Tuesday, October 22, 2013

235. Go Home or Face Arrest dirigido a Teresa Maio

cartesiano Ministro da Administração Interna do UK

Depois de o tristemente célebre cartaz, pela sua estupidez monumental, ter sido criticado severamente por toda a gente ajuizada, e até considerado ilegal, e politically incorreto, parece que o Ministério da Teresa May, apoiada pela Governo reacionárioTory UK já refletiram mais sobre o assunto, e meteram a maldita van e o maldito cartaz numa bendita garagem.

Nem sabemos se isso lhes traria ganhos de votos da plebe, ou se teria hostilizado e afastado os votantes étnicos. Bem, estes também pouco votavam neles, votam mais no Labour ou em ninguém.

This government is been hard on the poor and excellent to the super rich, the millionaire like them.  It´s been hard to  deal with them and bring them to their senses. They have caused a lot of trouble in this country and still cause. Oh, dear!


No UK rollout for 'go home' vans

Home Office van bearing the slogan "In the UK illegally? Go home or face arrest"The adverts contained inaccurate arrest figures, the Advertising Standards Agency said

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Vans telling illegal immigrants to "go home" or face arrest will not be rolled out across the UK.
A trial of the controversial vans in London is currently being evaluated by the Home Office.
A government source has told BBC News the evidence shows the vans are "not very effective".
It was not clear when the evidence would be published, added the government source, but "the vans will not be going ahead".
The Home Office's pilot, which saw vans driving around parts of London for a week in July, drew criticism from across the political spectrum.
Liberal Democrat Business Secretary Vince Cable described the campaign as "stupid", and Labour accused the government of aping language used by the far-right National Front in the 1970s.
UKIP said the scheme was "disturbing" and reminiscent of a fascist dictatorship.
The vans were also banned by the Advertising Standards Authority, which said the arrest statistics on them were misleading, although the watchdog cleared the campaign of being offensive and irresponsible.
Home Office ministers insisted that the pilot had worked - and they were considering extending it to other parts of the country.
According to the Daily Mail, Home Secretary Theresa May has decided not to extend their use, as only one person, a Pakistani man, was persuaded to leave the country as a result of seeing the signs.

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