Furthermore, I do know lots of people who have domestic cleaners whilst earning less per hour than them. £30 for a couple of hours every fortnight, probably does the same amount of cleaning it takes a *non-professional* 4 or 5 hours to do. It’s a no-brainer.https://twitter.com/LeithMotive/status/1260591224198758401 …
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And that’s before we even take in the possibility the family in question may have special needs for the children - a disability, a learning difficulty - that isn’t supported by local authority carers for one reason or another.
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Replying to @twlldun
But presumably after we take into account the fact that if people can’t buy food they will stop being alive
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And how does the fact that some people have really good reasons for having cleaners help the argument that people who don’t have those reasons should keeps their cleaners cleaning as well?
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Replying to @NdeSpn
So, how do you know which is which? How are you going to judge which is which? Are you going to go door to door and say “ok, I see you have three kids and one has a mild learning disability, you can still have your cleaner. You, on the other hand, feckless, don’t deserve one”
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It’s just stupid. You don’t know the complexity of anyone’s life, what their domestic situation is, what the home dynamics are. Either the act of paying someone to clean is ok, or it isn’t.
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IT'S NOT OKAY DURING A PANDEMIC
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"Oh, everyone loves a cleaner though don't they" "Yeah, but not during a fucking deadly pandemic though Chris"
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