But now You cannot even use a telephone directory and looking up the shape of a name and phone number without the ability to use the alphabet
I'm not taking it personally Danidl, I'm just trying to show you how hopelessly wrong you are on this subject. Read on and you'll discover that there are far more unskilled jobs now than at any other time since WW2.
I use to have a lot of respect for you, but now you are rapidly losing it. How many times must I say that we effectively have 100% literacy in this country, yet still you come back with the need to know the alphabet. How the on earth do you think all these people are texting on their smartphones?
This extended riff started off when I suggested that in our youth, those people with extremely poor literacy were able to get on better and were at less disadvantage than those of today . It was possible to hide this lack then but not now.. The reason being that .. . There were more unskilled jobs , and even skilled jobs which did not require literacy or numeracy.
This is completely untrue, there has been a huge expansion of unskilled menial jobs since our youth. When I was young large numbers were employed in manufacturing doing skilled or semi skilled jobs, but most of those jobs have disappeared and we've grown a service economy instead, as witness the huge increase in the number of office blocks in our towns and cities.
All those offices have occasioned huge growth in the number of cleaners, door, security and mailroom staff, all unskilled jobs. And here again you've shown your quaintly old fashioned view by saying cleaning is mostly done by women. It isn't, for decades office cleaning is overwhelmingly done by men. Even the youngsters I mentioned are all male. The reason is simple, office cleaning is done after business hours in the evening and overnight when many women need to be caring for their children.
Which brings me to the next area of huge expansion of unskilled jobs where women indeed do much of the work. That area is tourism which we've hugely expanded as an earner in place of lost manufacturing. That's brought a large increase in the hospitality industry, hotels etc, and thousands of jobs like chambermaid maintaining hotel rooms within school hours, so ideally suiting women. I need hardly list all the other unskilled jobs associated with tourism.
Having shown those two areas of huge increase in menial work since our youth, I turn to a third huge area which didn't exist at all when we were young, recycling.
All over the country local authorities have recycling depots where we take ours to, and as we all know each has a number of staff in completely new unskilled jobs. The skipfulls of material then go on to dedicated recycling companies, where once again they employ large numbers of unskilled sorting and grading workers. Some automation has proved possible in those companies, but they still have to resort to manual stages of final sorting.
Which brings me onto another completely new area of manual work, the waste to power stations which are springing up now. We have a large one of these here where large numbers of unskilled workers are employed sorting and extracting unsuitable materials from the refuse on a long conveyer belt heading for the furnace.
No, I'm not finished yet, not by far. Take cars, when we were young the roads were virtually empty, but now they are clogged with around 30 million cars, all getting dirty. The automatic washing machines haven't found favour with many motorists so manual handwash stations have sprung up. They are everywhere, at garages, in car parks, random sites etc, employing countless thousands of unskilled workers.
Then there's the supermarkets that didn't exist when we were young but now are everywhere and dominate the retail sector. They overwhelmingly employ unskilled labour, warehousing, unloading, shelf stacking, checkouts, hundreds of thousands of completely new unskilled jobs that didn't exist when we were served in individual shops by people with skills in their supply area.
But of course we buy much online, supplied by the likes of Amazon from warehouses full of unskilled or semiskilled staff doing jobs that never use to exist.
And to deliver those goods we have a huge number of courier companies with many thousands of loading and driving jobs that didn't used to exist.
Then of course another vast new area of employment for the unskilled is fast food, which didn't exist when we were young but is now a massive national industry.
And how about minicabs in their countless thousands. When we were young and everyone much poorer, few could use taxis. But now almost everyone uses minicabs, creating a vast number of new unskilled jobs.
I could go on listing more, but I've shown that the number of new unskilled jobs overwhelmingly surpasses the small number lost to technology and qualifications that you've been able to give as examples
And far from there being a shortage of unskilled jobs, the vast increase in them has necessitated importing many hundreds of thousands of immigrants to fill the vacancies. That's not just in crop picking, it's in all of the areas I've listed.
The mistake you and many have made is in believing what the politicians say and the media and academia exaggerates. For years they've all propagated the lie that everyone has to be much better educated to be able to get a job at all, but they've always been wrong as I've showed above.
We've had Harold Wilson with his "white heat of technology", telling us we'd all be in an age of leisure by the millenium, with little need to work. In fact by the millennium we were telling the EU we couldn't manage with their 35 hour week and needed 48 hours. So much for the age of leisure.
We've had the idiot Blair with his "education, education, education" message, leading to half our young pointlessly going to university and getting degrees, only to find the only jobs for most of them are the unskilled ones I've listed.
And of course academia has a vested interest in promoting their false message.
So please ignore their message, just look at the facts. Since WW2 there's never been more unskilled employment than there is now. The range of unskilled jobs now available is immense.
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