this post was submitted on 05 Aug 2024
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UK Politics

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[–] Streamwave@feddit.uk 8 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (6 children)

The way that Musk is riling up and egging on these rioters on the world's biggest social media platform is really frightening and dangerous. The guy's in total control of the algorithms that control people's feeds - including the sorts of thugs and bigots turning out on these race riots.

I think we really are going to need a much more grown up national conversation about regulation of social media companies and the damage they're doing to our democracy.

There are also clearly some very profound community tensions which we're going to have to address on some fundamental level in the long-run through processes of deradicalisation, integration, education and community cohesion strategies. But that still seems like a discussion that's necessary to have but maybe after we've locked up these Neo-Nazis.

[–] echodot@feddit.uk 5 points 3 months ago (5 children)

The tension is largely inflated. It exists mostly because people like Tommy Robson and Nigel Farage claim that it does.

For example take the housing crisis, it would be a problem even if it weren't for immigrants, maybe they slightly increase the pressure but only marginally and only in certain areas, but the racists and the fascists have decided to ignore nuance and simply claim that immigrants are causing the housing crisis. Then they imply, do not outright say, that if there were no immigrants everyone would have a house, which of course is demonstrably untrue, but thicko idiots believe it.

[–] Streamwave@feddit.uk 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (3 children)

The tension is largely inflated. It exists mostly because people like Tommy Robson and Nigel Farage claim that it does.

I don't agree. They inflate tensions that pre-exist them, and I think if we keep pretending these issues don't exist, then this is only going to get worse.

Immigration is not the cause of the housing crisis, but it's also not possible to address the housing crisis without also reducing immigration because it's not possible to build housing for 700,000+ people each year. Yearly net migration of almost 1 million is not sustainable, so the number will need to come down substantially.

[–] UrbonMaximus@feddit.uk 2 points 3 months ago

40% of that figure is international students, who tend to be wealthy and live in student accommodation which wouldn't house regular people anyways. They also tend to leave after they finish their studies. So that would leave us closely with the recommended number of building new houses. People should really find another excuse to blame immigrants or bother reading the details of the stats they use. (Also, ONS and other think tanks said that this number is not going to continue going forward.)

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