, with “government borrowing rates the lowest ever, this is the most cost-effective way possible to meet Britain’s housing needs. Since the government will be acquiring assets, the taxpayer can expect to make a net gain as rents are paid on the new housing.”

Corbyn’s team said its figures and plans were more credible and precise than the house-building agenda offered by Smith, who had merely said he would “free up councils across the country to borrow to build”.

Yesterday Smith set out plans to scrap university tuition fees and called for the current funding system to be replaced with a 1%-2% graduate tax. He also pledged to build 50,000 homes a year for would-be first-time buyers aged under 30, to be rented at lower than market rent.

Jeremy Corbyn ‘would build 1m new homes’ in five years of Labour | Politics | The Guardian
 

Walter

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There could be help along the way if the Brits vote correctly......


A Labour government run by Jeremy Corbyn would borrow £15bn a year to build houses across the country – half of them council homes – as part of a £500bn programme of public investment, new policy papers have revealed.

It would aim to build one million homes during a five-year parliament and guarantee housing tenants – especially those in the private sector – new safeguards, including secure three-year contracts and protection from “unreasonable rent increases”.

Despite the huge sums, Corbyn’s team insists that government borrowing will be “highly efficient” and a good deal for taxpayers because of the boost to the economy from construction, job creation and rental income.

The documents, released by the Corbyn campaign as it seeks to fend off the challenge to his leadership by Owen Smith, say that the net cost to the public sector will be £10bn a year, because two thirds of the construction bill would be labour costs, meaning extra tax revenues for the Treasury.

The papers say that, with “government borrowing rates the lowest ever, this is the most cost-effective way possible to meet Britain’s housing needs. Since the government will be acquiring assets, the taxpayer can expect to make a net gain as rents are paid on the new housing.”

Corbyn’s team said its figures and plans were more credible and precise than the house-building agenda offered by Smith, who had merely said he would “free up councils across the country to borrow to build”.

Yesterday Smith set out plans to scrap university tuition fees and called for the current funding system to be replaced with a 1%-2% graduate tax. He also pledged to build 50,000 homes a year for would-be first-time buyers aged under 30, to be rented at lower than market rent.

Jeremy Corbyn ‘would build 1m new homes’ in five years of Labour | Politics | The Guardian
Spending other people's money is a leftie's wet-dream.
 

Blackleaf

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If Jeremy Corbyn (should he beat Owen Smith in the Labour leadership contest, which I think he will) beats Theresa May in the general election on 7th May 2020, I will do a Paddy Ashdown and eat my hat.
 

Blackleaf

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Brexit voters are not thick, not racist: just poor and from Manchester.

Manchester itself voted Remain.

It had the strongest Remain support in the North West of England, with a vote of 60.7% Remain.

Trafford (57.7% Remain) and Stockport (52.3% Remain) were the only other Greater Manchester boroughs, of which there are ten, to vote Remain.

Bolton, where I live, was 58.3% Leave. Wigan (the strongest in support for Leave in GM), Tameside, Oldham, Rochdale, Salford and Bury also voted Leave.
 

Blackleaf

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Not all showbiz types are anti-Brexit.

And not all Brexiteers are relatively poor folk living in working class areas.

Sharon Osbourne, the wife of Black Sabbath vocalist Ozzy, is a Brexiteer...

Steerpike

Why Brexit has the X Factor

Steerpike






Steerpike
29 August 2016
The Spectator

Since the British people voted for Brexit in June, there has been a sense of disbelief among luvvies. While Charlotte Church has demanded her ‘f—ing European Union back’, Mr S’s colleague Lloyd Evans reports that the comedy at this year’s Edinburgh Fringe harboured a ‘pleb-hating mood’ when it came to the referendum result.

So, Mr S was pleased to learn that the same cannot be said for everyone in show-business. In an interview with the Sunday Times Magazine, Sharon Osbourne — the X Factor judge and wife of Ozzy Osbourne — outs herself as a Brexiteer. What’s more, Osbourne — who was born in Brixton — says that she decided to vote for Leave as ‘there are too many people in a tiny country’:
‘I go back to England every four to six months and it’s becoming like Hong Kong — so overpopulated, so congested. There are too many people in a tiny country. There are classrooms of 40 kids, the NHS is in the toilet, the education system is in the toilet. I say take care of your own people first.’
Osbourne hopes that Brexit will mean that British people — and their traditions — will be prioritised:
‘I don’t have anything against any religion or any person, but the country is overloaded. Everybody loved England because we were unique. We had traditions, we had style. Everybody wanted to come and ride on a bus, and everybody wanted to go and see the palace and blah, blah, blah.’
Alas Osbourne’s direct approach to talking about immigration has already upset some of her fans, who have expressed dismay at her comments. However if anyone has reason to be offended by the interview, Mr S suspects it’s Sir Philip Green. Discussing the current BHS pensions row, she says that both her and her husband Ozzy thought Green would ‘come unstuck’. Why? He had a ‘f—ing hoof for a doorstop’.


Why Brexit has the X Factor | Coffee House
 

Danbones

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government borrowing
Ah....
that's why the whole thing: the bankers want to turn Britainers into debt slaves like every other third world country they touch:
then comes the resource rape

...and then they can blame the consequences on the Brexiters and take even more freedoms away later...from both the Brexiters and the remainers...
like they have done after things like the false flag 911, and other similar self done shizzlebombs
 

Blackleaf

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Britain 'too lazy and fat', says Trade Secretary Liam Fox


Britain 'too lazy and fat', says Trade Secretary Liam Fox - BBC News

And yet the British work longer hours than almost everybody else in Europe.

Nudist beaches with Arabic signs. The vandalising of a mosque. And why ever more Germans envy Brexit: Robert Hardman on the substantial shift taking place in Angela Merkel's backyard
 

Blackleaf

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Canada to step up UK trade with new export hub after Brexit vote

Canada is setting up an export agency office in the UK in an attempt to boost trade links with one of its biggest trading partners after the EU referendum.

In the latest indication of the desire of non-EU countries to do more business with the UK, Export Development Canada (EDC) will open a London site this week.

Britain is already Canada’s third-largest trading partner, with more than C$20bn (£11.5bn) of exports last year.


Canada to step up UK trade with new export hub after Brexit vote
 

Blackleaf

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If they knew what they were doing, they'd get the same job done without having to work those long hours.

Or if the rest of Europe stopped being lazy bastards - particularly the southerners like the Greeks, Italians and Spanish who are way behind the hardworking British and Germans and other northern Europeans in wealth and prosperity as a result - and worked longer hours and stop being given three hour workdays three days a week and countless holidays then perhaps they wouldn't be in the economic **** they're in now.
 

tay

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May 20, 2012
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43% of young Brits still live at home

Despair, worries about the future and financial pressures are taking a toll on millions of young Britons, according to a poll which found young women in particular were suffering.

Low pay and lack of work in today’s Britain are resulting in “suspended adulthood”, with many living or moving back in with their parents and putting off having children, according to the poll of thousands of 18 to 30-year-olds.

Large numbers describe themselves as worn down (42%), lacking self-confidence (47%) and feeling worried about the future (51%).

“Make no mistake about it, we’re talking about a generation of young people in crisis. And while life is hard for many young people, our survey shows it’s likely to be considerably tougher if you are a young woman,” she said.

https://www.theguardian.com/society...iving-in-a-suspended-adulthood-finds-research