Fuck Reform, Fuck Farage
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- Esquire Bertissimmo
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Re: Fuck Reform, Fuck Farage
Could someone make a non-racist argument for less immigration? Absolutely, people do so all the time.
Could *Reform* make such an argument? As you've pointed out, they clearly do make the "volume" argument. And when they do, I expect they don't racialize it. But it's harder to trust their motivations when they also engage in what look like race-baiting campaigns at the same time. Their general pitch to voters seems to lean heavily on, as Jamie framed it, opposition to dark-skinned people arriving by boat.
Interestingly enough, Canada used to have a Reform party positioned to the right of the Conservatives. Their arguments to lower immigration levels were rather clearly mixed with anxieties about the racial mix of incoming immigrants. The party condemned racists on the one hand, but had a pretty high tolerance for prominent racist members on the other. It seemed clear that their advocacy for reducing immigration levels was part of the party's broader agenda, which involved preserving the whiteness of Canada, even if they didn't always say the quiet part out loud.
Decades later, the modern Conservative Party is making arguments for reducing immigration levels that are much harder to label as racist. That’s partly because the party is a multi-ethnic coalition that is far more careful to distance itself from bigots. It also avoids race-focused rhetoric across the board, making its motivations appear more policy-driven and less culturally or racially charged.
Could *Reform* make such an argument? As you've pointed out, they clearly do make the "volume" argument. And when they do, I expect they don't racialize it. But it's harder to trust their motivations when they also engage in what look like race-baiting campaigns at the same time. Their general pitch to voters seems to lean heavily on, as Jamie framed it, opposition to dark-skinned people arriving by boat.
Interestingly enough, Canada used to have a Reform party positioned to the right of the Conservatives. Their arguments to lower immigration levels were rather clearly mixed with anxieties about the racial mix of incoming immigrants. The party condemned racists on the one hand, but had a pretty high tolerance for prominent racist members on the other. It seemed clear that their advocacy for reducing immigration levels was part of the party's broader agenda, which involved preserving the whiteness of Canada, even if they didn't always say the quiet part out loud.
Decades later, the modern Conservative Party is making arguments for reducing immigration levels that are much harder to label as racist. That’s partly because the party is a multi-ethnic coalition that is far more careful to distance itself from bigots. It also avoids race-focused rhetoric across the board, making its motivations appear more policy-driven and less culturally or racially charged.
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Re: Fuck Reform, Fuck Farage
It's not as if Reform are a whites only party. Even the Guardian acknowledges this in their article about the abuse suffered by Reform's growing numbers of ethnic minority activists
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2025/apr/20/ive-been-assaulted-reform-uk-bame-candidates-seeking-local-election-wins
As for their manifesto, they style it as a contract and it's really not that big. Worth a read if you're genuinely interested, and easy to find with a Google search. Immigration is prominent and makes up two of their core pledges, and they very clearly differentiate the issues of mass migration and illegal migration
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2025/apr/20/ive-been-assaulted-reform-uk-bame-candidates-seeking-local-election-wins
As for their manifesto, they style it as a contract and it's really not that big. Worth a read if you're genuinely interested, and easy to find with a Google search. Immigration is prominent and makes up two of their core pledges, and they very clearly differentiate the issues of mass migration and illegal migration
It fleshes out some of the immigration policy to some degree later, but the seven policies mentioned don't seem to confuse illegal immigration and legal immigration at any point, despite Jamie suggesting otherwise. I'll leave you to read it and judge for yourself.1. Imagine Smart Immigration, Not Mass Immigration
All non-essential immigration frozen to boost wages, protect public services,
end the housing crisis and cut crime.
2. Imagine No More Small Boats in the Channel
Illegal migrants who come to the UK will be detained and deported. And if
needed, migrants in small boats will be picked up and taken back to France.
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- Jamiet99uk
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Re: Fuck Reform, Fuck Farage
Let me ask a question about immigration from another angle.
UK population growth in 2023: 0.82%
UK population growth in 2022: 1.13%
UK population growth in 2021: -0.08% (small shrinkage)
UK population growth in 2020: 0.36%
UK population growth in 2019: 0.56%
UK population growth in 2018: 0.60%
(Source: World Bank / Google Data Commons)
World population growth in 2023: 0.9%
World population growth in 2022: 0.87%
World population growth in 2021: 0.83%
World population growth in 2020: 1.02%
World population growth in 2019: 1.04%
World population growth in 2018: 1.08%
(Source: World Bank / Google Data Commons)
The UK's population is increasing at a relatively low rate; over the past six years on average, the UK's population growth has tended to be less than the rate of global population growth.
So actually what is the problem? The population of the UK is slowly increasing, but the population of the Earth is slowly increasing. The UK is not some crazy outlier.
@Octavious, are you advocating for a reduction in the global population, or the UK population, or both, or what?
UK population growth in 2023: 0.82%
UK population growth in 2022: 1.13%
UK population growth in 2021: -0.08% (small shrinkage)
UK population growth in 2020: 0.36%
UK population growth in 2019: 0.56%
UK population growth in 2018: 0.60%
(Source: World Bank / Google Data Commons)
World population growth in 2023: 0.9%
World population growth in 2022: 0.87%
World population growth in 2021: 0.83%
World population growth in 2020: 1.02%
World population growth in 2019: 1.04%
World population growth in 2018: 1.08%
(Source: World Bank / Google Data Commons)
The UK's population is increasing at a relatively low rate; over the past six years on average, the UK's population growth has tended to be less than the rate of global population growth.
So actually what is the problem? The population of the UK is slowly increasing, but the population of the Earth is slowly increasing. The UK is not some crazy outlier.
@Octavious, are you advocating for a reduction in the global population, or the UK population, or both, or what?
Potato, potato; potato.
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Re: Fuck Reform, Fuck Farage
I don't recall advocating for anything. I was responding to your request to share my perspective on Reform's stance on immigration
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- Esquire Bertissimmo
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Re: Fuck Reform, Fuck Farage
This post seems to intentionally miss the point.Jamiet99uk wrote: ↑Fri May 02, 2025 4:49 pmLet me ask a question about immigration from another angle.
UK population growth in 2023: 0.82%
UK population growth in 2022: 1.13%
UK population growth in 2021: -0.08% (small shrinkage)
UK population growth in 2020: 0.36%
UK population growth in 2019: 0.56%
UK population growth in 2018: 0.60%
(Source: World Bank / Google Data Commons)
World population growth in 2023: 0.9%
World population growth in 2022: 0.87%
World population growth in 2021: 0.83%
World population growth in 2020: 1.02%
World population growth in 2019: 1.04%
World population growth in 2018: 1.08%
(Source: World Bank / Google Data Commons)
The UK's population is increasing at a relatively low rate; over the past six years on average, the UK's population growth has tended to be less than the rate of global population growth.
So actually what is the problem? The population of the UK is slowly increasing, but the population of the Earth is slowly increasing. The UK is not some crazy outlier.
@Octavious, are you advocating for a reduction in the global population, or the UK population, or both, or what?
"Natural increase" (births minus deaths) have cratered in the UK. Continued population growth is being met almost entirely by immigration levels that are higher than ever in absolute terms, and near their highest-ever level as a share of the population. The result is an historically unprecedented shift in the demographic makeup of the country such that, for example, 40% of London residents are foreign born.
This raises a whole bunch of interesting questions that go beyond the somewhat nonsense metric of "are we growing as fast as the global average".
- Jamiet99uk
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Re: Fuck Reform, Fuck Farage
You made a serious of critical comments regarding immigration.
Ok then, what do you see as a good long term outcome, and how do you see it being realised?
Potato, potato; potato.
- Jamiet99uk
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Re: Fuck Reform, Fuck Farage
Not sure this is true.Esquire Bertissimmo wrote: ↑Fri May 02, 2025 7:11 pmThe result is an historically unprecedented shift in the demographic makeup of the country such that, for example, 40% of London residents are foreign born.
What proportion of London residents was foreign born in 1990?
What proportion of London residents was foreign born in 2024?
(With sources)
Plus why is London the barometer?
I live 320 miles from London.
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- Esquire Bertissimmo
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Re: Fuck Reform, Fuck Farage
Here is one source for the 40% claim that also provides some good context: https://migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk/resources/briefings/migrants-in-the-uk-an-overview/#:~:text=London%20has%20the%20largest%20proportion,London%20and%20the%20South%20East.&text=Compared%20to%20people%20born%20in,or%20have%20a%20university%20degree.
The London example is undeniably interesting in my view. 4/10 people being directly from abroad makes London an unbelievably cosmopolitan place. And it shows how the headline ~9% foreign born figure can translate into much higher shares in some locales.
Whether or not you should care about this is up to you. I live in a similarly diverse place and I quite like it and would be eager to support policies that sustainably promoted inbound immigration. To someone who doesn't share my pro-cosmopolitanism, they no doubt are worried about cultural cohesiveness, the primacy of English language, the impacts on housing markets, etc.
The London example is undeniably interesting in my view. 4/10 people being directly from abroad makes London an unbelievably cosmopolitan place. And it shows how the headline ~9% foreign born figure can translate into much higher shares in some locales.
Whether or not you should care about this is up to you. I live in a similarly diverse place and I quite like it and would be eager to support policies that sustainably promoted inbound immigration. To someone who doesn't share my pro-cosmopolitanism, they no doubt are worried about cultural cohesiveness, the primacy of English language, the impacts on housing markets, etc.
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Re: Fuck Reform, Fuck Farage
I'm not particularly interested in having another immigration debate, but I'll sketch out some of my thoughts. As an ideal I feel the globe should maintain a largely stable population supported by sustainable birth rates in all regions, with low levels of migration open to those who are born with wanderlust.Jamiet99uk wrote: ↑Fri May 02, 2025 10:53 pmYou made a serious of critical comments regarding immigration.
Ok then, what do you see as a good long term outcome, and how do you see it being realised?
The reality is far off that ideal. Native populations are collapsing all across the world, particularly in Asia and Europe. Looking at Africa you can see the exact same pattern emerging. China and India are somewhere in between. There is enough momentum in places like Africa to keep headline global populations increasing for the time being, but it won't last.
The "solution" favoured by Europe has been to import workers from elsewhere to paper over the cracks in the local labour markets. This has had a massively detrimental effect on the ability of developing nations to maintain effective healthcare systems and develop their own economies, but we don't seem to give a damn about that for some reason. But this imperfect solution will become increasingly more difficult to implement as there are fewer and fewer areas to import workers from. The numbers of available Eastern Europeans has dropped alarmingly. We're unlikely to get another tranche of workers like we did from Ukraine, or indeed the recent high numbers from Hong Kong. The empty villages of Greece and Romania are testament to the issue.
Now there is a strong argument to use some immigration to mitigate the effect of a declining national workforce, but it should be carefully managed. Immigrants should be keen to integrate, share local values, and come in numbers that don't overwhelm local areas. We should also have a keen awareness of the problems this may cause to the supply nations and act in a more responsible manner. And this should very much be about mitigating the more damaging impacts of a declining population, not pumping in people to such a degree that the population of an already densely populated island is significantly increasing. That's utterly insane and puts you in mind of the overuse of antibiotics for every medical condition under the sun.
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- Jamiet99uk
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Re: Fuck Reform, Fuck Farage
Thank you very much.
I can support the first part of that. I feel the second should be less significant.
Surely if birth rates are falling in Asia and Europe, and are now beginning to fall in Africa, and are relatively stable in China and the Indian subcontinent, this will over the long run cause the situation to tend towards your hoped-for situation of a largely stable population, no?Octavious wrote: ↑Sat May 03, 2025 7:13 amThe reality is far off that ideal. Native populations are collapsing all across the world, particularly in Asia and Europe. Looking at Africa you can see the exact same pattern emerging. China and India are somewhere in between. There is enough momentum in places like Africa to keep headline global populations increasing for the time being, but it won't last.
We are probably somewhere closer to agreement here than you might assume.Octavious wrote: ↑Sat May 03, 2025 7:13 amThe "solution" favoured by Europe has been to import workers from elsewhere to paper over the cracks in the local labour markets. This has had a massively detrimental effect on the ability of developing nations to maintain effective healthcare systems and develop their own economies, but we don't seem to give a damn about that for some reason. But this imperfect solution will become increasingly more difficult to implement as there are fewer and fewer areas to import workers from. The numbers of available Eastern Europeans has dropped alarmingly. We're unlikely to get another tranche of workers like we did from Ukraine, or indeed the recent high numbers from Hong Kong. The empty villages of Greece and Romania are testament to the issue.
An economy that requires a continuously increasing population is not sustainable indefinitely. Instead of trying to import labour to maintain a cheap labour pool, salaries should be increasing. A finite labour market should mean that each person's labour becomes more valuable. Automation should be reducing the demand for low-skill, low-pay labour.
Instead, over the past 15 years or so, the UK has experienced wage stagnation and a continuation of a long hours culture. A lot of people in work are having to claim benefits because their earnings are insufficient to support their basic needs. The reason we are not transitioning to a higher-paying, more productive economy, in my view, is that business owners want to hold down wage growth to bolster their own profits. Unfortunately, the Conservatives, Reform, and even Keir Starmer's zombie pastiche of the Labour party, are all equally in the pockets of big business backers.
So successive Conservative administrations, and now Labour, have actually quietly accepted a situation where there is a significant amount of immigrant labour, despite their false anti-immigration rhetoric. It's why there has been such a focus on "stop the boats" and victimising refugees, even though asylum seekers represent a very small proportion of total immigration (I think last week I read it was around 7%).
The population of the UK is not "significantly increasing" as I have previously highlighted. But I do agree with some of your analysis.Octavious wrote: ↑Sat May 03, 2025 7:13 amNow there is a strong argument to use some immigration to mitigate the effect of a declining national workforce, but it should be carefully managed. Immigrants should be keen to integrate, share local values, and come in numbers that don't overwhelm local areas. We should also have a keen awareness of the problems this may cause to the supply nations and act in a more responsible manner. And this should very much be about mitigating the more damaging impacts of a declining population, not pumping in people to such a degree that the population of an already densely populated island is significantly increasing. That's utterly insane and puts you in mind of the overuse of antibiotics for every medical condition under the sun.
However, I think we are closer to each other than we might have realised.
So, I offer you two genuine questions:
1. Do you agree that the demonising of asylum claimants (who I think we agree, are a small minority of those arriving) by various political parties and actors in the UK, is problematic? (And has a tendency to draw attention away from other issues?)
2. Do you agree that instead of relying on migrant labour to sustain sectors of the labour market, the British economy should use increased labour demand as an opportunity to increase wages and living standards, and end in-work poverty? (And that any UK Government should work to that end?)
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Re: Fuck Reform, Fuck Farage
No, because all regions are following the same trend. Some are just further along than others. China will soon be following the same part of the route as Japan and Korea, with India not far behind. In Africa the population boom fueled by high birth rates, as experienced by Europe in previous centuries, is very much over. There is still growth, but fertility rates are far more modest and it is reasonable to expect that the trend experienced everywhere else in the world is going to play out in Africa in much the same way.Jamiet99uk wrote: ↑Sat May 03, 2025 9:24 pmSurely if birth rates are falling in Asia and Europe, and are now beginning to fall in Africa, and are relatively stable in China and the Indian subcontinent, this will over the long run cause the situation to tend towards your hoped-for situation of a largely stable population, no?
We clearly have a different understanding of statistics. I tend to put more faith in British government statistics as they have more skin in the game and the civil service is pretty good at this sort of thing, but even using your stats that's a significant increase. If a population is increasing by around 0.6 percent a year it means it will double in a little over a century.Jamiet99uk wrote: ↑Sat May 03, 2025 9:24 pmThe population of the UK is not "significantly increasing" as I have previously highlighted. But I do agree with some of your analysis.
I disagree that asylum claimants have been demonised. I also disagree that 7% of total immigration is a small number, considering how high immigration currently is.Jamiet99uk wrote: ↑Sat May 03, 2025 9:24 pm1. Do you agree that the demonising of asylum claimants (who I think we agree, are a small minority of those arriving) by various political parties and actors in the UK, is problematic? (And has a tendency to draw attention away from other issues?)
What has been heavily criticised are the people smuggling themselves in on the boats, lorries etc, who are overwhelmingly young men who are trying to cheat the system. Young men who are fleeing the apparent tyranny of France after passing through the nightmare states of Italy, Spain et al. If you were to envision a fair and just asylum policy that comes to the aid of those in genuine need, the vast majority of the people on the boats would have no part of it.
Very much so, yes. Jobs that are necessary will see a substantial increase in pay and conditions. Jobs that are unnecessary (to pick an example, minimum wage strawberry pickers who work exhausting shifts for the sake of producing cheap strawberries) will probably go. But if the cheap British strawberry industry only exists on the back of exploiting immigrant labour then we shouldn't have cheap British strawberries.Jamiet99uk wrote: ↑Sat May 03, 2025 9:24 pm2. Do you agree that instead of relying on migrant labour to sustain sectors of the labour market, the British economy should use increased labour demand as an opportunity to increase wages and living standards, and end in-work poverty? (And that any UK Government should work to that end?)
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