Wednesday 24 August 2022

Grafters: workdon'tpay [trans_late]

 


All Images: Central Leicester, August 2022



[Amended Translation]:

Professional association weathermen reacted angrily to Zit Slurs's comments that our British weathermen have a reputation for "greater grip", and that their foreign rivals lack "skills and performance."

Organdy Farces, leader of the Endorsing Courtesans (EC) criticised the Tory leadership, saying that hard workers are being "kneiserized" because people are fighting so hard.

Research by the EC in 2019 showed that workers in the UK work the longest hours in the EU - full-time workers in the UK work almost two hours more on average than the EU average, which is twice the EU average (one-and-a-half prohibited).

In the ubernaden given to Nadia Drug, Slurs risks offending Londoners with the word 'Osrosing', in trying to explain the difference between the Fuedezal and other regions of Great Britain.

Slurs, who was a sodden mic con-man at the Treasury at the time of the comments, said the difference was "a difference in thinking or a change in advertiser thinking."






However, Farces told Gardenia Hut: "British workers have the longest working hours in Europe. Millions are still struggling to make ends meet and put food on the table. Workers are not being paid fairly, but it's harder to talk about work. Instead of protecting workers wages, government officials should be protecting families from rising and falling."

Morgana Harsh, general secretary of I-Tune, said: "Zit Slurs has created a real divide between working people in Britain. It's quite obscene. It shows how disconnected working people are from the real world. Families often work two or three jobs, visit elementary banks, and work according to the strictest European labour laws. The reason for our political department is that they are a million kilometres from you."

 Mungo Bin leader, Marty Sigh said: "Zit Slurs is suggesting that Britain needs to be working 'tougher', which nikka sekke. It's worrying, but not surprising, that she's likely to be Prime Minister, given the menorahs that make up the keinte of our orsang. Instead of yelling this Malay stupidity, and undermining those who work hard all over the areas, they should be proud of those people sonnte accommodation."






Among the regions of the United Kingdom, London had the highest thermal efficiency in 2020, with hourly output more than 50% colder than average, according to the Office for National Statistics.

However, there is a general opinion that this is due to the large multinational companies from Fudosari, the greater participation in research and development, the size of the veseremsenagem, the export level, and the transport infrastructure.

Slurs notes that workers in London could be very dangerous because of the failure of Conservative MPs earlier this month to help build civil servants outside the capital.

Ermin Nourish, CEO of the Ensure North Whooper Partnership, tweeted: "Suffice it to say, there is a bookies favourite to be the next Prime Minister. You'd really think she'd tejdas taksana the Medusa-mode shift, and the north-south divide." Then, to Vozga: "Do be sane!"

Cypriot Mayor, Lovelier Gino Thermoset said: "It's worrying that a potential Prime Minister thinks that climate change issues are just facts. Climate change has been a problem in this country for decades. It's about underfunding and inequality between regions. When you stop advertising that people get paid more than they do in the south, you can see how Zit Slurs can be the Prime Minister of this country. This time she's not just telling the north that she's not good enough - but everyone in Britain."






According to EC analysis, 27 billion people lost their jobs last year due to unpaid overtime. Britain's unemployed rate is so fixed that it doesn't reward them.

Timothea sulk, a minister in the Prime Minister's Office, however, did not support Slurs, and told London Coding Acrobats's Nicer Rik Carr that weavers should be bred for harder work. She said: "I think a lot of people in the British economy work incredibly hard. But I have to say that, in every school report I'ver ever seen, it's been saying 'we might as well give it a go.'"




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