ChatterBank1 min ago
Would The Govt Go For This ?
15 Answers
If they did random drug tests on job seekers etc and stop their money if they test positive, then offer return of allowances after they go for drug counselling and rehabilitation, because they are definitely not going to get a job whilst using. Yes I am watching Jezza, I do so because it makes me feel good about myself !
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.jezza was a joke rest I believe the govt is not doing enough to stop giving money to people who have no intention of ever getting themselves in work because its too easy not to, yet people who genuinely want to work get penalised .A good friend of mine started work on Monday and he has been out of work for almost three years, he is over the moon and the look on his face when the phone call came to say the job is yours was priceless.
The thing is Dee Sa a HUGE amount of people take drugs, many of whom are gainfully employed. We are talking about Drs, Solicitors,teachers, people who work in the city, accountants etc. You seem to think that drug users are only composed of Jeremy Kyle contestant like people on the road to nowhere, deliberately sponging off the state. It's simply not true. I guarantee you know at least one, possibly a few a people who take drugs and you don't even know it. We all do.
kvalidir is right
"An estimated one in three adults (36.5%), around 12 million people, had ever taken an illicit drug in their lifetime; three million people (8.9%) had done so in the last year; and 1.7 million people (5.2%) had done so in the last month.
Drug usage is consistently higher for young people than for the whole population. For people aged 16-24, 2.5 million people (37.7%) had ever taken an illicit drug in their lifetime; 1.3 million (19.3%) had done so in the last year; and 700,000 people (11.1%) had done so in the last month.
The survey also estimates that five million adults (15.6%) had ever taken Class A drugs, one million (3%) had in the last year, and half a million (1.5%) had done so in the last month."
That's from http:// www.dru gscope. org.uk/ resourc es/faqs /faqpag es/how- many-pe ople-us e-drugs
"An estimated one in three adults (36.5%), around 12 million people, had ever taken an illicit drug in their lifetime; three million people (8.9%) had done so in the last year; and 1.7 million people (5.2%) had done so in the last month.
Drug usage is consistently higher for young people than for the whole population. For people aged 16-24, 2.5 million people (37.7%) had ever taken an illicit drug in their lifetime; 1.3 million (19.3%) had done so in the last year; and 700,000 people (11.1%) had done so in the last month.
The survey also estimates that five million adults (15.6%) had ever taken Class A drugs, one million (3%) had in the last year, and half a million (1.5%) had done so in the last month."
That's from http://
Taking drugs doesn't automatically stop people from working!
When I was teaching, at least half a dozen of our staff (of 50) used cannabis. I've also known teachers (in other schools) who were cocaine users and I've known several people in the finance industry who use cocaine. None of those people were incapable of doing their jobs. (Indeed, the only teachers I've come across who became incapable of doing their jobs through drug misuse did so because of alcohol, not through the use of illegal - but less harmful - drugs).
When I was teaching, at least half a dozen of our staff (of 50) used cannabis. I've also known teachers (in other schools) who were cocaine users and I've known several people in the finance industry who use cocaine. None of those people were incapable of doing their jobs. (Indeed, the only teachers I've come across who became incapable of doing their jobs through drug misuse did so because of alcohol, not through the use of illegal - but less harmful - drugs).