[hider=THOMAS ROBINSON] [hider=DATABASE RECORDS] [img]https://imgur.com/BtQvBhm.jpg[/img][img]https://imgur.com/hrtTzr4.jpg[/img] [i]Offender Risk Profile "Single, white laddie of 18 goin' on 19" "Right 5'9 on the mark, av'rage as can b'. Hair look like a birdie nestin'. Wears hoodies 'nd darke' trousers" "Born 'nd raised Brummie. Moved b'tween homes on welfare" "Scholarship student at Thames' Edge" "Prickly, reserved type, turn y' down for a drink kind of [color=2e2c2c]twat[/color]" "Political supporter of populist, xenophobic movements, domestic 'nd online"[/i] [/hider] [hider=WRITTEN EVIDENCE] [i]Personal statement retrieved from UCAS[/i] The forces of economics have decided my life for me since the day I was born, so naturally by choosing to study this subject I can attempt to take back control of my life. My parents worked steady jobs until the recession, when they got laid off and we were put on welfare ever since. I heard this story repeated many times by my neighbors and relatives. And I lived it myself, a latchkey kid making runs to the food bank while my parents checked in daily at the job center for the next part time job available. I understood from a young age that businesses saw labor as numbers like their products. But unlike a goods or money supply where theory has allowed for excess demand to be represented as deficit or debt, a shortage in labor just means lower productivity. The unemployment rate of Britons had soared and never recovered in my lifetime, and as part of the problem I always sought to fix it. I became a practicing economist when I was only 10 years of age. My parents stopped arguing over expenses when they decided to give me their checks to organize. I knew even the days of birthday and Christmas novelties were bygone, so I maximized our budget purely for survival. After rent, whatever food banks could not provide I scrounged for at every supermarket sale within Birmingham almost, and holiday presents became gifts of clothes like the suits my father wore to job interviews. I reckon my family fared better than most in my area, since my next door tenants changed more frequently than we moved. My parents soon trusted me enough to do their taxes for them since I was managing their income anyways. Thus I became interested in looking up where our taxpayer money went towards government spending. I was angry when learning how much politicians spent lining the pockets of non Britons outside in the EU, while our own people with empty pockets go hungry right under their noses. Looking for alternatives, I read An Essay on the Principle of Population by Thomas Robert Malthus. Two hundred years later and counting I find his sentiments agreeable and views undeniable, that our population working or not if unfed becomes a detriment to our economy extending into society itself. What has also declined over time is the moral standard of the nation after influxes of immigrants with ulterior motives. Food security is threatened when good Briton establishments are shuttered then reopened by immigrants as greasy spoon kebab shops and Chinese takeaways importing outside food. I went to school with immigrants, and am proud to have beaten them in the subjects of mathematics and sciences as the top one percentile of my class. I studied hard to prove along with other Britons to the world that our nation has a self sufficient workforce including my parents whose utility we must prioritize over shelling out to immigrants and the EU. Brexit was an opportunity for me to initiate the change I wanted in my life. Despite being underage to vote at the time, I joined my local chapter of the Vote Leave campaign. I participated in conferences and rallies, where I helped organize participants and record political concerns and positions. I then personally requested to my campaign manager I follow up on those who live close to my home, handing them flyers and conversing with my neighborhood business owners, workers, and unemployed on how Brexit is the first step towards fixing our economy. I remember the talk I had with my parents who opposed my "donation" of time to politics, but I convinced them to vote "leave." I think my efforts contributed to the greater achievement of Brexit than any academic or professional one, and I learned from voters the importance of listening to the workforce that runs an economy when fixing one. The microeconomics of labor utility can be focused on after macroeconomic issues like labor market gluts are dealt with. I have no time to play and all the time to devote towards studying economics for a future where my parents have steady pay again. [/hider] [hider=UNIDENTIFIED SEIZURES] [url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Death][img]https://imgur.com/bPgbAFH.jpg[/img][/url][url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cane_gun][img]https://www.heavenlyswords.com/images/D/Pistol_Sword_Cane_M2603.jpg[/img][/url] [/hider] [/hider] [hider=Actual CS] [img]https://imgur.com/BtQvBhm.jpg[/img] Gender: Male Age: 18 Sexuality: Heterosexual Nationality: British Appearance: Brunette hair is long, curly and almost always messy, eyes with brown irises narrowed and shifty as if paranoid, wears hoodies to cover head out of self consciousness, darker color trousers with long unfolded hems, dark brown loafers, facial expressions shift between drooping disdain to tightened irritation Height: 5'9" Personality: Prickly or easily irritated when someone else attempts to initiate interaction, usually prefers being reserved and does activities on his own, converses with a stick up his butt in formal situations or at most sarcasm when relaxed, has suppressed anger about parents and financial situation, haughty towards those less fortunate (or outright discriminatory towards immigrants) but only if they show weakness, hates acting weak himself and would rather withdraw into shell than admit discomfort or negative emotions Persona: Black Death [img]https://imgur.com/bPgbAFH.jpg[/img] Skill: Nuclear Equipment: Cane gun Education: Economics Year 1 Biography: His parents worked steady jobs until the recession, when they got laid off and they were put on welfare ever since. Neither his father nor mother were financially savvy and spent most of their time job hunting, so they dumped the responsibility of managing finances onto their son who did show high aptitude for mathematics at young age. He grew up a latchkey kid who was self conscious about his poverty and fostered resentment against his parents for their ineptitude. Read economic theories particularly by Thomas Malthus and agreed the moral standard of living was being corrupted in his time. Became influenced by populist, xenophobic rhetoric online and showed racist disdain for immigrants around his area. When the EU referendum was beginning he joined the Vote Leave campaign as a youth organizer and devoted time to talking with voters, to the disapproval of parents who thought he should get a job for more income. Later applied to university and was accepted on scholarship at least for undergraduate studies, however conflicted whether he should stay for graduate years or return home to find work and provide for family. Affiliations: Mother and father [/hider]