Putting the jobless to work.

Since I posted that I was putting the blog on hold for a while, I've not watched or seen any news. It's surprising how much you miss, just having a few days away from it. What's not surprising is how little it matters. It's like when you go abroad for a couple of weeks. When you get back, the news is still there but what you've missed doesn't affect you in any way.

Anyway, I've be trawling t'interweb looking for a story, and I came across the news that the government are planning to put the long term jobless to work, on pain of loosing their benefits.

It seems some religious dude objects. I disagree:

Ministers have defended their plans to force the long-term unemployed to do manual work or lose benefits.

Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander told the BBC the idea was not to "punish or humiliate" but to get people back into the habit of working.
Quite. I'm of the opinion that those on benefits are getting something for nothing. Now I'm only referring to those who have chosen a life of benefits, however the same applies to those who are just down on their luck.

We are all forced to pay into the welfare system, and those of us who have always had a job would be grateful of the assistance should the worst happen and we find ourselves out of work. but what should the taxpayer be funding if I loose my job. Should they be paying for me to sit at home feeling sorry for myself or should they be paying for me to get temporary employment in the interim? In my younger years, I've taken on packing jobs because it was better than being on the dole. This is similar, it's just the government paying for you to work while you look for something.

But the Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams said the changes could drive people "into a downward spiral of uncertainty, even despair".
Now I don't know why the Arch Bishop should be involved in this discussion. I suppose we all have our opinions but if he wants his in print he should really start a blog.

To respond, I don't see what he means about uncertainty and despair. Surely if you've lost your job, being given another one should keep your spirits up. Maybe if you are one of those who want to live on benefits forever, being forced to work would cause despair, however you've only yourself to blame in that situation.

Under the plan, claimants thought to need "experience of the habits and routines of working life" could be put on 30-hour-a-week placements.
Reading that sounds like they are targeting the long term unemployed anyway. And whats thirty hours per week? That's less than the Dolly Parton shift.

Anyone refusing to take part or failing to turn up on time could have their £65 Jobseekers' Allowance stopped for at least three months.
Fair enough?

The Work Activity scheme is said to be designed to flush out claimants who have opted for a life on benefits or are doing undeclared jobs on the side.
Mr Duncan Smith said his plans were designed to reduce welfare dependency and make work pay.
He said: "One thing we can do is pull people in to do one or two weeks' manual work - turn up at 9am and leave at 5pm, to give people a sense of work, but also when we think they're doing other work.
The more I read, the better it sounds. Some people........no, a lot of people, chose to live a life funded by the taxpayer because they can't be arsed to work. If they knew they would be put into work in order to receive their benefits, surely they would be more likely to try and find a job they want.


The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, expressed his concern, telling the BBC: "People who are struggling to find work and struggling to find a secure future are - I think - driven further into a downward spiral of uncertainty, even despair, when the pressure is on in that way.
Or maybe they will realise that the gig is up. That the world is no longer willing to give them a living. That if they want things in life, they have to work for them. Maybe?

"People often are in this starting place, not because they're wicked, stupid or lazy, but because their circumstances are against them, they've failed to break through into something and to drive that spiral deeper - as I say - does feel a great problem."
Those with genuine bad luck are not wicked, stupid or lazy. Those that choose the dole life are.

Deputy Labour leader Harriet Harman told the Andrew Marr Show she would wait to see the full details of the proposals on Thursday before giving her verdict.
She probably wants to see how much "equality" is involved. (Whats the Andrew Marr show anyway?)

But she said the government needed to understand that to get people back into work, there had to be jobs for them to go to - and at the moment there were five people chasing each vacancy.
Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary Douglas Alexander accused the government of "focusing on the workshy but offering nothing to the workless".

There are five unemployed people chasing every job vacancy, he said, adding: "The tragic flaw in the Tory approach is that, without work, it won't work. A longer dole queue will mean a bigger benefits bill."
.
 One step at a time eh? Creating jobs has to be a priority, (Real jobs in private industry, not local council rubbish) but in the interim, something needs to be done about all the people squeezing the benefits system. This seems like a good way. Maybe some of the "equality" and "diversity" staff on 30k+ per year could be made redundant and put on this system. Imagine the saving to the taxpayer (not that we will get any of our tax back.)

Richard Exell, a senior policy officer at the Trade Union Congress, said there was high unemployment, not because of a problem with the work ethic, but because there were not enough jobs.

"Unemployed people are the victims in this story, not the villains," he said.
I'm sorry but I think I just read TUC and Work Ethic in the same sentence. Ha!

The UK has five million people on out-of-work benefits and one of the highest rates of workless households in Europe, with 1.9m children living in homes where no-one has a job
I've never been out of a job even though I'm not really qualified for much apart from pub work. I can think off hand, of  five times when I have left a job and got another one within a week. Most of those were in the pub industry. Before the smoking ban, pubs were crying out for experienced staff who were in it for the career rather than earning some cash to get through college. However the one really significant time was before I worked in pubs. I left a well paid office job because it was sapping my will to live. I did various packing jobs while I got some qualifications for working in the licenced trade. When I left the pub trade I signed on with an agency and ended up doing call centre work until a company gave me a full time job in the stock control and logistics line that I am doing now (and love). Call centre was crap. People phoning up and bollocking you for thirty five hours a week, but it got me into something better.

Work is out there. The question is, do you want to put up with the shit to get the good or do you want to go down the Arch-Bishops route of depressing downward cycles of feeling sorry for yourself and wondering when somebody else is going to give you a break?

I doubt the Arch-Bishop has ever had to ask that question of himself. The flock will always provide.

Aaaahhhhh! That's better.

The long weekend has gone totally according to plan. I've got loads done. I've even fixed the bathroom roof, although I confess I had to get a mate who's a roofer to go up there and replace a broken tile. Climbing on roofs is just a bit scary for me.

I've got most of my jobs done and I've given the blog a bit of a makeover. I'm now gonna sit down with a four pack of Murphys and watch CSI on the box.

A bit of tidying up to do tomorrow and then I'm back on it from Tuesday.



Blogroll and stuff

I'm gonna take the opportunity to revamp the blog a bit over my long weekend and I'm looking to update the blogroll aswell.

I just use my blogroll to get easy access to the other blogs I read. It's changing all the time as I add stuff and give it a go so I don't tend to post updates.

Any suggestions for additions would be greatly appreciated.

Any suggestions for making the blog easier on the eye or more interesting will also be appreciated.

Cheers.

I need a break

Things are getting mad busy at the moment and I'm just not finding enough hours in the day to get it all done.

I've got about six unfinished DIY jobs and the bathroom roof is leaking. Has anyone read the Dilly Dally Man? (Well worth a read if you haven't). My normally perfect finances are in a mess, the car's running like a pig etc etc.

Works stupid too. I've been bringing it home with me for the past two weeks.

As a result, I'm falling into the trap of posting hastily written rubbish in order to keep the blog running, and I don't want to do that.

There were a couple of topics I was going to blog on today but I just don't have the time. They've been taken on by my betters anyway:

The CCTV that listens as well as looks has been covered at Big Brother Watch
The Nutty Professor says Booze is worse than heroin has been covered by Simon Clark at Taking Liberties. That story is well worth a read. He exposes the nonsense in a way I never could.

While I was digging out the links for the above I spotted a couple of other topics that I don't have time to delve into. Damn shame really, often there's nowt and then four come along at once:

Knee jerk reaction to exploding toner.
Over reaction to Iraq war vote.

I'm gonna clear my desk at work this week, then I've booked a long weekend to get on top of all the crap I need to do at home. I'll still be reading and commenting where I can but I doubt I will be doing much more posting until the back end of next week.

Have a good un and I'll be back in a week or so.



The Biggest Monster on Halloween - Passive Smoking.



Amazing isn't it?

But most will fail to warn about the biggest risk, one which may kill more children this Halloween than all of the others combined: smoking in their presence by adults.


Breathing in cigarette smoke from adults will actually kill children this Halloween. I wonder if they will follow up that press release with actual figures of the number of dead kids in America this morning. I doubt it.

secondhand tobacco smoke kills more than one thousand children every year from diseases including respiratory syncytial bronchiolitis, asthmatic attacks, and other respiratory complications.  This doesn't even include the larger number of deaths each year from SIDS apparently triggered by tobacco smoke.

150,000-300,000 lower respiratory infections like pneumonia and bronchitis; 7,500-15,000 hospitalizations; 200,000-1,000,000 asthma attacks; 8,000-26,000 new cases of asthma; and - as noted - a large increase in deaths from SIDS.

The figures just get more and more fantastic. Nobody knows what causes SIDS, yet of course the anti tobacco lobby have all the answers that science does not.

It's like they are trying to push the boundaries of credibility; trying to discover what is the most nonsensical pie in the sky rubbish they can get people to believe.

Here's some more of their flirtations with sanity:

Scare the children
While parents assure their young children that vampires are only imaginary, they can also use the occasion to warn kids about the real monsters who really do try to enslave them, and do cause long and lingering deaths.

Smoking makes you unemployed.
Residents of France who continue to smoke are imposing huge costs on the great majority of the French who do not smoke,

Smokers are worse than shoplifters.
Today's report that shoplifting costs the average American family about $425 each year is nothing compared to the costs imposed by smoking, which are almost five times higher, and about which something can easily be done, says ASH

E-cigs are even worse.
E-cigarettes are "just as bad" as conventional cigarettes, says the Malaysian Health Ministry, noting that "there is concern this nicotine delivery to the human lung might result in stronger toxicological, physiological and addictive effects."

H/T to Taking Liberties