British social issues associated with the film

Drew 2022-10-01 11:01:35

I, Daniel Blake#

It's a very Labour movie, set in Newcastle. The friendly accent made me guess for a second that it was the North.

Probably after staying in the UK for so long, I really have feelings, and I will sign up for NHS volunteers. The people at the bottom are suffering everywhere. The film implicitly mentions the impact of globalization on handicraftsmen, the abandonment of some people in the information age, and the inefficiency of the government. Sometimes I feel that the government is doing okay, the policies are okay, and the procedures are still normal. It is just that you have not encountered strange things, but you still seem to have some value. I went to three police stations in New York to deal with theft cases, tossed materials over and over again at the Danish Visa Center in London until I wanted to cry, and the inefficient police office system and appointment system that I could never get in touch with...

This is not to accuse the West and China of being good or bad, and it is not uncommon for domestic procedures to be broken. It's just that capital is easy to use everywhere, and distress is mostly left to the poor in the middle and lower classes. We're too used to the meritocracy point of view, thinking that A government is there to facilitate people and get the best out of their strengths, but what if, there's a little guy that needs a help hand?

Frankly speaking, I blocked a Conservative Chinese-American MP I know (only for this dynamic). I still don't want to confront this issue head-on, I'll just talk to myself.

The more I write the political commentary in the past two days, the more I feel like God dammit, It's all the fault of not only Tory but also the neoliberalism that unprepares the system for pandemics.

But is there any other solution? When the short-term bull market of drinking poison to quench thirst has passed, and when the demand stimulus is no longer there, the Federal Reserve begins to forcibly issue money to inject water. In the age of technology, most occupations are destined to disappear/replace, and those with skills cannot get the basic survival compensation. Even for people with disabilities, it is necessary to add bedroom text, and for large companies, tax cuts and tax cuts are required, and a lot of money flows into bonds and the stock market (ok does create jobs in the short term). Is there really no other way to quench thirst by drinking poison like this?

ok, even if the Conservative Party steps down and the Labour Party comes to power, can it be better, after all, the global industrial market is no longer the pattern of the 60s. A look at American Factory is especially hopeless. I'm sorry, I'm just very angry, thinking that it is difficult for me to decide whether to stay or stay as an international student, I want to encounter the epidemic in the UK for a long time, and I want to go to Sweden to the Netherlands because of the epidemic. Great space. But still hurt by the distant cry, because it feels so close, so close.

What am I afraid of. The next group to be paid as the price and sacrificed regardless of the cost is ourselves.

I hope the love and kindness in the movie is real, because now I see more hatred, xenophobia, panic, anger, arrogance, and the east and the west are just fifty steps to laugh at one hundred steps.

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Extended Reading

I, Daniel Blake quotes

  • Daniel: It's a monumental farce, isn't it? You sitting there with your friendly name tag on your chest, Ann, opposite a sick man looking for nonexistent jobs, that I can't take anyway. Wasting my time, employers' time, your time. And all it does is humiliate me, grind me down. Or is that the point, to get my name off those computers? Well, I'm not doing it any more. I've had enough. I want my date for my appointment for my appeal for Employment and Support.

  • Katie: I'm just really hungry.