Tuesday, 9 June 2026

Hear Hear Hear

 Immigration is never uncontrolled. It is limited already by factors such as finances and transport availability. 

You might want to consider uncontrolled migration areas in which people may come and go without any checks comparable to Free Port parts of International Harbours for cargo, in order to speed up traffic and business conduct. 

Immigration is limited by the ability to emigrate from another nation. Obviously, every welcoming nation has the right to create rules on how to may stay.

I would like to build a company in England, if I ever sort the finances. I need than clear and simple to understand rules and ways to proof that I do so.

Then there are individual rights and laws covering those.

The current debate is mixing up general laws with individual laws. That kills migration which is needed to conduct business. For the worlds most important Financial Hub, instead of considering more laws and rules, you want to consider if there a dedicated zones in which everyone who can afford rent and live for as long as he wants being able to fiance his tenure and not break any law.

The rest you may ask what they intend to do and judge them for that.

So we should you... voted members of parliament ...and treat you as every one else failing to stick to your declaration before having been allowed to move into, not through, but immigrating that House.

Remember, remember...

#provos #ironcladthegoblin 

Can you define immigration migration and emigration for me, please, I am learning English. 

These three words describe moving, but they focus on different directions and viewpoints. Emigrate means to leave your home country. Immigrate means to enter and settle in a new country. Migrate is a general word for moving from one place to another.
The difference between these actions becomes easy to understand when you look at the focus of the sentence:
1. Emigrate (Exit / Leaving)
Definition: To leave your home country to live somewhere else permanently.
Memory Trick: Both Emigrate and Exit start with the letter E. Think of it as "leaving from".
Example: "My grandparents emigrated from Poland in 1990.
2. Immigrate (Into / Arriving)
Definition: To come into a new country in order to settle and live there.Memory Trick: Both Immigrate and In start with the letter I. Think of it as "coming to".
Example: "My grandparents immigrated to Canada in 1990.
3. Migrate (Moving)
Definition: A general term for moving from one place to another. It doesn't have to be permanent and is often used for seasonal work or animals (like birds flying south for the winter).
Example: "Many birds migrate to warmer countries during the winter.
 
For more visual ways to practice these words, you can watch the BBC Learning English TikTok or check out the YouTube Migrate Shorts.Would you like to try writing a practice sentence using one of these words? If you write one, I can check your spelling and grammar. 

Thank you Doctor Google.