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message 651:
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Linda
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Sep 25, 2012 07:33AM

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I would not though. especially after reading this in her bio..
I was born in Liverpool and found the dole very helpful while writing my first novels; I also worked in various of jobs before going to Liverpool University.
If the English dole is the same as our Australian dole then I highly disapprove of her boasting about bludging on the government pay cheque so she can write her books.
The dole is supposed to be there (paid by taxpayers), to support people in hardship who can't find a job.
I'm afraid this kind of 'dole bludging' is frowned upon in my country.




Just for the record, an unemployed person on the dole is not a dole bludger. Not if they don't want to be on the dole and are trying to find work.
Here's a definition in the Urban Dictionary. (ignore the New Zealander reference in the last definition. This is not true.)
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define...


Just for the record, an unemployed person on the dole is not a dole bludger. Not if they don't want to be on the dol..."
Last one definitely not true. Kiwi's haven't automatically qualified for the dole for about 10 years. They have to be here 6 months before they qualify, I think.

i have even heard one young mother say she got pregnant again so she could pay to get a boob job....the Australian worker has good reason to have the shits with dole bludgers. LOL!!

Is this the same elsewhere?

We have Work for the Dole for about 15 years.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Work_for...
Which in my opinion is a good scheme.
We had a change in Federal Government and they have been rolling it back which sucks.

Welfare is what you get from the government if you're poor, so you have a job that pays crap or typically if you're a single mother then you get enough to live on. Say pay rent and get cheap food, it's amazing anyone can live on it but it is true that the more kids you have the more money you get.
Employment Insurance I pay into with every check I make. Then if I get laid off or fired (with no just cause) then I can apply for EI. It lasts 9 months and the intent is to give you time to find another job and still be able to afford food. You have to have had a job to get it, unlike Welfare.

What you are explaining there, we call Bill Cover and you have to seek that out and pay for that privately if you want it.
You have Superannuation come out of your weekly/fortnightly (or whatever) pay too don't you? It is compulsory over here.
If hubby lost his job, which is our main bread winner income as the farm income id not enough to support us, then he would have to get on the dole quick to pay the bills.
You can get a hardship lump sum from the Gov to help you pay your bills for a couple weeks, but you have to pay it back, which is fair enough.
As well as the dole, people on the dole get their rent paid half by the government.
So they get say, $150 a week from the dole (a single persons payment), plus half of whatever their rent is.
You have a couple living together on the dole you start talking $300 a week (approx the same in Canadian and USD), plus rental assistance..and then if they have kids, they get more for each child.
We had neighbours. A couple with a couple children, all on welfare, and they were pulling in something like $1200 a week, and their rent was half paid for by the gov as well. It is ridiculous! Neither of them wanted to work and had a lifetime of dole bludging under their belts..


I guess as rents have gone up the rental allowance has gone down.

If you are paying $150 a week rent (which is a reasonable price for small places in Brisbane out of the central city), that is fairly close to half the rent.


Amen Anne!!

It is just wrong.
At least you got your pram the honest way, Anne, even though it was used.
You hit on a key word there Anne. Lifestyle. For many who need the dole due to hardship, the dole is a temporary measure...or they hope it is. But for the dole bludger it is a lifestyle. They think government handouts are a right, and they take that into their everyday lives. Always expecting something for free or cheap and they get aggressive when they don't.
I am from a family of workers. No dole bludgers in my family and I am proud of that.
That's not to say the dole has not helped me survive when I came back from living overseas and could not find work for about a year.
I cried like a baby when I finally landed a job and could be proud of myself again. Not have to stand in line with all those 'lifestyle unemployed' to put my 'dole form' in. Erg. I would do it again if I had to, to survive, but here's hoping it never happens.

One of my supervisors told me I should just quit tryign to make ends meet and go on welfare myself. There just was no way I would have done it. I am still poor, but I have pride that I always did things on my own, even delivering newspapers mornings when I needed work. I am retired now, but it bugs me to no end seeing our country go down the tubes with the welfare mentality being pushed today.

It bugs me with my own country too, Anne.

If you are paying $150 a week rent (which is a reasonable price for small places in Brisbane out of the centr..."
In Melbourne, that doesn't even come close. :(

It amuses me today to see so many young people aghast when I tell them I was working at 13. I cooked in a takeaway bar on Saturday mornings. I tried babysitting and decided I didn't like either the noise or the smell. So I cornered the local market in dog walking and pet sitting.

But when we were bigger kids, we confronted Dad and insisted he start paying us. Which he grudgingly agreed to, although it wasn't much.
So I was working as soon as I could sling on a pair of gumboots, but I was working for money from about 12 years old thanks to my brother and our little union movement. :)

But when we were bigger kids, we confronted Dad and insisted he start paying us. Which he gr..."
Of course, these days the Dept of Human Services would have a hissy fit at kids working before the "legal" age of 15. I was deep frying fish and cooking hamburgers, as well as cleaning the meat slicer and the fat vat at 13. WorkSafe would crap themselves as well. :D

I daily see people 18 or 19 years old who are collecting pogey and who will never work a day in their lives because they are cranking out fatherless children like there is no such thing as birth control. It's no mystery why the taxes are so high.

Is the nickname for the dole 'pogey' in Canada?
As a kid...10 bucks a week and all the food I could eat would have made me one happy girl. :D
The one thing I do miss about working on the family farm growing up? Steak and onion gravy for breakfast.

Is the nickname for the dole 'pogey' in Canada?
As a kid...10 bucks a week and all the food I could eat would have made me one happy girl. :D
The one thing I do miss about wor..."
Mmmm! Steak and onion gravy! Sounds yummy.
The chap I worked for was a bachelor farmer who lived with his mother and that woman could cook! Even at 14 and ravenous I couldn't keep up with her. I say per week but nothing moved on a Sunday; you fed and watered the stock and took the day off.



Yes they do, Linda.
One might also say...it is a vicious circle. ;)

I meant you can't win for losing. Child labor laws, Department of Human Services--all that government knows best stuff. Terri, because you worked on the farm and had to eat in order to work, your virtue remained intact from the travelling salesman.
I have been guardian ad litem for children under DHS jurisdiction and there are some really scary things that can happen there. Good things are done too if DHS workers, the court and guardians ad litem use common sense


Amazon say that I have 'saved' £0.39 on Bernard Cornwell's 1356 by pre-ordering. Now, what CAN I spend that on...
Anyway, it'll be here Monday.
Jeg glæder mig!

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mediev...

Thank you, I do love a new avi. :)
It's taken in Bratislava.

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mediev..."
They post castles for sale, that is so awesome. :)

...can you see the large question mark hanging over the Northern part of Italy, Speesh?

It sounds better if I translate it to Italian 'Non vedo l'ora' and then to English 'I can not wait'. Makes more sense in english anyway. :)
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