"British salaries are crap."
BUT, if you want to work in the US, you'll get a much larger salary, but you'll pay through the nose
for medicine, dentistry and so on, and if you become unemployed you may end up calling a large cardboard
box home: so, from my point of view at least, it's a real case of swings and roundabouts.
The disadvantage about the UK is that the nanny state takes all sorts of decisions for you, is incredibly
over-regulated, and sucks so much corporate tax your employer can only pay you a crap salary.
The disadvantage about the US is that unless you are extremely switched-on and prepared to take 100% responsibility
for all your decisions the chances of ending up as a complete clôchard are fairly high.
BUT, the fact is that where and when to use an apostrophe has got bugger all to do with which political
system you choose to live under, and the thing in the UK is that owing to the "cradle-to-the-grave" cocooning
of the vast majority of people, they have become so complacent they have relied on what passes for education
supplied by the state, which is extremely second-rate.
BUT, human brains/minds are NOT the same as those computers that sit on our desks, under our desks or
on our laps: they can go in for all sorts of nuanced fuzzy logic, so can cope with an apostrophe being in
the wrong place, but a "literal-minded" desktop computer ends up way off in the left field if it
is dealt some "curve ball's" [apostrophe intended].
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