a day ago
Readers discuss migrant protests, Labour's left-wing, water systems and taxes
Do you agree with our readers? Have your say on these MetroTalk topics and more in the comments.
It's so depressing that a heinous crime is being used as a political football to attack refugees.
Far-right activists claim that the reason they are targeting a hotel housing asylum seekers in Epping is because one of those asylum seekers was arrested for allegedly attempting to kiss a 14-year-old girl (Metro, Mon).
Rates of sexual assault are just as high among men born and bred here as they are among ethnic minorities or migrants.
Why aren't these activists also protesting about that? When a white Brit is said to have committed a sexual offence, where are all these guys? Fighting for better prevention strategies and higher rates of police investigation?
Nope. They're busy finding some other reason to bash the migrants. Because this isn't about safety. It's about racism. Charlie Parrett, Stoke
When I want to solve a problem, I go after the cause. If Nigel Farage and other right-wing politicians actually cared about migration, they'd try to get to the bottom of what's causing it.
We've already tried to limit benefits to migrants and the right to bring their families with them, so it isn't that.
The ones who come illegally don't have the right to claim benefits anyway. People are risking their lives to come here. Why?
If there's not a pull, then there must be a push. These people's homelands are being torn apart in a hellstorm of totalitarianism, war and famine. If you want to stop people coming here, you have to help sort out the countries they're coming from.
Remember – if someone's talking about a problem but they're not trying to solve the problem, then they're trying to use the problem to serve their own ends. Helen Shaw, Liverpool
Robert Hughes (MetroTalk, Mon) says Jeremy Corbyn's new party will only benefit the Conservatives and Reform by splitting Labour's left-wing vote.
Perhaps if Labour offered any sort of concession or appealed to the left wing of its party (its not really extreme considering Labour call themselves democratic socialist) then Corbyn's party wouldn't have nearly as much momentum.
They have nobody to blame but themselves. Maybe Labour should worry about their own voter base rather than trying and failing to appeal to the right? James Freeman, Bognor Regis
Our junior, now called 'resident', doctors are either striking or leaving altogether because we don't have the money to pay them enough.
Our water system is collapsing because we don't have the money to take it back under public ownership.
We can't give disabled people the extra help they need because we don't have the money for their 'pip' personal independence payments.
We don't have the money to help children with special educational needs, either. All because chancellor Rachel Reeves refuses to tax the unused wealth of the super-rich.
People say that if we have a wealth tax, these super-rich people will leave. And maybe some of them will.
But a lot of them won't. People aren't motivated by money alone. They're motivated by where they and their families want to live and work.
Is it really worth bankrupting our country just to hold on to as many super-rich people as possible? And besides, if we're so broke that our basic infrastructure is starting to fall apart, surely that would be a good reason for those people to leave anyway. Rob Slater, Norfolk
The death of a child from measles in Liverpool this month highlights the UK's decline in vaccination rates.
Some areas are seeing rates below the 95 per cent target recommended by the World Health Organization. More Trending
Sadly, this will lead to more deaths from preventable diseases.
The spread of lies and disinformation – particularly on social media – is leading to a misplaced distrust in vaccines.
Vaccines have been proven to be safe and have saved millions of lives, including from Covid.
If vaccination rates continue to fall, we will see more tragic deaths that could have been easily prevented as well as outbreaks of previously eradicated diseases. Mark Dawes, London
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