Speaking as a Brit, though, it is not generally the Londoners who are complaining about the immigration.
It is the rural counties, who get the least of it. Speaking from experience, as someone living in a county that is (as per the 2021 census) counted as 95.2% White British, and yet has a strong Reform showing, and having to deal with countless friends and relatives complaining about “the immigrants”. The ones that simply don’t exist here.
It helps put into proper context that Reform’s popularity in many places is more cultural than demographic - based on feelings more than facts.
You can argue that immigration is a legitimate problem, but you should also have an answer to give in regards to people like the ones in my local area, whose view of immigration isn’t representative of any sort of lived reality, but is completely manufactured. People like the ones in my locality rightly delegitimise concerns about immigration for many people, because it shows how people can irrationally fear it without any experience of it at all. It shows how concern is often an issue of false perceptions, rather than being grounded in reality.
The cost to public services harms everyone. Unskilled rural labour has absolutely been hammered by immigration. ('they do the jobs British people won’t do! (Actually we don’t want anybody doing that work for that pay.)
I have no idea why you specify London. I only used the ‘not far off a London a decade’ as an illustration that every reasonable person will agree shows that the level of immigration is unsustainable. Please don’t make me waste my time having to respond to silly comments.
The cost to public services harms everyone. Unskilled rural labour has absolutely been hammered by immigration. ('they do the jobs British people won’t do! (Actually we don’t want anybody doing that work for that pay.)
Whether correct or not, you seem to be entirely ignoring the point made: I am talking about populations of people who have scarcely seen an immigrant in their life (that is to say, not competing locally with immigrants for jobs), complaining that there are “too many immigrants”.
I stated I lived in a rural county - this is true - but I live in the county town of this county, population of >100,000. From my lived experience, I am not talking about the most rural parts of the county, but a decently sized urban area. As with most county towns, the immigrant population is slightly higher here than the overall county figures - we are over 93.5% White British according to the 2021 UK census.
Furthermore, I work for a payroll bureau (a job I would recommend to everyone, personally; I would also recommend internal payroll, in-house for a national company, which I worked in before this) - I have direct firsthand experience of hundreds of clients within the local economy, and could tell you firsthand the proportion of immigrants working in those jobs and the pay differentials between people of similar positions.
From where I’m sitting day after day (seeing the names and backgrounds of many employees working across many local businesses), there is no “immigration problem” within my local area, but that doesn’t change the people who are perceiving there is an immigration problem.
I don’t know your situation (maybe there are more immigrants where you live), but when I see the people around me living in a false reality where they feel anxious about what are effectively boogeymen that only exist in their minds - where they are scared and stressed about something nonexistent - I consider that a problem. It’s a problem of internal beliefs having no basis in reality - a problem of mass-delusion. The solution isn’t to “get rid” of the tiniest of tiny minorities that these people have never had any exposure to or threat from to begin with; the solution (as with anyone deluded) should be to address that false belief itself and seek to ground that person more in reality. People are very clearly living not as materialists, but idealists - they are imposing their ideas on the actual world, and using their ideas to colour their judgement of how the world is - and this is a problem, as the world simply does not reflect those beliefs, yet it isn’t stopping people holding them. In this sort of atmosphere, there are no guardrails to prevent anyone believing any sort of fantasy.
Unskilled rural labour has absolutely been hammered by immigration. ('they do the jobs British people won’t do! (Actually we don’t want anybody doing that work for that pay.)
A member of my family is in a building trade. When he started, he was a labourer, bottom of the heap. He observed that most of the Brits on the crew with long Brit ancestry were work-shy and bolshy. The only people he respected were the Poles and Romanians. They showed up every day, did the job and didn’t constantly moan. Now almost all of them have returned to their home countries, or at least have stopped working in England.
Working-class white “true Brits” learned a bad habit during the Empire: assuming there was always someone else to do the dirty work: an Irishman, someone from somewhere in the Empire, or (more recently) an Eastern European. It’s entitlement, pure and simple, and a passivity when it comes to improving one’s lot in life.
My family member has moved up rapidly in his trade and is now in education to move up the food chain even further. His British friends who started with him as apprentices have now moved on to faking disability, dealing drugs, stealing things, or remain at the bottom of the heap.
Exploitation is a problem. But so is the learned helplessness and the entitled sense of being too good to put any effort into working or learning.
I am aware of this, however, the reality on the ground is exactly as I described.
Nobody is going to fix capitalism in the time frame available, so deal with the world as it is, not as any of us would like it to be.
Speaking as a Brit, though, it is not generally the Londoners who are complaining about the immigration.
It is the rural counties, who get the least of it. Speaking from experience, as someone living in a county that is (as per the 2021 census) counted as 95.2% White British, and yet has a strong Reform showing, and having to deal with countless friends and relatives complaining about “the immigrants”. The ones that simply don’t exist here.
It helps put into proper context that Reform’s popularity in many places is more cultural than demographic - based on feelings more than facts.
You can argue that immigration is a legitimate problem, but you should also have an answer to give in regards to people like the ones in my local area, whose view of immigration isn’t representative of any sort of lived reality, but is completely manufactured. People like the ones in my locality rightly delegitimise concerns about immigration for many people, because it shows how people can irrationally fear it without any experience of it at all. It shows how concern is often an issue of false perceptions, rather than being grounded in reality.
The cost to public services harms everyone. Unskilled rural labour has absolutely been hammered by immigration. ('they do the jobs British people won’t do! (Actually we don’t want anybody doing that work for that pay.)
I have no idea why you specify London. I only used the ‘not far off a London a decade’ as an illustration that every reasonable person will agree shows that the level of immigration is unsustainable. Please don’t make me waste my time having to respond to silly comments.
Whether correct or not, you seem to be entirely ignoring the point made: I am talking about populations of people who have scarcely seen an immigrant in their life (that is to say, not competing locally with immigrants for jobs), complaining that there are “too many immigrants”.
I stated I lived in a rural county - this is true - but I live in the county town of this county, population of >100,000. From my lived experience, I am not talking about the most rural parts of the county, but a decently sized urban area. As with most county towns, the immigrant population is slightly higher here than the overall county figures - we are over 93.5% White British according to the 2021 UK census.
Furthermore, I work for a payroll bureau (a job I would recommend to everyone, personally; I would also recommend internal payroll, in-house for a national company, which I worked in before this) - I have direct firsthand experience of hundreds of clients within the local economy, and could tell you firsthand the proportion of immigrants working in those jobs and the pay differentials between people of similar positions.
From where I’m sitting day after day (seeing the names and backgrounds of many employees working across many local businesses), there is no “immigration problem” within my local area, but that doesn’t change the people who are perceiving there is an immigration problem.
I don’t know your situation (maybe there are more immigrants where you live), but when I see the people around me living in a false reality where they feel anxious about what are effectively boogeymen that only exist in their minds - where they are scared and stressed about something nonexistent - I consider that a problem. It’s a problem of internal beliefs having no basis in reality - a problem of mass-delusion. The solution isn’t to “get rid” of the tiniest of tiny minorities that these people have never had any exposure to or threat from to begin with; the solution (as with anyone deluded) should be to address that false belief itself and seek to ground that person more in reality. People are very clearly living not as materialists, but idealists - they are imposing their ideas on the actual world, and using their ideas to colour their judgement of how the world is - and this is a problem, as the world simply does not reflect those beliefs, yet it isn’t stopping people holding them. In this sort of atmosphere, there are no guardrails to prevent anyone believing any sort of fantasy.
A member of my family is in a building trade. When he started, he was a labourer, bottom of the heap. He observed that most of the Brits on the crew with long Brit ancestry were work-shy and bolshy. The only people he respected were the Poles and Romanians. They showed up every day, did the job and didn’t constantly moan. Now almost all of them have returned to their home countries, or at least have stopped working in England.
Working-class white “true Brits” learned a bad habit during the Empire: assuming there was always someone else to do the dirty work: an Irishman, someone from somewhere in the Empire, or (more recently) an Eastern European. It’s entitlement, pure and simple, and a passivity when it comes to improving one’s lot in life.
My family member has moved up rapidly in his trade and is now in education to move up the food chain even further. His British friends who started with him as apprentices have now moved on to faking disability, dealing drugs, stealing things, or remain at the bottom of the heap.
Exploitation is a problem. But so is the learned helplessness and the entitled sense of being too good to put any effort into working or learning.