Quote: roscoff @ June 11 2009, 4:16 PM BST
"If you look at the levels of crime when the pit was open they were low. Most of the vandalism, drug-taking and car crime is the result of the colliery closing."
Full article here
http://www.unison.org.uk/features/features/0403miners.asp.
And I think you'll find backed up by national crime statistics. Fact is when you create such a vacuum. People can't pay the mortgage, buy clothes for the kids and there is no employment for the 18-20 year olds then you are looking at a sorry state of affairs. No not everyone would turn to crime etc but it will w increase. You are not comparing like with like. If a huge employer in your area was to pull out do you think that things would stay the same? All academic research would beg to differ. As does reality. Flawed argument?
Oh I get it, use facts and figures to back up your argument. You swine!
I agree that losing a major employer of any kind in a remote community will have disasterous effects on the population.
Though I'm still of the opinion that working down a mine is dangerous and if I ever met any of my kids, I would do everything in my power to make sure they wouldn't pursue such an occupation.
Crime maybe up, but I bet that death by black lung, cave ins and poisonous gas asphyxiation is way, way down.
I think I'm just flabbergasted that when these miners were in full time employment and bringing home wedges of dosh, they didn't send their kids to private schools or universities.
Maybe they just had thick kids from the coal dust contamination or some type of avian canary flu.