Autumnnights1 may not have come across very well but she has a couple of very good points. This was discussed on another thread here and a couple of links to The Guardian and to an Economist piece were posted. They make interesting reading.
An emotional response, a moral response is that we have to help. No-one can remain unmoved by pictures of dead and dying children. Bob Geldorf was really the first to use that with LiveAid. It is hard to square it with our consciences when we have so much and others have so little and we want to do the right thing.
But we are being manipulated by these images. Who gains from an influx of fit young men, some of whom are skilled? Big business as they have a supply of labour - easier to negotiate the wages down, no need to train people up,. Business also has a bigger market - huge sales and profits to be made from the extra consumers from food to house-building, from "schemes" to clothing.
Who else gains? Middle classes who get cheaper nannies, plumbers, builders, cleaners, drivers - although less in this case than with the Eastern European migration of recent years as many of these jobs tend to be "female" jobs.
Who loses? Youngsters competing for jobs as shop assistants, leaflet deliverers, fast food servers, apprentice plumbers, drivers. (Not the Middle class kid from University with a Geography degree and parents who are lawyers. His job or that of his sister who recently joined the BBC / PWC/ Slater and Gordon as a trainee is not threatened).
If you are waiting for a Council House or a HA house you will be have to go down the waiting list. How else can we house people? They won't be moving in to the street of £3m houses in SW London.
If you are trying to get your child into a primary with a catchment area of 500m the chances are you will be less likely to get this place. If your child is in a secondary school that is already struggling with big classes this is likely to make it worse. The Migrants will not threaten the place of a child in a Kent Grammar school or a selective secondary or private school or any school where 10 minutes down the road the houses cost a couple of million quid.
So Autumnnights1 is right to make her point, whether or not you agree, and it is something that the government should be thinking about and not something to be ridiculed.