By Jim Osborne.
While Australian workers are still under pressure from one of the
most expensive housing markets in the world and a rising cost of living,
the government has decided to implement a plan in which people could be
paid up to $300 a week to house those who have bypassed our immigration
process. i
Our government clearly has no interest at all any more in protecting
the Australian identity and the well-being of Australian workers. Our
present government, much like our past one, no longer has any shame with
regards to its desire to remould Australia into a crowded, cosmopolitan
backwater.
Government handouts of up to $300 a week are overly generous, with
many people struggling to find this amount to rent a single home. But if
one chooses to use their home in order to drive up our population to
beyond its already unsustainable levels and allow people to bypass our
border controls, they get our tax payer dollars. What is worse, is that
it is easy for people here to be paid up to $300 dollars to house their
own family members who have come over. It would be easy for someone to
register with the privately run Australian Homestay Network, and
essentially have their own rent paid by us to house their brother or
parents or other family members or friends. Housing illegal immigrants
will now be a lucrative, tax payer funded venture. The potential for
abuse of this system is huge.
Although the cost for this unbelievable program is set to be taken
from the existing portion of the budget dedicated to housing asylum
seekers (which the portion could always just be increased), what is
worrying is that the focus of OUR government is not on the Australian
workers and tax payers who the government is subservient to, but
idealistic moral ventures.
This venture is not only foolish and wasteful, but also dangerous,
leaving people who haven’t gone through thorough checks loose in the
homes of Australians and in our communities. This policy provides short
cuts for people to enter our civic life from abroad, and to do so
without the care and consideration that should be taken, and at a very
high financial cost of up to $1,200 a month.
Australia should be looking at tighter, not looser control of its
borders. Governments should be doing something, anything at all, about
our astronomical house prices, which are hurting us greatly, instead of
providing free suburban accommodation to refugees. If the Gillard
government wanted to show its utter contempt for Australian workers and
give them the finger, then it has certainly achieved that goal with this
contemptible, poorly thought out idea.