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Deleted member 4439
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Of course. More permanent and full time work though as opposed to the zero hour, temporary and part time fare that forms a bigger bulk of the economy than it did then. And just FYI I hardly use social media either.
Ah, life was so much easier and better back then. At 17 I got a job working on the production line at Chrysler Peugeot - great fun, you should try it, especially working the welding machines. I was made redundant two years later.
A year later, during the 80s recession, I managed to get onto a forty-eight quid-a-week Youth Opportunities scheme, planting trees.
As there were no jobs after that, I went travelling the world for two years, working as I travelled. When I got back I got a job in a warehouse, working night shift. Having self-funded and successfully studied for a degree whilst in full-time work, I then further self-funded a full-time degree, whilst also taking in lodgers to help keep my mortgage. I then successfully entered into national competitions for stipends and funding for higher degrees.
Nobody helped me, I got off my arse and did it. Yes, the lack of good, solid jobs for the working class is an issue, but you're going back to the fifties and early sixties to re-live that world.
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