01 April 2009

Idle workshy Poles come to Britain to sponge off the taxpayer

After months of becoming increasingly angry at seeing British people referred to as "idle" "workshy" and "scroungers" I have decided to use that terminology to describe the Poles that the Brit-bashers are so obscenely fond of.

After the Poles (who were taking jobs that, previously, had often been done by British students during the university holidays) were supposed to be returning home in their thousands, it has been announced that they are flooding back to Britain to take advantage of the generous benefits they will receive over here (more than those paid out in their home country).

The fact that they are coming here to sponge off the taxpayer puts them into the same "idle" "workshy" "scroungers" category that people put out of work Britons into. But will we hear of the Poles being described in such unflattering terms? Of course not. Such demonising is only acceptable when it is directed at the indigenous Briton.

As someone who is out of work I know what I am talking about when I say I am talking from my own experience - places which, previously, recruited staff locally are now recruiting in Eastern Europe. British builders are being put onto three day weeks whilst Poles are kept on full time - it is the Brits not the Poles who have mortgages to pay and families to support, but it is the Brits who suffer most.

I know what I am talking about when I refer to Poles as idle, workshy layabouts. I have seen Polish "workers" spend their time gabbling away in their own language to each other whilst Brits were expected to do all the work - but who is thrown out of their jobs? Not the idle Poles. I know of hotels which employed Poles as "cleaners" only for Brits to go and do the work properly after the idle foreigners made a mess of it.

And who did the work before the Poles came here? I won't buy that rubbish about them only doing jobs that couldn't be filled locally. Toilets were cleaned, fruit was picked (it certainly did not go all to rot!) without the dubious benefit of those who came to take British jobs.

Read more about the sponging Poles here.