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Fao Aog

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Svejk | 15:41 Sat 28th Feb 2015 | News
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For 18 months you expressed some concern about a large influx of immigrants from Romania & Bulgaria much to the mirth of some ABers. In view of this week's figures that 187,000 have indeed flooded in from those 2 countries in 12 months, are you happy that you were proved right and 'the usual suspects' have a great deal of egg on their faces. Or does it just deepen your original concerns.
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There does seem to be a multitude of self-loathing anti-Brits on this site!
17:05 Mon 02nd Mar 2015
Sir Oracle
But nearer £589 than £100 that I think was suggested .
ZACS I've not bought a paper for years and no, I've not been pinching them either.
Me neither. I find they tend to give one a rather unbalanced view of the world.
SirOracle

/// OAG If you worked during the 50's I presume that you were liable for National Service, a two year period. ///

How you worked that out I just do not know, I could have already served my time.

/// The pay for a conscript was 4 shillings a day which was 28 shillings per week ( £1.40p in present day money). ///

/// This is around £ 70 per annum ,well under the ridiculous figure you quote of £589 per annum for the average salary in the 50's ///

That is not a ridiculous figure but the correct one.

You cannot compare the pay for a National Serviceman to the pay of those working in civvy street, just as you can't compare the pay for the WW2 fighting forces to those working on munitions etc.
Not really Retro. Both figures are around the same figure of inaccuracy as each other ( £250 ). ;-)
ANOTHEOLDGIT, what were your earnings in the '50s?
aog
Exactly the point I was making at 1255. Always the gripe of the soldier how much a munition worker was paid over and above their pay.
THECORBYLOON

/// ZACS how can that be true when you you hardly ever see a white face and you never hear English spoken on trains blah blah blah... ///

Oh and you have also noticed that, have you?

FOOTNOTE: This poster was the first to introduce 'colour' into the debate.
AOG I would refer you to Retro's figures of earnings which are £350,and his source is impeccable.
LOL. AOG, you really need to get to grips with irony.
SirOracle

/// Retro. The figures you quote (non police ones) show 1950 average wages of £7 per week =£350 pa,a very far cry from AOG's figures of £589 pa. ///

Not my figures but the Office for National Statistics figures.
Zacs-Master

Haven't you realised yet that one does not have to actually buy a paper these days, most are freely available on the web?
Sir Oracle
I would hardly credit my source of figures as impeccable
We can all see it is from Hansard which is not housed in a den of veracity.:-)
really?
Retro. Your comments on Hansard are verging on treason.!! ;-)
THECORBYLOON

/// ANOTHEOLDGIT, what were your earnings in the '50s? ///

If I told you, then I would have to shoot you.

I was brought up in an age when one's earnings were a personal matter, and it was accepted that it was the maximum of rudeness to ask anyone what their earnings were.
Loaf of bread: 1952: 6p

1952 prices converted into modern £/pence. Source: Office for National Statistics

In which case the correct conversion is 2½p, not 6p.
Sir Oracle
Can't hang you for it nowadays!! :-)
Loaf of Bread 1952: 6d ?
I remember it being 6d in 1955 then the government abolished the bread subsidy and the price shot up to 7½d, just over 3p. My mother was outraged.

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