There are people who are working here at the moment, but still consider themselves to belong to a different country and who will return there once their contrct or whatever is over, or who expect to work in several different places during their lives.
There are immigrants who have left their own country for good to live here permanently.
To call nthe first lot immigrants is to misname them.
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News & politics
An oath on British Values?
(619 Posts)Latest proposal is that all immigrants should be made to take an oath to abide by British values before even coming in to the country.
What would those values be? I doubt you could get much agreement between those of us born and bred here.
England, Scotland, Wales, NI? North, south, east, west?
I wouldnt choose the word "grade" myself WW because I dont wish to imply any 'moral worth' (or lack of) I am speaking purely in economic terms, since that is what the study Jess refers to does.
Try to keep the discussion objective rather than making a moral issue of it. I know you find that hard.
Umm! Well as you are talking about immigrants I guess ........ immigrants 
Based mostly on myth and inflammatory language. Identifying the other - in this case immigrants.
What absolute nonsense. Jess spoke of 'immigrants'. What word would you like to use? 
As opposed too low grade identified by that idiot Farage. Yet more populist rhetoric. mair try putting your argument in less confrontational language and with more rigour, then I think you will find yourself being taken more seriously.
More populist rhetoric. Based mostly on myth and inflammatory language. Identifying the other - in this case immigrants. There will be limitation put on immigration there can be almost no doubt about that, but we will do so without any hate or "otherness" that is how we behave in this country. We have no need for this attempt at division.
What will benefit us as a country is to admit ONLY the 'high value' immigrants, those who ARE going to put in more than they take!
This is what UKIP and Farag wants us to be able to do.
Why should we just allow in people who want to come here to take from us? I am not suggesting this is a 'conscious' motive of course in most cases, but it is the usual reality.
"Immigrants are certainly not a drain on the economy. The evidence is that on balance they make a small positive contribution to the economy, with EU immigrants, because of their age profile, being ahead of non-EU immigrants (a group that includes people bringing spouses etc into the country who may be less likely to be working immediately)."
www.migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk/resources/briefings/election-2015-briefing-fiscal-impacts-of-migration-to-the-uk/
You do realise that this study was a basic input output snapshot and did not take into account immigrants lack of previous contributions to the infrastructure they use (roads, schools, hospitals, housing etc paid for by our parents and grandparents), or the changing impact they are likely to have over time, dont you?
At present the demographic profile of the immigrant population is more youthful than that of the native British population, so more likely to be of working age, and more likly to be in good health, but of course two to three decades from now that will have changed,as their children will have 'taken' from the system, and their health declines with age, and they no longer work.
It is also distorted by the fact that it includes what one might call "high value" immigrants, doctors and many Australians, Americans etc working in highly skilled jobs in the city or in technology and paying higher rate tax. These high contributors compnsate for the majority of low contributors
The fact is that people who are only average wages i.e the majority will over a lifetime be net takers and not net contributers even when the snapshot has caught them at a stage in life of "contributing". This is going to be the situation even for 'hard working Poles' who spend their lives working full time in a distribution warehouse on minimum wage, as for a Somali migrant who has five children and works part time as a cleaner while living in social housing and claiming in work benefits, say no more!
The Migration Observatory you need to realise has a pro immigration agenda (its actually stuffed with immigrants) and is predisposed to present its finings in the most favourable possible light.
Mair doesn't trust them, either, daphne.
There's a whole load of cost/benefit analysis on Fullfact.
fullfact.org/immigration/costs-and-benefits/
No need to tell me, Mair, that you do not trust Fullfact. I do, to the point that I help fund them. I am sure that one fact makes you trust them even less, but I don't care, really.
It's about politics rather than rational decisions.
This is a little off topic, but contains some relevant points (it's not all about Brexit).
www.youtube.com/watch?v=RaM20tSfyXA
Immigrants are certainly not a drain on the economy. The evidence is that on balance they make a small positive contribution to the economy, with EU immigrants, because of their age profile, being ahead of non-EU immigrants (a group that includes people bringing spouses etc into the country who may be less likely to be working immediately).
www.migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk/resources/briefings/election-2015-briefing-fiscal-impacts-of-migration-to-the-uk/
I've observed personally that immigrants seem far more likely to start a business which is excellent news, because future prosperity of this country is dependent, more than anything, on the successful growth of today's small and medium sized businesses.
The economic prosperity of the USA is built, largely, on the entrepreneurial efforts of various waves of immigrants. And it is still happening e.g. high quality Indian tech graduates, heading for Silicon Valley in droves.
tech.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/startups/indian-entrepreneurs-us-billion-dollar-startups/51452550
But is our esteemed PM trying hard to help UK universities recruit more bright students from abroad? Is she encouraging them to stay afterwards and start new business?
No - she's fixated on the net immigration target that her boss gave her 6 years ago.
Good post Cunco I think you are right in your assumptions.
Most British people are moderate in their views.and we like to have fair play.
That was to pen
Also populist rhetoric
Reading the initial question, I could not define British values either. Personally, I think I am tolerate, rational and caring. I like to make my own decisions. I try not to make stereotypes of any large group of people, even Remain or Leave (which seems to be unusual on Gransnet). I have voted Leave twice in my lifetime because of sovereignty, now and in the future. Neither time was immigration a major factor. I do worry about unplanned population growth but live happily alongside people of different race, religion, sex and sexuality. There are probably good and bad in any large group.
If you look at the way the British people behave, I suspect there are many more like me than the extremes of left or right.
I have only just caught up with this so have not been able to plough through read it all.
Surely we don't want people standing up and promising to be grumpy and, in the face of adversity, to be stalwart and grumpy.
The benefit Mair is to the economy. I know the extremist right's myth is that immigrants drain money out of a country but the reality is that the vast majority contribute a great deal.
I have worked in "working class" areas most of my career and know that in those communities there are those who work hard and who are decent and lovely people and those who are total wastrels. That is within groups that you term 'native' and 'immigrants'. I guess I would find the same in different socio economic groups.
People can be good or bad. Their ethnic origins/class etc. are irrelevent.
The economic situation is a result of internationa and national political decisions not because of "immigrants".
Trying to stir up hate for any group of people and to blame them for a country's difficulties is fascism & against British law. It is how civil wars and international wars strart.
mair a tad extreme 
This idea that "elites" were in favour of staying in the EU was, I think, a cleverly calculated strategy and not a reality. It was guaranteed to get people's backs up.
I don't think there was a rigid profile for remainers or leavers, other than people in very deprived areas being much more likely to vote leave. When interviewed, many of these people cited immigration as the reason for their suffering and yet immigration had very little to do with major industries closing down.
Looking at politicians, there are some from very privileged and often aristocratic backgrounds, such as Jacob Rees-Mogg and Theresa Villiers, who were very vocal in their wish to leave the EU. Travelling through the Suffolk countryside where my Mum lives, I saw that most of the rich farmers exhibited leave posters along their land, as did the most expensive houses.
My own friends and acquaintances, from similar social and economic backgrounds, were about evenly spread between stayers and leavers and those that chose to vote stay, including myself, could in no way fit the description of "elite".
I didnt think you were focusing on butterflies when you referred to 'natural selection'. 
I am a member of FOE, who have stopped some pesticides being used that kill bees, and a member of Butterfly Conservation.
I help to record numbers of butterflies and moths.
Hope that answers your query.
Now there's a thought. Natural selection.
What are your 'thoughts' on that Durham?
Without bees and butterflies, there wouldn't be enough food to feed all those natives.
Now there's a thought. Natural selection.
"I posted on the other thread about Aldi customers going round topless."
Crikey, not in my local Aldi!
This sounds like another lets sneer at the working class urban myth.
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