
Originally Posted by
johntins
There is an issue, right there. Stereotyping is not helpful. Many who are on the 'dole' would actually like a job. The system these days is not geared to helping, it is geared to penalising. So, we call disadvantaged people "bludgers". We say, "no work where you are? Move to Broome". Well, it might work, but not for long. People need their family.
I have worked pretty much all of my life. I have taken jobs that most people wouldn't ( drove a Western Star once, V8Ian ), and found myself once in Mitchell, Qld., with no job, and my (then) wife and newborn in Brisbane, with no money, no job, no car, no nothing. This was in the early 80's. Did anyone care? In those days it was the DSS. To get any help from them I had to be unemployed for twelve weeks, and I had to prove that I had been seeking work for all that time. Dunno if anyone here has been to Mitchell, but if you have, think back to 1984. The only jobs there were on the weir, and I'd just been sacked from that. No guaranteed separation in those days. You had to fight, and fighting took money. Oh, did I mention that in order to get a job there in the first place meant joining the AWU? Well, it did. Did they help me? Guess.
Pickles, I know what you are saying. I see people every day who choose not to help themselves. I have no sympathy for them, but I really feel for the poor buggers who want to have a go, but don't want to be baristas, which seems to be the only way forward in this current world.
Oh. Did I get home? Yes, I hitched, something that seemed reasonable in those days. Made no difference though, she left me anyway.
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