Reblogged from Vox Political:
Residential
Workfare for the disabled. If that sentence hasn’t already set off at least
three separate alarms in your head, then you haven’t been paying attention.
What follows is a warning: Stay alert. Ask questions. Do not allow what
this article predicts.
Workfare, for all those who still need enlightening after
three years of this particular Tory-led nightmare, is a
government-sponsored way of keeping unemployment high while pretending to be
doing something about it. The idea is to send unemployed people to work
for a period of several weeks – often for a large employer that is perfectly
capable of taking on staff at a reasonable wage – and remove them from the
unemployment figures for that time, even though they continue to be paid only in
benefits. When the time period is served, the jobseeker returns to the dole
queue and another is taken on, under the same terms. The employer pays nothing
but reaps profit from the work that is carried out. The jobseeker gains nothing
at all.
The disabled are, of course, the most persecuted sector of modern
British society – far more vilified than hardened criminals or
terrorists. Since the Coalition came into office by the back door in
2010, it has been government policy to close down employers taking on disabled
people (Remploy factories), to spread propaganda against them, claiming they are
scroungers or skivers, and the vast majority of disability benefit claims are
fraudulent (this is true of only 0.4 per cent of such claims – a tiny minority). The bedroom tax, enforced nationally in April, has
proven itself to be a means of driving disabled people out of homes that have
been specially adapted to accommodate their needs. The Work Programme, which
was extended to disabled people last December, has
proven totally unsuited to the task of getting them into work, yet the Work
Capability Assessment for Employment and Support Allowance continues to sign 70
per cent of claimants off the benefit as ‘fit for work’ (whether they are or
not), and a further 17 or 18 per cent into a ‘work-related activity’ group where
they must try to make themselves employable within 365 days.
The word ‘residential’ – applied to any sector of society at
all, never mind whether they’re disabled or not – rightly sends shivers through
the hearts of anyone in this country of good conscience. The terrible regime at
the Winterbourne View home in Bristol is still recent, and nobody wants to see
those crimes repeated – on anyone.
However, put these three words together and that seems the most likely
consequence.
So why bother?
Here’s some pure speculation for you: The government knew that the bedroom
tax was going to put the squeeze on the disabled, and it knew that disabled
people would complain (although there was no way of knowing whether it would win
a court case on the issue, as happened this week). It had already devised a
solution and called it residential training for the disabled.
This is already running. It provides worthless
Work Programme-style training to participants while filling their heads with
the
silly nonsense that the Skwawkbox blog showed up to such great effect
earlier this year, encouraging them to ‘think new thoughts’.
The residential aspect means that participants currently get to stay in their
own rooms, in relative comfort – but this could change, and very soon.
You see, this scheme is intended as a pilot study, and the plan has always
been to expand this form of training, opening it up to the market, for
private-sector parasites to run for profit after competing with each other to
put in the lowest bid for the franchise.
Bye bye, individual rooms. Bye bye, dignity. Hello, communal dormitories.
Hello… well, eventually it’ll just be hell.
And you can be sure mandation will follow, meaning anyone refusing to attend
will lose benefit.
Gradually, disabled people will disappear from our communities, ending up in
these residential ‘Workfarehouses’.
How long will it take before we start hearing stories about abuses taking
place against people living in these places?
How long did it take before the stories came out of Winterbourne View?
Come to that, how long did it take before the world found out about places
like Auschwitz or Dachau or Belsen?
I know what you’re thinking:
“It couldn’t happen here.”
Think again.