it isn't that easy to locate and deport all those people not to mention they lived in britain for years and some had political issues.
I don't think busy gives a fuck about illegal immigrants in Britain. Other than as a conceptual issue.
it isn't that easy to locate and deport all those people not to mention they lived in britain for years and some had political issues.
So there I am sitting in the canteen, eating my soup, reading a newsaper when all of a sudden my 3 colleagues decide to go a rant about how those damn illegal immigrants should all be sent back to their own countries straight away and how the ones that are legal but aren't working and their families should be kicked out as well.
They then went on to say that they should definitely not be allowed to wear any cultural headgear (or, as it was stated 'those rags around their heids'), shouldn't get council houses until all the Brits were getting free houses first and how they should be forced to pay for health care instead of getting it free.
Of course, then they went on to say that myself and the guy who runs the Pakinstani shop around the corner are ok.
When the conversation was brought up by my pal this afternoon, our manager failed to see what the problem was, as obviously the remarks weren't aimed at me. They were obviously talking about people with a different skintone with no money and no complete grasp of the English language.
Please tell me, when did it become appropriate to spew disgusting racist opinions in the work place?
:angry:
Did you think to discuss it with them and express your opinion in a calm and rational manner? Or did you just take it silently and then complain to your boss?
These lunch time rants are self propelling. Once one guy goes off on one it becomes a game of slap to see who can out rant the other. Usually a reality check brings them back to earth. However, one can't appear upset as the racism then becomes secondary to the game of "wind up" :shifty:
I'm with manker. That chap reacted to the words on the screen and the personality that wrote them, rather than make up a situation that he knew nothing about.
The words said that some people said some stuff that another person thought vile, and that person sat there and didn't say 'owt.
That person should have said something.