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15% unemployment. No work in Ireland. Non-EU workers Visa
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Irish
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15% unemployment. No work in Ireland. Non-EU workers Visa Sceala Irish Craic Forum Irish Message |
bamboozileer
Sceala Philosopher
Location: Dublin
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Sceala Irish Craic Forum Discussion:
15% unemployment. No work in Ireland. Non-EU workers Visa
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We Irish do not want the number of EU immigrants that are already here.
The vast majority > 72% of Irish people want to see a reduction in the number of non-Irish immigrants living here.
Source
Irish Times /Behaviour Attitudes opinion poll.
We need to get out of the EU and make budget and laws for our own native population first.
The liberal nonsense about what the EU did for us, is nothing more than unquestioned myth.
To those who questioned whether non EU workers are being hired on purpose by companies. It was not just me that noticed PC World have so few Irish sales staff.
******* Go into any PC World and most of the staff have been brought into Ireland from India under a special work visa? Tesco and McDonalds also used these work visa schemes to recruit in asia, and legally traffic these people into ireland to undercut irish workers wages.
I believe that there is also a secret FF policy to tolerate, even encourage illegal immigration, to provide really cheap labour to farms and other such businesses. Thats why they removed all visa requirements for Mauritius visitors. Its an imitation of an american policy where illegals do all the harvesting of crops and other menial work but have zero bargaining power.
politicalworld.org/showthread.php?t=2804 *******
What was the plan of Irish politicians during the last decade? To destroy Irish society and native culture.
They encouraged foreign immigrants into Ireland in unprecedented numbers.
A million immigrants flooded into Ireland in just a few years, Ireland had a population of 4 million.
To comprehend a similar impact, imagine -
15 million foreign immigrants going into the UK, 15 million inside of a single decade.
or
75 million foreign immigrants allowed into the United States, 75 million inside of a single decade.
This is not a fair or sensible immigration policy, this is invasion and colonization by economic means. It is not asking for trouble, it is insisting.
All our politicians do is talk about immigrant rights and welfare.
What about Irish native culture and our rights to our nation?
We are all paying for foreign immigrant fraudsters.
Most welfare fraudsters are foreign immigrants.
Over 20% on the Dole are foreign immigrants.
Over 30% collecting rent welfare are foreign immigrants.
These figures are indisputable facts from the government offices involved.
Pay a visit to a playgroup or first years primary schools in Ireland, you will find many of the children are either recent immigrants or born to recent immigrants. The Irish tax payer is funding free places for foreigners to come here and educate their children. It is not the individual child's fault that many can not speak English well, or at all, and in the process hold back the education of native Irish children.
We are paying a heavy price for this madness and not just financially.
Pay a visit to a Doctors and wait as a minority in your own land among the non Irish, many of whom are clearly medical immigrants. In Ireland because of our free medical services. Their own native country, often Eastern European, have a third world health service.
We can not afford this, and it is so naive to think any nation could.
Who is paying for the unprecedented levels of foreign immigrants? they are not paying their own way and they never were, that is for certain. Proven by UK studies on their own immigrant population. Most recent foreign immigrants have not come because of their high skills. Most foreign immigrants are low skilled and general workers who directly compete with the native population for work.
Most immigrants in Ireland who did work, did so for close to minimum wage, and they never had to pay a cent in income tax.
No country could accommodate the numbers Ireland has in the past decade. No where on earth was as naive as Ireland.
And the madness continues. Even in out meltdown economy, the politicians are adding fuel to the mix.
Anyone else notice the number of Asian sales staff in PC World shops in Ireland. I know several people who walked out of PC world because they could not understand what the Asian sales people were saying. It would be difficult to accept these immigrants are generally more qualified in any way, to sell in Ireland than the native Irish.
The majority of sales staff in any store, anywhere in Ireland seem to be Asian. Are the Irish really not able to sell a computer.
I believe that someone in PC World is deliberately employing Asians.I have seen PC stores with a majority of Asian sales staff when the local population has nothing like that ratio.
The Irish government, responsible to the native population, should at the very least, be investigating if any business operates a anti Irish and racial discrimination employment policy.
If they are employing Asian staff by preference, in a racist employment policy, they are not the only ones.
Employers are importing thousands of workers for ordinary jobs from outside the EU, despite record unemployment levels here.
The number of non-EU workers being hired has surged to more than 6,600 so far this year, new figures show.
Workers from outside Ireland and the EU are being hired for jobs on farms, in hotels, restaurants, bars, nursing homes, takeaways, insurance companies, pharmacies and leisure centres.
A large number of the workers are also employed in nursing homes, with permits also issued for workers in guesthouses.
The surge in numbers comes despite rules that insist companies can only hire overseas if they can't get the staff at home or in the EU. The number of people signing on the dole here is just under 450,000.
The figures will raise serious questions about why companies are so desperate for foreign workers -- and whether it is because they are often cheaper and non-unionised.
There are also restrictions on hiring lower-paid workers. But they do not seem to be preventing employers hiring staff in industries where wages are relatively low.
This time last year, only 5,822 work permits had been issued for the first time or renewed, but by September this year, the figure had risen to 6,621, a 14pc increase.
While the numbers are well down on the Celtic Tiger era, in one month alone this year the number of permits granted almost touched 1,200.
In recent years, Irish workers have been rejecting the lowest-paid jobs, although this may change as the labour market continues to worsen.
The rules from the Department of Enterprise are very blunt: permits can only be granted when an employer has "made every effort to recruit an Irish or European Economic Area national for the post".
Recruitment specialists said yesterday that specific language skills were needed for some of the roles, and these were not available in Ireland or the EU.
But they could not explain the large number of overseas workers needed in areas like catering, education, agriculture/fisheries and various service industries.
The Department of Enterprise figures showed that while healthcare and medicine were key areas for recruiting foreign workers, service industries, which cover everything from hairdressing to insurance, also appeared central to the high demand.
For example, in June 1,194 permits were issued, with the largest demand coming from services industries, considerably ahead of healthcare.
The geographical background of those getting permits was highly concentrated, with Indians awarded 1,780 permits, followed by citizens of the Philippines with 1,101 permits and China with 288 permits.
Those awarded permits can only work for the employer sponsoring them initially, but there are ways to change to another employer later on.
The original application can be made by the employee or the employer.
The system was established under the Employment Permits Act of 2003 and 2006.
There have been complaints in recent months by the Migrant Rights Centre Ireland (MRCI) that some unnamed employers were exploiting workers.
The Minister of State in charge of labour affairs, Dara Calleary, recently condemned "any practices by employers that may result in non-compliance with employment rights, entitlements or any other mistreatment of employees".
Mr Calleary pointed out that those employers who contravene employment permits legislation may be liable for fines ranging from €5,000 up to €50,000.
- Emmet Oliver
Irish Independent
www.independent.ie/national-news/thousands-of-workers-imported-despite-job-crisis-2374800.html
Can you believe this Irish government. We have 15% unemployed already and rising. Irish natives having to emigrate.
But they are still alllowing thousands of Non EU workers to come and take jobs.
Can only guess their plan is to push the native Irish into anarchy.
Think this a exaggeration, that Ireland has nothing to learn?
Is this really what anyone wants for any Irish city.
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