Incredible man is both striver and skiver

A UNIQUE man has found himself straddling the new divide which has riven Britain because he is both striver and skiver.

Ryan Whittaker, 38, qualifies as a striver because of his 40-hour-a-week job as an offset print manager but is also one of the UK’s skivers because he f**ks off work every chance he gets.

He said: “They tell you that you must choose. That you can be either striver or skiver. I’m here to tell you you can be both.

“Take today, for example. We’ve secured a client and we’ve got until noon tomorrow to put together a comprehensive quote. I was in the office until 7pm yesterday working on it. But here I am the next morning working from home and watching Stranger Things.

“I’ll do nothing more than a few emails until lunch, then I’ll suddenly be on the phone blasting my staff, making them run around doing everything I haven’t while I’m in Teams meetings looking harried and hurrying them along. Back to full striver.

“And it’s not just work. I’ll have any benefit going. You should see the amount of tax relief I claim on my rental property. Do I need it? F**k no. I spent it on a massive telly.

“The budget upped my tax, which I’ll balance by contributing to our national productivity crisis by doing sod all in December. It’s about achieving that strive-skive balance.”

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Should you cash in on the lifting of the two-child benefit cap with wild procreation?

YESTERDAY saw the government abandon the two-child benefit cap, but does that mean you should start indulging in frantic reproduction? Find out with this guide.

PRO: Making a baby – whether it’s bankrolled by state handouts or not – usually involves sex, which feels great if you do it right. Plus you won’t have to worry about a split condom or pulling out because pregnancy is the whole point. All that shagging sounds great, and don’t worry about the subsequent task of raising a child, because that is a piece of piss.

CON: Banging at every opportunity could numb the thrill of sex even more than the countless hours you spend watching internet porn. If you want to feel any excitement you’ll have to constantly invent new sexual roleplay scenarios, and your partner may feel uncomfortable when you’re scraping the barrel with ones like ‘hot dinner lady’, hang gliding lessons and Bagpuss.

PRO: You’ll be lifting children out of poverty, statistically. By spawning a massive swarm of brats sucking away your personal wealth, you’ll be making everyone else better off, comparatively. Don’t worry that the knock-on effect of everyone doing this could impoverish Britain due to 80 per cent of the population being at primary school. Start f**king each other senseless right now for the sake of the economy.

CON: It’s the start of an 18-year commitment, minimum. And even when your kids have moved out you’ll still have to buy them birthday presents and sit through their dreary weddings. If you’re only having kids for the Universal Credit, do a moonlight flit every time one reaches 18 and stops bringing money in. Don’t feel bad – they’ll work out how to cook food and use the washing machine eventually.

PRO: Children often feel obligated to look after their parents as they get older. By procreating with abandon today and burdening your kids with guilt, you’re also gifting yourself a team of carers in a few decades’ time. What’s more, their blood and organs are likely to be a suitable match should you ever require a transplant. It’s a win-win.

CON: The benefit cap might be brought back. Reform are surely training their sights on benefits claimants ahead of the next election, and your human horde could be used on a billboard scaremongering about ‘Benefits Britain’. Maybe wait and see how the details of the new budget shake out before going crazy with the cream pies.

CONCLUSION: Only conceive a vast litter of children if you can already afford them, unless you think you might enjoy the Christmassy Dickensian vibe of leaving them in wicker baskets on people’s doorsteps.