Page 482 of 501

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 10:11 am
by The Huskar Social Union

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 10:19 am
by Shamhnan Insir

Sigh.

Then again, if NI could get a proper working government together, abortion would hardly be at the top of a "to do list" currently.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 10:23 am
by Anywhere Else But Here
Vassenor wrote:
Anywhere Else But Here wrote:Well, mainly I want you to admit that when you said you were working from outdated information, what you meant was "I did not know what I was talking about."


I'm not your dancing monkey.

Besides from the sounds of things you've already come to that decision whether I say it or not.

Well, then kindly provide the outdated information you were working from.

I certainly have come to that conclusion. I've come to it because I cannot find anything saying that EU students have to pay Scottish tuition. I'm not sure when EU students last had to pay Scottish tuition, if they ever did. It's hard to find out, because googling turns up accurate information about how EU students currently don't have to pay. So I can't imagine that you could possibly have access to some weird, outdated information but nothing up to date. Which leads me to conclude that you basically just said what you vaguely thought was right. And that's fine. It's fine to be make mistakes. But it's weird that you feel the need to cover it.

I'm almost certainly being petty here, but you do this a lot. The other day, when forced to confront the sexism of a dress code, you labelled it "badly written", because the alternative was admitting that you were wrong. You're wrong about an awful lot of things, Vass. It's okay to admit it. You won't grow as a person if you can't accept your own fallibility.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 10:24 am
by Anywhere Else But Here

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 10:29 am
by Vassenor
Anywhere Else But Here wrote:
Vassenor wrote:
I'm not your dancing monkey.

Besides from the sounds of things you've already come to that decision whether I say it or not.

Well, then kindly provide the outdated information you were working from.

I certainly have come to that conclusion. I've come to it because I cannot find anything saying that EU students have to pay Scottish tuition. I'm not sure when EU students last had to pay Scottish tuition, if they ever did. It's hard to find out, because googling turns up accurate information about how EU students currently don't have to pay. So I can't imagine that you could possibly have access to some weird, outdated information but nothing up to date. Which leads me to conclude that you basically just said what you vaguely thought was right. And that's fine. It's fine to be make mistakes. But it's weird that you feel the need to cover it.

I'm almost certainly being petty here, but you do this a lot. The other day, when forced to confront the sexism of a dress code, you labelled it "badly written", because the alternative was admitting that you were wrong. You're wrong about an awful lot of things, Vass. It's okay to admit it. You won't grow as a person if you can't accept your own fallibility.


So show me when I said the dress code was not sexist. Like I asked you to at the time and you failed to.

Vassenor wrote:
Anywhere Else But Here wrote:That's not badly written. Badly written implies that some flaw in the wording results in the code having a meaning different from the author's intent or creates some loophole the author would not have approved of. In this case, it is clearly the school's intent that shorts be forbidden. It's like saying the Buggery Act was badly written because it made gay sex illegal.

So why is it okay to force (in practice) boys to only wear trousers, but not okay to force girls to only wear skirts?


Where did I say it was OK to force boys to only wear trousers?

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 10:37 am
by Anywhere Else But Here
Vassenor wrote:
Anywhere Else But Here wrote:Well, then kindly provide the outdated information you were working from.

I certainly have come to that conclusion. I've come to it because I cannot find anything saying that EU students have to pay Scottish tuition. I'm not sure when EU students last had to pay Scottish tuition, if they ever did. It's hard to find out, because googling turns up accurate information about how EU students currently don't have to pay. So I can't imagine that you could possibly have access to some weird, outdated information but nothing up to date. Which leads me to conclude that you basically just said what you vaguely thought was right. And that's fine. It's fine to be make mistakes. But it's weird that you feel the need to cover it.

I'm almost certainly being petty here, but you do this a lot. The other day, when forced to confront the sexism of a dress code, you labelled it "badly written", because the alternative was admitting that you were wrong. You're wrong about an awful lot of things, Vass. It's okay to admit it. You won't grow as a person if you can't accept your own fallibility.


So show me when I said the dress code was not sexist. Like I asked you to at the time and you failed to.

Well, I suppose you didn't explicitly. You did snidely dismiss Ostro, as you snidely dismiss everyone who disagrees with you.
Anything that doesn't treat men as special is gynocentric misandry.

Which rather implies that you thought he was demanding special treatment and the existing state of affairs was fine. But we're getting away from the point. I note that I wrote quite a long post there, and you picked out one tiny part of it that's divorced from the whole "you being wrong about Scotland" theme.

Like I said, I know I'm being petty, but come on. It's not hard. Three little words: I was wrong. There, I've even typed them for you. You just need to copy and paste them.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 10:39 am
by Vassenor
Anywhere Else But Here wrote:
Vassenor wrote:
So show me when I said the dress code was not sexist. Like I asked you to at the time and you failed to.

Well, I suppose you didn't explicitly. You did snidely dismiss Ostro, as you snidely dismiss everyone who disagrees with you.
Anything that doesn't treat men as special is gynocentric misandry.

Which rather implies that you thought he was demanding special treatment and the existing state of affairs was fine. But we're getting away from the point. I note that I wrote quite a long post there, and you picked out one tiny part of it that's divorced from the whole "you being wrong about Scotland" theme.

Like I said, I know I'm being petty, but come on. It's not hard. Three little words: I was wrong. There, I've even typed them for you. You just need to copy and paste them.


And I'm pretty sure that was the straight implication of "Oh, well I guess my information was outdated then" that would be obvious to anyone who wasn't trying to draw out a point for the sake of spite..

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 10:53 am
by Anywhere Else But Here
Vassenor wrote:
Anywhere Else But Here wrote:Well, I suppose you didn't explicitly. You did snidely dismiss Ostro, as you snidely dismiss everyone who disagrees with you.

Which rather implies that you thought he was demanding special treatment and the existing state of affairs was fine. But we're getting away from the point. I note that I wrote quite a long post there, and you picked out one tiny part of it that's divorced from the whole "you being wrong about Scotland" theme.

Like I said, I know I'm being petty, but come on. It's not hard. Three little words: I was wrong. There, I've even typed them for you. You just need to copy and paste them.


And I'm pretty sure that was the straight implication of "Oh, well I guess my information was outdated then" that would be obvious to anyone who wasn't trying to draw out a point for the sake of spite..

What information? When is it from? Is it an article from the early 2000s? An admissions pamphlet from the 90s? As you're so fond of doing, I'm going to have to ask you for a source.

I don't think it was the implication. I think the implication was that someone else was wrong, and you'd just innocently relayed their mistake. But if that was what you were implying, go ahead and "exply" it now. I was wrong. Go on.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 11:02 am
by Imperializt Russia
Ostroeuropa wrote:A school brought in a "Gender neutral" uniform policy, which in actuality is just gynocentric misandry.

They've said trousers or skirts only, banning shorts and telling boys to wear skirts if it gets too hot. This is a disparate impact kind of thing.

This is indeed dumb, and while I don't agree with your terminology, I do accept your assessment.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 11:32 am
by Salandriagado
Anywhere Else But Here wrote:
Vassenor wrote:
Why exactly are you pushing me on this anyway?

Well, mainly I want you to admit that when you said you were working from outdated information, what you meant was "I did not know what I was talking about."


Except that isn't the case. There was a period when Vassenor's claim was true: that changed because they got taken to court over it.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 11:48 am
by Anywhere Else But Here
Salandriagado wrote:
Anywhere Else But Here wrote:Well, mainly I want you to admit that when you said you were working from outdated information, what you meant was "I did not know what I was talking about."


Except that isn't the case. There was a period when Vassenor's claim was true: that changed because they got taken to court over it.

I never said there wasn't such a period. But Vass never brought it up when asked. Instead, she got defensive and danced around the point. It seems this case was seven years ago? I would say that if you comment on a situation you haven't checked in on in over half a decade, that counts as not knowing what you're talking about.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 11:49 am
by Shamhnan Insir
So who amongst you is going to go and help pick the fruit and vegetables this summer, since the complete fucking farce of the Brexit situation has hamstrung the supply of people willing to do the work?

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 11:50 am
by Oil exporting People
Shamhnan Insir wrote:So who amongst you is going to go and help pick the fruit and vegetables this summer, since the complete fucking farce of the Brexit situation has hamstrung the supply of people willing to do the work?


> exploitation is good

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 11:58 am
by Ostroeuropa
Imperializt Russia wrote:
Ostroeuropa wrote:A school brought in a "Gender neutral" uniform policy, which in actuality is just gynocentric misandry.

They've said trousers or skirts only, banning shorts and telling boys to wear skirts if it gets too hot. This is a disparate impact kind of thing.

This is indeed dumb, and while I don't agree with your terminology, I do accept your assessment.


Why don't you try describing it then, i'm assuming misandry is the word you're objecting to.

Suppose a school demanded buzz cuts regardless of gender, knowing full well this would mean more discomfort and so on for girls than boys, and threatened to send them home if they didn't.

It sounds like the kind of wrecking maneuver Republicans pull over abortion, but aimed at fucking over girls education.

Here it's similar, and despite boys being disadvantaged and discriminated against in schools (Or perhaps because of that and this is merely an escalation), we're seeing a maneuver to fuck them over.

We know for a fact that misandry against boys in schools is widespread and systemic and they're punished more often and harsher for the same behaviors, and graded less for the same work by mostly women teachers, and this headteacher is a woman.

Why should this be viewed outside that context, rather than this merely being a more straightforward expression of a prejudice and contempt for males we know to be widespread in the education system?

Like a chief of police one day up and deciding to go on a rant about n*g**rs.

What's revealing about it is that this is a case where contempt for males is advanced using egalitarian rhetoric, which seems to be simply how it's done these days, to present treating men as second class citizens or like dirt as the same thing as fairness, something only enabled by feminist gaslighting of the populace into ignoring male disadvantage and presenting women as an oppressed class by ignoring and suppressing discussion of mens issues.

Clearly, the results of the feminist framework being normalized in institutions are not positive.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 12:00 pm
by Anywhere Else But Here
Shamhnan Insir wrote:So who amongst you is going to go and help pick the fruit and vegetables this summer, since the complete fucking farce of the Brexit situation has hamstrung the supply of people willing to do the work?

Surely they're not affected yet? We haven't actually Brexited.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 12:00 pm
by Dooom35796821595
Shamhnan Insir wrote:So who amongst you is going to go and help pick the fruit and vegetables this summer, since the complete fucking farce of the Brexit situation has hamstrung the supply of people willing to do the work?


This is a great chance for automation to replace cheap human labour.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 12:06 pm
by Fartsniffage
Dooom35796821595 wrote:
Shamhnan Insir wrote:So who amongst you is going to go and help pick the fruit and vegetables this summer, since the complete fucking farce of the Brexit situation has hamstrung the supply of people willing to do the work?


This is a great chance for automation to replace cheap human labour.


See if you can invent a machine to pick raspberries or strawberries. You'd make a fortune if you can.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 12:07 pm
by Neu Leonstein
Anywhere Else But Here wrote:Surely they're not affected yet? We haven't actually Brexited.

Many of them have though. Or rather, not Brentered. *sigh*

Basically, migrants from eastern Europe looking for physical labour jobs in the UK don't think of those jobs as exploitation, but as an opportunity to earn more for that work than they would at home. They live here fairly cheaply, and anything left over gets sent back home. When they make the decision whether to leave their home country, and which country to move to, they obviously convert earnings back into the home currency.

Since sterling has crapped itself following the vote (less so now than immediately, but it's still a pretty substantial depreciation, especially against EUR), any given fruit picking salary in the UK is now substantially lower than a fruit picking salary in France or Germany or whatever.

There are lots of charts here where you can see it: https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulation ... 2017-11-30

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 12:10 pm
by Shamhnan Insir
Anywhere Else But Here wrote:
Shamhnan Insir wrote:So who amongst you is going to go and help pick the fruit and vegetables this summer, since the complete fucking farce of the Brexit situation has hamstrung the supply of people willing to do the work?

Surely they're not affected yet? We haven't actually Brexited.

Directly? No.
However there is real concern over the paperwork requirements due to false reporting of immediate changes following the report as well as news headlines generating a negative light about work in the UK at the current time. Either way, farmers are facing serious staff shortages which will lead to a lot of wasted produce unless the vacancies can be filled in.

Dooom35796821595 wrote:
This is a great chance for automation to replace cheap human labour.

Would have been done already if picking were as simple. Automation tends not to be gentle in its approach and we all know how presentation is everything when it comes to fresh produce.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 12:12 pm
by Oil exporting People
Fartsniffage wrote:
Dooom35796821595 wrote:
This is a great chance for automation to replace cheap human labour.


See if you can invent a machine to pick raspberries or strawberries. You'd make a fortune if you can.


Labor Shortages Prompt Strawberry Picking Automation

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 12:17 pm
by An Alan Smithee Nation
Anywhere Else But Here wrote:
Shamhnan Insir wrote:So who amongst you is going to go and help pick the fruit and vegetables this summer, since the complete fucking farce of the Brexit situation has hamstrung the supply of people willing to do the work?

Surely they're not affected yet? We haven't actually Brexited.


European fruit pickers shun Britain

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 12:29 pm
by Anywhere Else But Here
An Alan Smithee Nation wrote:
Anywhere Else But Here wrote:Surely they're not affected yet? We haven't actually Brexited.


European fruit pickers shun Britain

Oh. That's unfortunate.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 12:38 pm
by Oil exporting People
An Alan Smithee Nation wrote:
Anywhere Else But Here wrote:Surely they're not affected yet? We haven't actually Brexited.


European fruit pickers shun Britain


Gotta love the BBC using click bait instead of delving into the actual reasons:
Kent-based AG Recruitment and Management works in Romania to supply labour for 80 growers across the UK.

Over the next few months it needs to find 4,000 people to pick strawberries, raspberries, and eventually apples and pears. The agency is nowhere near that target, and is having to call farmers to say it will not have enough pickers for them.

According to co-director, Estera Amesz, the numbers of people wanting to work in Britain fell sharply after Brexit. A key issue was the fall in the value of the pound. She says it is also down to the uncertainty; people aren't sure what documents they now need.


For one, they're just citing a single company instead of any hard facts or data; that alone raises a major Red Flag as the problem could just be this company. Beyond that, this portion alone immediately invalidates the headline, as the workers are not shunning the UK over Brexit in of itself, as is implied, but actually just because they're unsure of the logistics of making it to the UK now.

Continuing on, we see even more trouble with the headline:
Romania is one of the poorest countries in Europe. It is one of the largest recipients of EU money.

However, almost 30 years after the Romanian Revolution of 1989 and the fall of the communist leader Nicolae Ceausescu, its economy is growing at 6.9%. That's a much faster rate compared to Britain's.

It's creating a newly wealthy middle class.


Further on:
Growers in Romania are also finding it tough to find pickers.

The director of the Research and Development Centre for Fruit Growing in Iasi, Gelu Corneanu, said: "It's really difficult to find workers to harvest our crops, mainly because they are attracted to other European countries.

"People tend to go and harvest garlic in Spain, then they harvest cherries in Romania and then they harvest strawberries in Greece."


So the actual problem doesn't seem to be Brexit at all, but instead that Eastern Europe is getting wealthy enough to not need to do this and when they do it, they're actually able to be more picky with regards to which jobs they take in order to get the best return.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 12:52 pm
by Shamhnan Insir
Oil exporting People wrote:


Gotta love the BBC using click bait instead of delving into the actual reasons:
Kent-based AG Recruitment and Management works in Romania to supply labour for 80 growers across the UK.

Over the next few months it needs to find 4,000 people to pick strawberries, raspberries, and eventually apples and pears. The agency is nowhere near that target, and is having to call farmers to say it will not have enough pickers for them.

According to co-director, Estera Amesz, the numbers of people wanting to work in Britain fell sharply after Brexit. A key issue was the fall in the value of the pound. She says it is also down to the uncertainty; people aren't sure what documents they now need.


For one, they're just citing a single company instead of any hard facts or data; that alone raises a major Red Flag as the problem could just be this company. Beyond that, this portion alone immediately invalidates the headline, as the workers are not shunning the UK over Brexit in of itself, as is implied, but actually just because they're unsure of the logistics of making it to the UK now.

Continuing on, we see even more trouble with the headline:
Romania is one of the poorest countries in Europe. It is one of the largest recipients of EU money.

However, almost 30 years after the Romanian Revolution of 1989 and the fall of the communist leader Nicolae Ceausescu, its economy is growing at 6.9%. That's a much faster rate compared to Britain's.

It's creating a newly wealthy middle class.


Further on:
Growers in Romania are also finding it tough to find pickers.

The director of the Research and Development Centre for Fruit Growing in Iasi, Gelu Corneanu, said: "It's really difficult to find workers to harvest our crops, mainly because they are attracted to other European countries.

"People tend to go and harvest garlic in Spain, then they harvest cherries in Romania and then they harvest strawberries in Greece."


So the actual problem doesn't seem to be Brexit at all, but instead that Eastern Europe is getting wealthy enough to not need to do this and when they do it, they're actually able to be more picky with regards to which jobs they take in order to get the best return.

The weaker pound doesn't exactly help, nor (as I have said) the headlines portraying a negative light on this. I come back to my question however, who of you would go and pick fruit in the summer? I understand you have already suggested automation, however it is not economical viable for small farms to invest in such tools when a human laborer can preform a greater variety of tasks to a more refined degree.

From what I observed, I saw the referendum as a signal of a stirring of nationalism in the UK, however beyond the vote and the subsequent pointless shit-slinging with equally vocal opponents, I do not see a "dig for Britain"mentality emerge.

PostPosted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 1:07 pm
by Neu Leonstein
Oil exporting People wrote:So the actual problem doesn't seem to be Brexit at all, but instead that Eastern Europe is getting wealthy enough to not need to do this and when they do it, they're actually able to be more picky with regards to which jobs they take in order to get the best return.

That explanation does nothing to address the actual patterns.