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scot47

Joined: 10 Jan 2003 Posts: 15343
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Posted: Mon Feb 23, 2004 11:45 am Post subject: ?? |
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My my, Mr Gugelhupf you do seem upset !
The vitriolic response from you and others just illustrates the depths to which public discourse in the UK has sunk.
Perhaps your response is so heated because you know that there is something very rotten in the State of Britain ?
Have a nice day. |
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leeroy
Joined: 30 Jan 2003 Posts: 777 Location: London UK
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Posted: Mon Feb 23, 2004 7:44 pm Post subject: |
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scot47 wrote: |
Mr Leeroy, there are too many people in this game who wear rose-coloured spectacles and see every thing in beautiful tones. An alternative view has to be presented.
You seem to think that because I have a diferent point of view I am wicked or evil or perverse. |
Agreed - people's expectations of ELT are sometimes unrealistic. I do not oppose the principal of "telling people how it really is" - which you are far more qualified than I to do.
I would love to hear your "different point of view", but does it extend far past "Too many teachers are unqualified, this industry is rubbish, Britain is a bad country"? It's getting to sound a little like a tired record. Is this the sum total of your experience that you are willing to share with us?
Your evident self-styled vigilante mission against "anyone doing TEFL and enjoying themselves" is an education for no-one. How many people (honestly) will read your OP here and think "what a thought-provoking post... there are some interesting aspects to living and working in Britain that I hadn't considered before"?
Instead, your online persona invokes responses such as that recently made by Mr Gugelhupf - which are equally fruitless. For the most part, your participation on this forum has resulted in pointless negativity - regardless of whether your true intentions were malicious.
scot47 wrote: |
But then I should not expect much intellectual sophistication from someone who chooses "Mr T" as his avatar. |
Oh come on. Really! This, fittingly, sums up your attitude to this forum. You are not interested in discussing, sharing or debating anything, preferring to make snide derogatory remarks of little practical use or consequence.
I have seen no evidence in your post to suggest that you are "wicked or evil or perverse". I find the content, implied motivation and overall effect of your presence on this forum a negative one.
I'm sure many don't share my feelings on this issue - and indeed the world would be a dull place without diversity. Ironically, perhaps, my recent posts here have displayed as much pointless negativity as I have accused your posts of having... |
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SueH
Joined: 01 Feb 2003 Posts: 1022 Location: Northern Italy
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Posted: Mon Feb 23, 2004 10:39 pm Post subject: |
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It seems Leeroy has got in with many of the points I would have made if I really had the time and energy to respond at length. I�m afraid (pace grahamb) that Scot47 s posts rarely enlighten in any constructive way and after a time are as predictably amusing as a saloon bar bore. I wouldn�t use the language gugelhupf used, but I can understand some of the frustration behind the sentiment. I quite expected to see his statement �Politeness and diplomacy are qualities traditionally highly regarded in this neck of the woods� transformed into a negative opinion from Scot that hypocrisy and mealy-mouthedness abounds. There is in fact no discourse in any detailed sense to which we can respond. I can well believe the statement that �I am in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia - which I find a more congenial place than Her Majesty's Dominions�, and I seem to recall money being mentioned but I don�t recall any other reasons for this opinion. This may be more a reflection of the person than of the country, but it is difficult to tell. Generally Saudi posters seem to have a jaundiced enough view of both the country and their expatriate colleagues and the word �congenial� seems conspicuous by its� absence.
So far this thread has criticised negativity and apathy in the UK as well as hoping that we �outgrow your positive outlook on the wonders of life in the UK�. I suppose I might agree with �confused��. |
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steampig
Joined: 27 Oct 2003 Posts: 28
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Posted: Tue Feb 24, 2004 4:38 am Post subject: |
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Well, blow me down if the UK forum hasn't just taken off! As for the negativity about Britain. Let us make a few points. Working in London is a particularly unremunerative place to be in our line of work. I won't say 'profession' or else Scot (probably correctly) will jump down my throat. However, there is a world outside of the bustling metropolis. If you want to earn some money try going 'up North', where life is far from grim and can be reasonably remunerative. The universities in the north of England are overflowing with Chinese students, which has inevitably led to a great increase in the need for teachers and a consequent need to pay reasonably. Far from the 12 pounds an hour you will get in private language schools in London, I know most universities pay over 20 pounds an hour and one that pays nearly 30 pounds an hour, which is respectable income, especially if your rent is cheaper.
I think, and I am certainly not going to check it up, that it was in Sherlock Holmes story that Picadilly (the London one, before outraged Mancunians write to tell me there is more than one) was the centre of the Empire and rather like a giant plughole attracted all the scum of the earth. I am merely paraphrasing. The point being that the concept of Britain 'going to the dogs' is a universal theme of British life. I think it was Dostoevsky who wrote of the melancholy English drowning their sorrows in public houses, not talking to each other. Now since he also commented that English women were the most beautiful on earth, he may not be the world's most reliable correspondent, but I hope you take my point. Erasmus, wrote scathingly about the coldness of British housing after visiting Thomas More. He, also, wrote about how crap the wine was, which was a little unfair since climate change during the fifteenth century had rendered our vineyards obsolete and we, therefore, were importing our wine from France. The French no doubt, as they do to this day were selling their rubbish abroad whilst keeping the drinkable stuff for domestic consumption. Even in The Middle Ages it was said that ' the English take their pleasures sadly'. It probably accounts for our national pastime of flagellation, which means that pleasure can only be accompanied by pain.
Historical correspondents going back to the middle ages also point out that the common Englishman had a remarkable capacity for mindless drunkenness and violence. Recognise anything here?
Personally, I blame the climate. It is impossible to be happy for too long in a climate as dark and dank as the British one.
Now there are plus points to all this. The British are a wonderfully sceptical people who have a proud philosohical tradition of empiricism that wholeheartedly flies in the face of most of the european tradition. Not being excitable they tend to treat ' triumph and disaster' with similar acerbity. They have put a great tradition of words to be the servant of literature and rarely that of political polemic. They have a healthy scepticism of politics of all kinds, especially, when it involves ideas. Their dislike of ideas has meant they managed to avoid some of the twentieth century's worst manifestations in communism and fascism. However, their inate sense of freedom allowed Karl Marx to spend his time in London writing 'Das Kapital'. Incidentally, both Marx and Engels utterly despaired of the English as a revolutionary people despite the fact that 'Kapital' was entirely based on Britain's nineteenth century capitalist society. So, it's not all bad I think.
Anyway, that's my two pennorth. I hope it hasn't caused too much offence. |
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gugelhupf
Joined: 24 Jan 2004 Posts: 575 Location: Jabotabek
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Posted: Tue Feb 24, 2004 7:48 am Post subject: |
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Thankyou, Steampig, for a breath of fresh air! Thanks too for the reminder that GB extends well beyond the M25. |
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naturegirl321

Joined: 04 May 2003 Posts: 9041 Location: home sweet home
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Posted: Tue Feb 24, 2004 9:48 am Post subject: |
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grahamb wrote: |
The passing away of Bnix . |
Passing away?! did he die? yikes |
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grahamb

Joined: 30 Apr 2003 Posts: 1945
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Posted: Tue Feb 24, 2004 10:51 am Post subject: Bnix |
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Yes, he died last July, if I remember rightly. A friend of his posted an announcement about it. |
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grahamb

Joined: 30 Apr 2003 Posts: 1945
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Posted: Tue Feb 24, 2004 11:02 am Post subject: Life north of Watford. |
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The UK extends even further north than the dark satanic mills. There's a quaint little place called Scotland. It's not perfect, but the natives appear immune to the Europhobia that is endemic in England. |
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leeroy
Joined: 30 Jan 2003 Posts: 777 Location: London UK
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Posted: Tue Feb 24, 2004 8:38 pm Post subject: |
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Yep. That's why people don't like scot47. It's because he's Scottish. |
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khmerhit
Joined: 31 May 2003 Posts: 1874 Location: Reverse Culture Shock Unit
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Posted: Wed Feb 25, 2004 5:41 pm Post subject: |
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Carry On Up the Khyber, Scot. Keep up the good work, cheerio pip pip and all the rest.
Quote: |
"British India, 1895. The Burpas are revolting but then again "The Devils in Skirts" who guard the Khyber Pass are none too charming either.
Can Sid James as Sir Sidney Ruff-Diamond prevent the scheming Khasi of Kalabar (Kenneth Williams) from starting a full scale rebellion, massacring thousands of innocent people, ending British Rule and making his cushy job obsolete? Can he prevent the secret concerning the 3rd Foot and Mouth Regiment from becoming common knowledge among the natives?
Join the Carry On team in this tale of passion, greed and missing underpants, set in the raging days of the Raj." |
http://www.google.ca/search?q=cache:GVumdBmc9R0J:www.carryonline.com/carry/cokhyber.html+carry+on+up+khyber&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
You should probably take a holiday, however--- a holiday in Cambodia  |
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SueH
Joined: 01 Feb 2003 Posts: 1022 Location: Northern Italy
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Posted: Wed Feb 25, 2004 7:16 pm Post subject: |
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Ah yes, Khmer - a classic of the genre, best after a number of pints of Pedigree and/or a few spliffs, according to choice. |
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Capergirl

Joined: 02 Feb 2003 Posts: 1232 Location: Nova Scotia, Canada
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Posted: Thu Feb 26, 2004 1:07 pm Post subject: |
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Well, things are getting heated on the UK forum!
@Leeroy, I agree with you. Why would any sane North American want to come to your piddly little country? (Well ok, all the phone boxes may not be red, but those double decker buses are damned charming! )
I feel sorry for the queen's palace guards, though. Can you say "cruel and unusual"????  |
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Will.
Joined: 02 May 2003 Posts: 783 Location: London Uk
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Posted: Thu Feb 26, 2004 3:46 pm Post subject: |
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Right.........
Correct me if I am wrong, but a certain lady of the spangly pants was planning to visit the southern parts of our wonderful metropolis this month, if my memory serves me well.
The continent of origin of this young lass? North America.
The question asked: why would any sane North American.............
Does this mean you are no longer sane or you are no longer visiting? |
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Capergirl

Joined: 02 Feb 2003 Posts: 1232 Location: Nova Scotia, Canada
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Posted: Thu Feb 26, 2004 5:03 pm Post subject: |
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Is your name, Leeroy?
Will, I would have to have been considered sane to begin with in order to be now declared "no longer" sane, but you are correct about the my North American roots and my plans to go to your part of the world. Yes indeed, I had planned to make a trip to England this spring but that trip has since been put on hold indefinitely. I had also intended to find ESL work there, if possible, but those plans have changed as well (for reasons I would rather not get into here).
Nonetheless, I still think England is a beautiful country and would love to return sometime in the future, even in spite of the large number of people who insist that the English are boorish and rude.  |
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Teacher in Rome
Joined: 09 Jul 2003 Posts: 1286
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Posted: Thu Feb 26, 2004 6:47 pm Post subject: |
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... which judging by some of the comments in this thread, they are! |
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