RE: UK STRIKE DAY 30TH NOVEMBER
November 25, 2011 at 6:28 am
(This post was last modified: November 25, 2011 at 6:31 am by Norfolk And Chance.)
To be fair, public sector workers steal a wage and don't even go to work at all.
Take teachers for example. They have 104 days off in a year due to weekends, 8 bank holidays and usually around 4 "teacher training days". That's 116 days. Then they have 13 weeks paid holiday - 91 days. So already 207 days off each year. On top of that they only"work" 9-3 which is 6 hours a day in the remaining 158 days and means 18 hours off every single day - 2844 hours more off, or 118.5 days.
So that means they only work 39.5 days in a year, and as they don't do full shifts, working only 6 hours per working day, then those 39.5 working days convert to 29.625 "real" working days of 8 hours per day, in each year.
On top of that your average teacher gets out of 3 more days of actually working per year by going on school day trips to museums and stuff, and many get a further week away on in term weeks away with pupils. That leaves 19.625 days a year work. Made up in my head government statistics say that public sector workers have the highest sickness rate in the UK due to the "stress" of their jobs, taking on average 18.625 days per year sick leave, paid of course.
Your average teacher therefore only works one day per year! This day happens to be on November 30th and they're on fucking strike that day!
And they think their pensions aren't quite lucrative enough? Try going to work for a day or two, you spongers.
Take teachers for example. They have 104 days off in a year due to weekends, 8 bank holidays and usually around 4 "teacher training days". That's 116 days. Then they have 13 weeks paid holiday - 91 days. So already 207 days off each year. On top of that they only"work" 9-3 which is 6 hours a day in the remaining 158 days and means 18 hours off every single day - 2844 hours more off, or 118.5 days.
So that means they only work 39.5 days in a year, and as they don't do full shifts, working only 6 hours per working day, then those 39.5 working days convert to 29.625 "real" working days of 8 hours per day, in each year.
On top of that your average teacher gets out of 3 more days of actually working per year by going on school day trips to museums and stuff, and many get a further week away on in term weeks away with pupils. That leaves 19.625 days a year work. Made up in my head government statistics say that public sector workers have the highest sickness rate in the UK due to the "stress" of their jobs, taking on average 18.625 days per year sick leave, paid of course.
Your average teacher therefore only works one day per year! This day happens to be on November 30th and they're on fucking strike that day!
And they think their pensions aren't quite lucrative enough? Try going to work for a day or two, you spongers.
You are currently experiencing a lucky and very brief window of awareness, sandwiched in between two periods of timeless and utter nothingness. So why not make the most of it, and stop wasting your life away trying to convince other people that there is something else? The reality is obvious.