What Britain has to offer is a society in which the state stays out of your private business.https://twitter.com/RamiRanger/status/816925380623929344 …
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0.3% can't speak English. Guess mainly older Asian people. Shocked if more than a handful of EU immigrants couldn't.
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75% of the kids starting at my local primary school can't speak English, according to their Ofsted report
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95% can't spell in English either, and most of them are English themselves.
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that's not the same issue
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still very much an issue, I think you'll agree.
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People involved in teaching ESOL say that new arrivals are *really* keen to learn. But funding has been cut loads.
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yes, the people who turn up to the classes are keen to learn. The others... not so much.
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I've heard stories of queues (ie oversubscribed classes). I imagine some would be intimidated/worried to go but seems a minority.
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Compulsory Spanish lessons for Expats on the Costas then.
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Because Brits in the EU integrate so well?pic.twitter.com/fyfAVX4vPz
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should EU insist that all UK migrants must speak the local language to be able to live in EU?
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Indeed,would you consider it to be an appropriate request?
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how would not being able to speak the host language not cause problems?
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e.g. UK migrants using Spanish Health services will require translators?De facto causing host problems.
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who's to blame if they aren't removed? I'm sure it's EU's fault?
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Those who cannot communicate in English end up on the fringes of society and do not realise what Britain has to offer.