Construction Working Quotes

Quotes tagged as "construction-working" Showing 1-5 of 5
Karl Wiggins
“Unemployed people will use any number of excuses including discrimination for reasons such as disability, race, sexual orientation, religion, sex or age, or maybe there’s a shortage of jobs in their area. Well if that’s the case then they can travel to wherever the work is and go into digs. I work in construction management and regularly work with steel erectors from Ireland or Newcastle, electricians from Cardiff, fixers from Sheffield or Birmingham, steel fixers from Romania, carpenters from Poland, canteen girls from Romania, scaffolders from Lithuania, and concrete gangs of Indians, and they all travel wherever the work is and they all live in digs. We all do. It’s the nature of our industry.”
Karl Wiggins, 100 Common Sense Policies to make BRITAIN GREAT again

Karl Wiggins
“A good bricklayer can lay his last brick of the day, point up, wash up, turn his back on his day’s work, and every single one of the joints between the bricks will be exactly 15mm. Why? Because he’s done it so many times, that’s why. It’s repetitive.

It’s probably the same for a good hairdresser, a mechanic, a musician, a prostitute and I’m sure Masai Warriors hunting lions in the heart of the Masai Mara.”
Karl Wiggins, Wrong Planet - Searching for your Tribe

Salman Rushdie
“Construction work was the city’s new brutalist art form, erecting its installations wherever you looked. Tall buildings fell and construction sites rose. Pipes and cables rose from and descended into the hidden depths. Telephone landlines ceased to work and water and power and gas services were randomly suspended. Construction work was the art of making the city become aware of itself as a fragile organism at the mercy of forces against which there was no appeal. Construction work was the mighty metropolis being taught the lessons of vulnerability and helplessness. Construction workers were the grand conceptual artists of our time and their installations, their savage holes in the ground, inspired not only hatred—because most people disliked modern art—but also awe.”
Salman Rushdie, The Golden House

“At 175 Longwood Road South, Suite 301A, Hamilton, Ontario, Training seekers provide health & safety training. Our purpose to give you the proper information and tools to find the training you need for your work.”
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Salman Rushdie
“Construction work was the art of making the city become aware of itself as a fragile organism at the mercy of forces against which there was no appeal.”
Salman Rushdie, The Golden House