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Those of us who were ‘cannon fodder’- how do you feel?

884 replies

Onandoff · 22/08/2021 09:09

I went to a gathering the other day with people who were privileged enough to still be working from home in highly paid city jobs. Their experiences were a stark contrast with mine. It was interesting to hear how protected they’d been, many still getting shopping delivered and only just resuming socialising. They hadn’t been on public transport at all. There was a general air of resentment at being asked to go back to offices and commute. They’d all saved money and were very worried about covid exposure despite being vaccinated. Apparently many workers have completely refused to return.

DH and I were the only key workers there and it brought home how exposed we’d been. Literally all of our family and colleagues caught it and some died or were left disabled. My mum died. In the hospital where I work 80% caught it in the first wave alone.

It’s been interesting to see through this that the jobs essential to society are (generally, appreciate some exceptions like medics) the worst paid. If we’d refused to go in or been redeployed we’d have been sacked. While the privileged middle class are still being pandered to despite vaccination.

I feel that those who went out to work should be financially compensated for the risk we took. At the very least we should be given tax breaks and not be expected to cough up for furlough costs.

OP posts:
ilovebagpuss · 31/08/2021 16:06

I used to feel quite angry that I was sent out to work (care home office) and was not furloughed as my DD’s were left alone so it was a case of work or quit. I couldn’t send them into school as one was isolating so it made more sense for her to have the older ones company.
My DH was in a similar position that he could work and there was not an option to furlough except loose money as self employed.
Apart from the anger towards my company who I feel could have given me some support to maybe wfh a few days a week I am not bitter of others lockdown experience.
I am glad I got Covid twice and fortunate not to be too unwell so I have a decent immunity buffer I hope as well as the vaccine.
I could not have juggled a job and young children at home so I know most people had a very hard deal in some way or other.
Yes a small minority had a pleasant enough lockdown but they often found it harder to come out of the bubble than others and were terrified of re-entering society.

Fncottonrrrrgh · 31/08/2021 17:30

@CBUK2K2 surely your pensions running out soon. I do believe from your comments you're approximately 70+...😂

CBUK2K2 · 01/09/2021 17:48

@Fncottonrrrrgh again, you choose to resort to insults, rather than a reasoned argument.

Fncottonrrrrgh · 03/09/2021 18:22

@CBUK2K2 because there's no point arguing with a stupid person 😜

CBUK2K2 · 03/09/2021 18:47

@Fncottonrrrrgh Again with the insults, maybe you could offer some compelling argument instead?

catfunk · 03/09/2021 18:51

Agree that proper front line workers were at risk and you should have been compensated accordingly (it sounds like you had a very difficult time)
But surely if the middle class privelleged folk you speak of had not been able to wfh/ lock down- you would have been In a far worse position as a healthcare worker ??

catfunk · 03/09/2021 18:57

Also just to add I'm probably what you see as the latter group and I was furloughed, at risk of redundancy the whole time and my mental health suffered working from home whilst not knowing if I would keep my job or not and I also lost loved ones. It's not been an easy ride for lots of people for various reasons.

Fncottonrrrrgh · 04/09/2021 13:05

Again with the insults, maybe you could offer some compelling argument instead?

You've proved my point 😂😂😂

YorkshirePuddingsGreatestFan · 04/09/2021 18:35

I would have liked mandatory furlough for shielding workers who were unable to work at home, instead of giving employers the choice of claiming or putting them on SSP.

I did the first period of shielding as I had a mortgage holiday and some savings that I used. However, I couldn't afford to shield on SSP for the subsequent shielding periods as SSP isn't enough to pay the mortgage, basic utilities and food.

Having worked all my life and paid into the system, I felt let down that there wasn't meaningful support to allow me to stay off work and shield when I needed to.

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