Oooh a letter to the Meath Chronicle.
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Oooh a letter to the Meath Chronicle.
That would have been better posted in the Lisbon thread mypost, since that's the agenda you're trying to push. I agree with your No vote, but in all honesty the way you put yourself across does more harm than good to both the No vote and your credibility.
Back on topic, you'd wonder how many people will have been told not to come back to work next week, after the builders fortnight.
adam
Thought it had more to do with the economic/unemployment situation than the Lisbon stuff, which was mostly confined towards the end of the piece, so I put it in here.
You must think people are very stupid mypost.
For those who haven't noticed, 17k signed on last month. The Thomas Cook workers will be on next month's figure.
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/...breaking27.htmQuote:
Originally Posted by irish times
Whilst individually relevant, the Thomas Cook numbers are smaller than the error rate and statistically insignificant.
A more useful comparison is comparing our 12.7% rate with the US 9.4%. given the lack of a welfare safety net in the US unemployment should always be lower, so that's a pretty large number.
From scanning through RTE's site, there doesn't appear to be any mention of the figures released on their news programmes yesterday.Quote:
Originally Posted by Dodge
Scan harder.
http://www.rte.ie/news/2009/0807/jobs.html
Quote:
The unadjusted figure rose by 17,143 from June to 435,735, giving an annual increase of just under 83%.
Quote:
Originally Posted by osarusan
Refers to tv/radio broadcasts of course.Quote:
Originally Posted by me
There were reports yesterday.
5,000 more signed on last month, which brings the total to just 10k shy of the 450k mark.
More
The latest figures were released this week, and show the first significant increase for a while, up by 3,000+ to 427,000.
An even bigger increase is expected next month.
anyone think that to get the dole you should do 10hours of community service or charity work a week? might give people somthing to do i guess..
I certainly think there is a trick being missed, there are a lot of highly skilled people on the dole who could be helping others with that knowledge.
Whether that needs to be mandatory or not is open to debate. I think there will be a re-emergence of the original Anco/FAS training ideals with more people joining courses rather than being on the dole.
I've said the same to other people, I really don't see how it could be anything other than beneficial if you got people working in the community for their dole. It gets the terminal dole scum out of bed, gives the decent unemployed people something to do, might help rebuild community spirit in areas (which I personally think is a huge problem at the moment), helps peoples self esteem by giving them something to work towards and also justifies what is a pretty decent chunk of public change (English people I know genuinely can't believe how much we are given over here)