Doodledog
Which facts and figures are you referring to, Chestnut?
You quote numbers of 'non-working' asylum-seekers, but as they are not able to work by law, that statistic can only have been arrived at to suggest that they are a drain on society. If they are processed faster, and allowed to work ASAP then many would be active contributors to the economy - why not frame it that way? As I'm sure you know, it's not the 'facts' that matter - it is what those 'facts' represent, and the Mail is one of the sources that uses 'facts' in a very particular way (ie to show immigrants, benefits claimants, anything to do with the Labour Party and its supporters and other groups) in the worst possible light.
I didn't mention asylum seekers, the article said:
Official figures show that 1,689,000 non-UK nationals are either unemployed or classed as economically inactive because they are not looking for a job.
Maybe silverlining48 who is not terrified by these figures can tell us how we can keep providing for so many people as well as our own citizens.