A New Way To Micro-Manage

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A Wisconsin company is microchipping their workers. The chip permits workers to access company resources, log into PC’s, and purchase food but they expect to increase its abilities.

Not simply unlocking opportunities, not just self-check out in stores, so many other things.

The concept is unique to the United States but is expanding abroad. With tens of thousands of chips marketed to corporations across Europe, participating businesses hold chip parties to implant workers with the masses.

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The chip implants are the size of a speck of rice and optional to workers. Some people are a little worried, but from day one some were enthusiastic about what they could do with the technology itself, and where it could go for the company.

Approximately half of the Wisconsin workers opted out of the chip programme because some of their concerns were about health outcomes and what’s going to happen to their body when they’re putting this unknown thing into their hand and what’s going to occur down the road.

Employers and workers don’t come to the board with equal authority and equal access to one another and so the question around the problem of Microchipping workers really, in part, comes down to that.

Is it actually optional when your boss is asking you if you would like to be microchipped? Will there come a day where people who prefer not to be microchipped, won’t get specific jobs?

However, the company is guaranteeing workers that a microchip is a start in the right direction?

I imagine for some people the company would have to shoot them first before letting them implant a chip and people are foolishly becoming livestock and we should all wake up and inhale the java.

This will ultimately be imposed on all of us in our lifetimes. Furthermore, the government and corporate America will have complete authority over everything we do and shortly they’ll force legislators to devise a bill that you can get fired from a firm or refused work if you don’t get chipped.

Also, it’s ironic how the lambs fall for it, all they have to do is call it a chip party and every lamb runs along bleating.

This microchip is bull and it actually is a slippery incline to horrifying things and if you require any proof, study human history. Each new technology has essentially become instruments to dominate and eliminate people.

This sort of thing only ever occurred in really poor films and it’s a terrible technology in the wrong hands but we have the liberties to do anything we want, so if people want to get chipped it’s up to them, right?

Consider it this way, if they want to identify your marketing customs, they can verify your chip history. If they want to know where you are and where you’ve been, they can verify your chip. Do you honestly want someone else to have access to your everyday movements and habits?

Because it won’t simply be your boss, it will be data that can be obtained or summoned by anyone, the government included. Now consider how a video can be adjusted to match someone’s agenda. Data can likewise be manipulated.

Do you honestly want to be in that situation? Because it’s simply another way to manage us.

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If they illegally monitor all of our cell phones with no problem, what makes us believe they won’t do this with microchip implants? We are advancing one step closer to Big Brother dystopia.

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Most people have their phones with them all the time and WikiLeaks revealed the intelligence community taps each device that is connected to the internet. They upload all video’s and sound to a huge data collection centres, even when the device is turned off.

Of course, this technology already exists. It’s not a chip, but what do you imagine Facebook, Google and Amazon are? These websites map and document where you’ve been, purchasing habits, personalized advertisements per each user and much more.

We’ve been trained to accept stuff that deliberately reduces our freedoms, of course, it has been a more suggestive way of going about things, until now, people will ultimately accept that injecting a chip into one’s hand is the best thing to do.

It’s a one stop shopping, rather of extracting phone histories and bank accounts, they will have a one data pool. It skips through a bunch of red tape. This chip further paves the way to pursue our actions in real-time.

If people are okay with this, by all means, get a chip.

Vince Cable Slams Older Voters

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Sir Vince Cable has lashed out at hardline Brexit martyrs who see financial pain as a cost worth paying to break away from Brussels.

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The Liberal Democrat leader stated older Brexit voters have nostalgia from an imperial past and attacked them of masochism in a surprising offensive.

He spoke following a census discovered half of all Leave-voting pensioners believe Brexit will be deserving of it, even if their family members lose their jobs.

YouGov’s shock poll also discovered 61 percent of Leave voters stated significant destruction to the British market would be a price worth paying for Brexit. Amongst pensioners, the number was 71 percent.

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Sir Vince, who at 74 is the oldest party leader following Winston Churchill, stated: “To describe such masochism as ‘martyrdom’ is dangerous. We haven’t yet learned about Brexit jihadis, however, there is a hint of violence in the language which is troubling and self-declared martyrs seem to be predominantly in the elderly.

The pain of the old comes cheap because they have fewer jobs to lose, and the old have comprehensively shafted the young.

Furthermore the old have had the ultimate word about Brexit, inflicting a world view distorted by sentimentality for a supreme past on a younger generation much more content with contemporary Europe.

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In the meantime, Whitehall sources attempted to play down speculation that Theresa May would be prepared to pay a Brexit bill of £36 billion as part of a compromise to strike a far-reaching free trade deal with Brussels.

The so-called divorce bill has been one of the principal stumbling blocks in Brexit discussions within the Government and Brussels.

Evidently, the Government will only agree to meet the amount if the EU treats it as part of a settlement on prospective relations, including the comprehensive trade agreement solicited by the Prime Minister.

The EU’s position is that trade talks cannot start until meaningful development has been made on the financial arrangement, citizens freedoms and Northern Ireland.

Supposedly a senior Whitehall source was cited as stating the EU’s position was that the fee should be 60 billion euro (£54 billion), however the actual bottom line was 50 billion euro (£45 billion), the United Kingdom’s position was 30 billion euro (£27 billion) and the landing position is 40 billion (£36 billion) even if the people and MP’s are not all there yet.

But supposedly that actually is nonsense, supposedly, it’s not where we are. Apparently, the £36 billion figure is just speculation.

I’m not certain about shafting the young and I’m not convinced how he has the temerity to speak about it, what about his party pledging to eliminate tuition prices and then tripling them? What about his interview where he stated we had to import people from abroad to do the skilled trades because our own young people weren’t up to it?

Vince Cable has shafted enough people in his life time and we’ve had to put up with the old bottom burping moron.

There were actually a lot of retired people who voted to remain in the EU, not every ageing person voted to leave, it’s simply not true. There were hundreds of postal votes in residential homes for the elderly that may have tilted the numbers.

All voters in the United Kingdom elderly or young are shafted by whoever gets in.

Everyone gets shafted. The motorist is shafted over diesel, the motorist is shafted full stop, the old were shafted about saving for their old age. We all got shafted over energy tariffs and Vince Cable is one of those people, only this time the shoe is on the other foot and he doesn’t like it. We are all shafted full stop!

It’s all rather cynical, but then, most of us are pretty gullible and the government are forever in question and the people in the United Kingdom are the rubbish tip and there is no peace in this country.

Our border controls are much too carefree but that is now the shape of our nation and the government are comfortable allowing immigrants in because they will work for less and endless man-hours but the people are supposed to sit there in silence and say nothing.

We are inspired to vote but what are we really voting for? Because at the end of the day, it’s all really disheartening because we are fooled by our government all the time. We are always being swindled, however, too much wrong has been done now.

We can scrutinise the government as much as we like, but unless we the people do something about it, it’s going to continue to be the same and the government come under scrutiny all the time and we challenge what they’re doing, but that’s about it.

The people of the United Kingdom are a force to be reckoned with, they just don’t realise it. We make a lot of noise about our government but we are further so cautious of what we say and how we say it.

It’s not sensitivity that we need because the government have none at all, they just say whatever they want and they decline to have any compassion for the people of the United Kingdom, we are simply a factory of serfs.

 

 

 

 

Prince Philip Retires

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The Duke of Edinburgh has met Royal Marines who have finished a gigantic 1,664-mile trek, this is his last official Royal appearance before he withdraws from public duties.

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In the grounds of Buckingham Palace, Philip praised the accomplishments of servicemen who have taken part in the 1664 Global Challenge, a series of strength and endurance achievements raising funds and awareness for the Royal Marines Charity.

The Queen’s Consort announced in May he would be withdrawing from royal duties following more than 65 years supporting the monarch in her position as head of state and attending events for his own charities and organisations.

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In the forecourt of Buckingham Palace Philip, in his capacity as Captain General of the Royal Marines, attended a parade to mark the close of the 1664 Global Challenge.

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Philip, 96, was celebrated at the time for his public service with Prime Minister Theresa May leading the tributes stating he had given the Queen constant support, while Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn announced the Duke’s distinct understanding of public service had inspired people for more than 60 years.

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Despite his age, Philip’s decision, which was entirely supported by the Queen and was not medically related, came as a shock as he still seemed to enjoy engaging with people and carrying out his public position.

The Duke is recognised for his jokes and over the past few months has been joking about his approaching departure, even telling celebrity chef Prue Leith at a Palace event “I’m discovering what it’s like to be on your last legs”.

Buckingham Palace has emphasised although the Duke’s diary of appointments will come to a close on Wednesday, he might choose to attend individual events, alongside the Queen, from time to time.

The Queen’s public agenda proceeds as usual, but other members of the Royal Family will step up in support of the Monarch in her position as head of state.

Prince Philip’s relationship with the Royal Marines dates back 64 years to June 2, 1953, when he was elected Captain General in succession to the late King George VI.

The challenge, which recognises the year 1664 when the Corps was established, has seen Royal Marines all over the world raising funds for the military unit’s charity with a number of ingenious achievements.

The 1,664-mile running hurdle started in Plymouth on April 25 with Royal Marines running 16.64 miles a day for 100 days, with the exhausting trek due to finish at Buckingham Palace on Wednesday.

The Duke will meet some of the runners including two Royal Marines who have completed the whole distance.

Royal Marines from around the globe have also been taking part in extreme events including a 34-mile swim underwater and a troop of Royal Marines lifting more than 20,000 tonnes and running 10,000 kilometres.

Throughout the event, Philip will further engage with ex-soldiers and cadets before getting the 1664 Global Challenge baton.

The parade will close with a parade past, a royal fanfare and three hurrahs for the Captain General.

Over the years, Prince Philip has tended numerous Royal Marines events and in 2014, to mark the Corps’ 350th anniversary, the Duke donned his entire ceremonial costume as Captain General to the state opening of Parliament.

Did you know? Prince Philip was the first member of the Royal Family to fly in a helicopter.

Prince Phillip From Greece to a great-grandfather.

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10 June 1921, Prince Philippos of Greece and Denmark is born to Prince Andrew of Greece and Princess Alice of Battenberg in the family home, Mon Repos, on Corfu. He is the youngest of five children.

December 1922, eighteen-month-old Prince Philip, travelling in a makeshift cot made from an orange crate, is evacuated from Greece on a Royal Navy ship after King Constantine I is forced to resign.

1923, the family locates in the outskirts of Paris, however Princess Alice starts to experience mental health problems and her devout beliefs become more strange.

1928, at the age of eight Philip, goes to England to live with his grandmother and his uncle.

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1930, Philip’s mother Princess Alice is diagnosed with schizophrenia and confined to a sanitarium in Switzerland for two years. His father Prince Andrew travels to the French Riviera. Philip is shipped to Cheam Preparatory School in the United Kingdom.

1933, at the age of 12 he spends two terms at Salem School in south Germany, controlled by Kurt Hahn, who encouraged Philip to set up the Duke of Edinburgh Award.

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November 1934, Prince Philip and Princess Elizabeth both attend the union of Philip’s cousin Princess Marina to Elizabeth’s uncle George, Duke of Kent, at Westminster Abbey.

1934, Philip starts at Gordonstoun School in Morayshire. He flourishes, becoming head boy and leader of hockey and cricket.

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1936, George V dies and is replaced by his son Edward VIII, who resigns 11 months later in December 1936 because of his affection for American divorcée Wallis Simpson.

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May 1937, Coronation of George VI and Princess Elizabeth watches her father being crowned king. Philip is amongst the gathering.

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November 1937, Prince Philip attends the internment in Germany of his sister Cecilie, who was killed in a plane crash at the age of 26.

May 1939, in the run-up to the start of the Second World War, Philip finishes at Gordonstoun and starts his naval work at the Britannia Royal Naval College in Dartmouth, where he gains two prizes for being the greatest cadet.

July 1939, the young Princess Elizabeth falls in love with Philip when he accompanies her and her sister Princess Margaret during a tour of the college.

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1940, Philip joins the battleship HMS Ramillies in 1940 in Colombo as a midshipman and spends six months in the Indian Ocean.

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January 1941, he serves on the HMS Valiant in Alexandria and two months later is named in despatches for his actions throughout the Second World War in the Battle of Matapan after detecting an unforeseen enemy ship with the search lights. He is later given the Greek War Cross of Valour.

1942, Philip progresses through the ranks and becomes one of the youngest officers in the Royal Navy to be made First Lieutenant and second-in-command of a ship, HMS Wallace.

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1943, HMS Wallace is despatched to the Mediterranean and gives cover for the Canadian beachhead of the Allied landings in Sicily.

Prince Philip visits with the Royal Family a number of times throughout home leave and, following a Christmas visit, Princess Elizabeth sets a picture of him on her dressing table.

2 September 1945, Philip is in Tokyo Bay when the Japanese surrender.

1946, Philip returns to the United Kingdom, spending time at naval training schools. He asks George VI for Princess Elizabeth’s hand in matrimony.

29 February 1947, Philip disavows his claims to the Greek throne and becomes a British citizen, Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten.

9 July 1947, the engagement of Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten to Princess Elizabeth is announced.

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20 November 1947, Philip marries Princess Elizabeth at Westminster Abbey. He is made the Duke of Edinburgh, Earl of Merioneth and Baron Greenwich shortly before his marriage.

October 1948, the Duke visits the Royal Naval Staff College at Greenwich.

14 November 1948, the Duke becomes a father when Princess Elizabeth gives birth to their first son, a son and eventual leader, Prince Charles.

1949, Philip is elected First Lieutenant and second-in-command of HMS Chequers, working from Malta with the Mediterranean fleet.

1950, he is advanced to Lieutenant-Commander and then appointed in charge of the frigate HMS Magpie in Malta.

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21 October 1950, Philip and Elizabeth’s second child, Princess Anne, is born.

1951, the Duke and Princess Elizabeth return home from Malta to Clarence House. Philip leaves the Navy early because of the deteriorating well-being of King George VI. Prince and Elizabeth are expected to take on extra royal duties.

Princess Elizabeth and Philip make their first important tour together to Canada and the United States in October and November 1951, following which the Duke is made a Privy Counsellor.

6 February 1952, George VI dies and Princess Elizabeth becomes Monarch while in Kenya on a Commonwealth tour.

2 June 1953, the Queen’s Coronation at Westminster Abbey. The Duke of Edinburgh vows to be his wife’s “liege man of life and limb” and is the first layman to pay kind loyalty to the newly-crowned sovereign.

1956, the Duke begins the Duke of Edinburgh Award. The Duke travels the Commonwealth on the royal yacht Britannia, without the Monarch.

February 1957, the Queen gives the Duke the style and title of a Prince of the United Kingdom.

February 1960, Prince Andrew is born.

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1961, the Duke becomes the first President of the World Wildlife Fund-UK, becoming its international president in 1981. But his shooting of a tiger while in India sparks judgment.

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1964, Prince Edward is born.

1971, the Duke gives up polo but goes on to take up carriage driving.

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1977, the Queen’s Silver Jubilee, 25 years on the throne.

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1981, Prince Charles marries Lady Diana Spencer.

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1982, Prince William, a future king is born and Prince Andrew comes back safely from the Falklands War.

1984, Prince Harry is born.

1986, the Duke makes a comment about slitty eyes on a state appointment to China and the Monarch celebrates her 60th birthday.

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Prince Andrew marries Sarah Ferguson.

1992, the Queen’s annus horribilis and the Princess Royal and Captain Phillips split, the Prince and Princess of Wales and the Duke and Duchess of York separate and Windsor Castle is hit by a fire.

1993, the Queen begins to pay income tax to the Government.

1996, the Prince of Wales divorces Diana, Princess of Wales and the Duke and Duchess of York split.

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31 August 1997, Diana, Princess of Wales, dies in a car wreck.

20 November 1997, the Queen and the Duke’s Golden Wedding anniversary.

April 1999, is a hectic and difficult agenda that did take its toll sometimes. While attending the Monarch on a state visit to South Korea, Philip falls asleep at a banquet.

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2000, a new millennium and the Queen Mother’s 100th year.

2002, the Queen’s Golden Jubilee, 50 years on the throne. The Queen’s younger sister Princess Margaret and the Queen Mother died.

Philip asks an Aborigine if they still launch spears at each other throughout a tour of Australia.

2007, the Monarch and the Duke mark their Diamond Wedding anniversary.

April 2008, the Duke is admitted to hospital with a chest infection that requires him to cancel a number of commitments. He spends three nights in the private King Edward VII’s Hospital.

December 2010, the Duke becomes a great-grandfather for the first time with the addition of Peter and Autumn Phillips’ daughter Savannah.

2010, Buckingham Palace announces Philip will step down as patron or president of more than a dozen organisations when he turns 90.

June 2011, the Duke marks his 90th birthday. The Queen gives him a new title, Lord High Admiral, the titular head of the Royal Navy.

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April 2011, Prince William weds Kate Middleton at Westminster Abbey and the Monarch visits Ireland.

Christmas 2011, the Duke is raced to the hospital by helicopter after experiencing chest pains. He spends four nights in the hospital, including Christmas Day, and is treated for a blocked coronary artery at Papworth Hospital in Cambridgeshire.

2012, is the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee and the Duke is forced to miss the preponderance of the festivities when he falls unwell with a bladder infection.

August 2012, Philip is treated for a bladder infection once again and spends five nights in hospital in Aberdeen, missing the opening of the Paralympic Games.

June 2013, two days following the service to mark the 60th anniversary of the Queen’s coronation, he is hospitalised for an operation on his abdomen and spends two months recovering.

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July 2013, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s son Prince George is born, third in line to the throne, a prospective king and the Duke’s great-grandson.

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May 2015, Prince Philip and the Queen’s great-granddaughter Princess Charlotte of Cambridge is born.

September 2015, the Monarch becomes the longest-reigning ruler in British history.

April 2016, the Queen marks her 90th birthday.

October 2016, the Monarch becomes the world’s longest-reigning living ruler, following the death of Thai King Rama IX.

June 2016, Philip turns 95, his birthday coincides with a weekend of celebrations for the Queen’s official 90th birthday.

4 May 2017, Buckingham Palace announces that Philip is to step down from public engagements in the autumn.

February 2017, the Monarch reaches her Sapphire Jubilee, 65 years on the throne.

2 August 2017, Prince Philip’s closing scheduled public duty, and the Captain General’s Parade at Buckingham Palace. Philip has held the office of captain general of the Royal Marines since 1953.

There are not many men who can still fit into the suit they wore on their wedding day, however, it is a measure of the Duke of Edinburgh’s extraordinary great stamina and energy that he can make such a striking claim.

Just a few weeks shy of his 96th birthday Prince Philip is thought to be in exceptionally great shape and his secret seems to be deceptively easy, regular exercise, a balanced diet and a healthy measure of sheer will power.

Prime to this is a management of small but intense workout utilised by both the Duke of Edinburgh and Prince Charles, called the 5BX Plan.

The program, created to increase the fitness of recruits for the Royal Canadian Air Force, can be carried out in a confined area, with no warm up or equipment needed, utilising five fundamental activities to strengthen each muscle in the body.

Like any person his age, the Duke has, of course, had the occasional health scare, but their rarity has only helped to highlight his overall health and durability.

Those who know Prince Philip say none of this is an accident. He works at staying healthy and, in a reflection of his days serving in the Royal Navy, has remained determined never to let himself go.

He is a man who has always looked after himself and taken custody of his body. He’s someone who enjoys physical exercise and he’s amazingly physically fit. He’s pretty picky about what he eats. If he puts on any weight at all, he will make certain he loses it.

The Duke prefers to walk and take the stairs where he can, and can still be seen behind the reins of a horse carriage in the grounds of Windsor Great Park.

Prince Philip took up carriage driving in 1971 after only withdrawing from polo at the age of 50 because of an arthritic wrist.

He used to compete, taking part in games such as the International Grand Prix in the Royal Windsor Horse Show, but now likes to put the ponies through their steps for pleasure.

It was only when he reached the age of 82 that Philip chose for the first time not to take part in the Trooping the Colour ceremony on horseback. Alternatively, he travelled in a carriage with the Queen.

Buckingham Palace has long declined to elaborate on the specifics of the Duke’s exercise regime but verifies he is an enthusiastic walker and points out that it takes quite a lot of energy to manage two or three ponies towing a carriage.

With each fleeting birthday, the Duke’s diet has been the topic of renewed speculation. Those who have been able to observe him at close quarters state it is usually a low carbohydrate regime, comparable to the Atkins-diet.

He is believed to favour black coffee, seldom drinking tea of any kind, and appreciates the rare fry-up for breakfast, though he further prefers to commence the day with oatcakes with honey.

The Duke consumes small quantities of alcohol and one biographer observed that he is partial to a pale ale at lunchtime.

Prince Philip’s longstanding personal clothier has vouched for the fact that he can still fit into the very naval uniform he donned on his wedding day.

There’s not a measure of fat on him, which is why he dons his outfits so well and he’s really well proportioned. He’s got moderately lengthy pins, and he doesn’t bear much ballast.

The Prince’s measurements have remained mainly consistent over the past five decades. He was a 31in waist when he was first measured, and presently just a 34, that’s unbelievable and he’s not had to have any of the threads let out.

The Duke’s determination to give up smoking virtually overnight in 1947, shortly before his wedding to the Monarch, has no doubt added to his excellent health and extended years.

So much so, that he was able to tell experts at the Francis Crick Institute, in November last year, that he had not had the flu for 40 years and he has further stated that he avoids consulting doctors because of their conflicting views.

Unavoidably, nevertheless, there have been low periods when convalescence or even appointments to the hospital were needed and very recently both the Monarch and the Duke fell unwell with heavy colds before Christmas last year, requiring them to delay their excursion to Sandringham by a day.

Shortly before his 95th birthday in June 2016, Prince Philip pulled out of the Battle of Jutland anniversary celebrations following medical opinion concerning a minor illness.

However, he was at the Queen’s side several days later for her official birthday festivities, including a service of thanksgiving, Trooping the Colour and a street party in The Mall, but in May 2014, the Duke had a minor procedure carried out on his right hand at Buckingham Palace and in June the past year, he spent two months convalescing following an exploratory procedure on his abdomen.

In December 2011 he was fitted with a heart stent and has twice been treated for bladder infections, including throughout the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee weekend in June 2012, when he fell unwell following having to stand in the cold on a barge throughout the Thames pageant.

On leaving the hospital, the day before his 91st birthday, Prince Philip was asked if he was feeling better. He answered, in his typical fashion: “Well, I wouldn’t be coming out if I wasn’t.”

The Prince has this selective manner about him, some people like it, some people loathe it but his approach, as irritating as it is sometimes to some people is not intended to be antagonistic, just really tongue in cheek entertainment.

If he’s asked a dumb question, he will just give a funny response, which really makes him a pretty down to earth sort of person, with a pretty good sense of humour.

His unbelievable energy, extraordinary sound vitality and a strong sense of public responsibility have seen Prince Philip through a myriad of official appointments over the course of his 64-year union to our Monarch.

Yet it is the unashamedly politically incorrect remarks he makes that have drawn the greatest attention over the years. Furthermore, as we pay praise to what Philip himself defined as “Dontopedalogy”, the ability to open your trap and putting your foot in it, a craftsmanship which he has practised for a great many years.

Philip has made some really huge boobs over the years on state appointments:

‘You look like you’re ready for bed!’ To the President of Nigeria, who was wearing traditional robes.

‘Do you still throw spears at each other?’ To Aboriginal leader William Brin during a visit to the Aboriginal Cultural Park in Queensland, 2002.

‘We don’t come here for our health. We can think of other ways of enjoying ourselves.’ On a trip to Canada in 1976.

‘You managed not to get eaten then?’ To a British student who was trekking in Papua New Guinea, during an official visit in 1998.

‘Aren’t most of you descended from pirates?’ To residents of the Cayman Islands in 1994.

On Europe:

‘I would like to go to Russia very much, although the bastards murdered half my family.’ In 1967, when asked if he would like to visit the Soviet Union.

‘Damn fool question!’ To a BBC journalist at a banquet at the Elysée Palace in Paris after she asked the Queen if she was enjoying her stay.

‘It’s a vast waste of space.’ To guests at the opening reception of a new £18 million British Embassy in Berlin in 2000.

‘You can’t have been here that long, you haven’t got a pot belly.’ To a British tourist, he met during a tour of the Hungarian capital Budapest in 1993.

On Scotland:

‘How do you keep the natives off the booze long enough to pass the test?’ To a Scottish driving instructor in 1995.

‘It looks as though it was put in by an Indian.’ The Prince’s verdict on a fuse box given during a tour of a Scottish factory in August 1999. He later apologised: ‘I meant to say, Cowboys. I just got my cowboys and Indians mixed up.’

‘People usually say that after a fire it is water damage that is the worst. We are still drying out Windsor Castle.’ To survivors of the Lockerbie bombing in 1993.

On China:

‘Ghastly.’ Prince Philip’s opinion of Beijing, during a tour of China in 1986.

‘If it has got four legs and it is not a chair, if it has got two wings and it flies but is not an aeroplane, and if it swims and it is not a submarine, the Cantonese will eat it.’ To a meeting of the World Wildlife Fund in 1986.

‘If you stay here much longer, you will go home with slitty eyes.’ To a British student on a visit to China in 1986.

On Multi-cultural Britain:

‘There’s a lot of your family in tonight.’ After noticing business leader Atul Patel’s name badge during a Buckingham Palace reception for 400 influential British Indians in 2009.

‘So who’s on drugs here? He looks as if he’s on drugs.’ To a 14-year-old member of a Bangladeshi youth club in 2002.

‘Are you all one family?’ Said to mixed-race dance troupe Diversity at the 2009 Royal Variety Performance.

On Women:

‘British women can’t cook.’ Endearing himself to the Scottish Women’s Institute in 1961.

‘Ah, so this is feminist corner then.’ To a group of female Labour MPs at a Buckingham Palace drinks party in 2000.

‘You are a woman, aren’t you?’ To a Kenyan woman in 1984, after accepting a state gift.

‘If it doesn’t fart or eat hay, she isn’t interested.’ On his daughter, Princess Anne.

‘When a man opens the car door for his wife, it’s either a new car or a new wife.’

On Celebrities:

‘What do you gargle with — pebbles?’ To Tom Jones, after the Royal Variety Performance, 1969. He later added: ‘It is very difficult at all to see how it is possible to become immensely valuable by singing what I think are the most hideous songs.’

‘Oh, it’s you that owns that ghastly car, is it? We often see it when driving to Windsor Castle.’ To near-neighbour Elton John after hearing that he had sold his Watford FC-themed Aston Martin in 2001.

‘I wish he’d turn the microphone off!’ During Elton John’s performance at the 73rd Royal Variety Show in 2001.

On Food and Drink:

‘Get me a beer. I don’t care what kind it is, just get me a beer!’ On being offered fine Italian wines by Prime Minister Giuliano Amato at a dinner in Rome in 2000.

‘Don’t feed your rabbits pawpaw fruit, it acts as a contraceptive. Then again, it might not work on rabbits.’ To a Caribbean rabbit breeder in Anguilla in 1994.

On Class and Money:

‘People think there’s a rigid class system here, but dukes have been known to marry chorus girls. Some have even married Americans.’ In 2000.

‘If you travel as much as we do, you appreciate the improvements in aircraft design of less noise and more comfort, provided you don’t travel in something called economy class, which sounds ghastly.’ To the Aircraft Research Association in 2002.

‘All money nowadays seems to be produced with a natural homing instinct for the Treasury.’ Lamenting the rate of British tax in 1963.

‘We go into the red next year. I shall probably have to give up polo.’ On the Royal Family’s finances in 1969.

‘Everybody was saying we must have more leisure. Now they are complaining they are unemployed.’ Said at the height of the recession in 1981.

On Art and Fashion:

‘You didn’t design your beard too well, did you? You really must try better with your beard.’ To a young fashion designer at Buckingham Palace in 2009.

‘It looks like the kind of thing my daughter would bring back from her school art lessons.’ On seeing an exhibition of ‘primitive’ Ethiopian art in 1965.

On the Press:

‘You have mosquitos. I have the Press.’ To the matron of a hospital in the Caribbean.

He’s excellent and his sense of humour is so cheeky and playful.

Nevertheless, the greatest one of all was when the Pope was visiting Holyrood. On seeing Iain Gray, Prince Philip noticed his tie which was in the St. Ninian’s Day tartan, a design that had been created to mark the event.

He turned to Annabel Goldie, the Scottish Tory leader who was standing alongside Iain Gray, and the Prince asked, ‘Have you got a pair of knickers made out of this stuff?’, to which she promptly answered, ‘I can’t possibly comment and even if I did I couldn’t possibly exhibit them’.

This one was a National treasure when Philip stated, ‘In the event that I am reincarnated, I would like to return as a deadly virus, in order to contribute something to solve overpopulation’, which Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh stated in 1988.

The royal couple said “I do” on November 20, 1947, in a grand celebration at Westminster Abbey, where their withstanding relationship was based on their reciprocal love and admiration but further a partaken sense of humour, after all, Prince Philip is especially hilarious.

As the man who remains to stand behind and supported his Queen, Philip has built a royal benchmark for marvellous relationship goals.

In fact, the Duke of Edinburgh traipse around and quips that he is the fella who belongs to Mrs Queen, rather than being professionally qualified in something.

The mother-of-four is really relaxed around her man and it’s not unknown for the Monarch to tell the Duke to shut up. Although there was a point when you wouldn’t get a peep out of her. She was so bashful and you couldn’t get a sound out of her, Philip recollected of his encounter with Elizabeth in 1939.

Following 50 years of marriage, Philip famously wisecracked that you could take it from him, the Queen has the kind of patience in abundance and that the secret of a contented marriage is to have diverse interests.

Kidding aside, it is obvious that it is the Prince’s total commitment to his wife that has been a spine to their unbelievable partnership and his first job, second and last is never to let the Queen down. The way he looks at her, even after decades of marriage, Prince Philip has but one Queen.

Laughing their way through life has made for an excellent union.

Forever by her side, Prince Philip is the Queen’s number one confidant.

 

 

 

 

Basildon Murder Victim: Gary Bassett

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A man who has been killed following an unmerciful boot to the head in a Basildon town centre attack has been identified locally as Gary Bassett. Gary Bassett died following an attack in a service area behind Primark and Debenhams at 7 pm on Friday, July 28.

Gary Bassett, who was well-known amongst the homeless community in Basildon, was taken to hospital but died later.

Even though Gary was well-known amongst the homeless community, he was not homeless himself, so that should be put on account to rectify things.

Whether a person is homeless or not does no more imply this attack was any less horrific. This was a human life, and consequently, should be handled the equal to any other, whether that person is homeless or not, there should be no exception.

Gary Bassett from Basildon died two days following being savagely attacked in the centre of the town sparking a murder inquiry.

Police and ambulance assistance was summoned to the area around Primark and Debenhams at about 7 pm, on Friday, July 28 with reports that a man had been grievously wounded by being booted in the head.

Police and ambulance teams reacted to unconfirmed news of a severe attack in Basildon. Emergency assistance, including teams from the air ambulance, sped to the region around Primark and Debenhams at about 7 pm, July 28.

People in the Basildon community are utterly overwhelmed and there have been loads of sympathies going out on Facebook from friends of Gary Bassett.

People have been paying tribute to Gary Bassett after he was fatally kicked in the head. Gary Bassett was not a person that you forgot quickly and he was memorable to everyone that met him. Some loved him and some didn’t, but everybody that met him will have great memories of him.

He was a genuinely great person and will be missed by countless people.

Police have detained a 27-year-old man from Dedham on suspicion of murder, Monday, July 31 and he is currently in custody for interrogation.

Also, a 53-year-old guy from Clacton has been detained on suspicion of murder but has been discharged on bail until Thursday, August 24, pending more enquiries.

Murder squad detectives are now investigating the death of Gary Bassett who was booted in the head during an attack in an alleyway. Doctors fought to save his life, but he later died in Basildon Hospital about 7 pm on Friday.

Tributes have been paid to Gary Bassett who was a past Fryerns school student, who was well known amongst the town’s displaced community, although he was not homeless himself.

People are still in shock over his unfortunate passing, it’s shocking and so disturbing. Gary Bassett had so many friends and he was loved by so many and was always so happy to chat. Additional friends and family have taken to Facebook to pay tribute to Gary.

Evidently, police have said that a 53-year-old has now been detained on suspicion of murder. Supposedly, police think a man was accompanied by a female who is an ex-partner of Mr Bassett. The man kicked Gary Bassett in the head repeatedly before leaving the scene.

No weaponry was observed and this is thought to be an isolated incident.

Detectives are urging anyone with information to come forward as they think there were a number of bystanders near the immediate area at the time.

The suspect, who has been described as white and mid 20 and 30 years old fled the scene. He was said to have a mousey brown hair, donning a grey Tee-shirt and Jeans.

Tradesmen in Basildon have expressed their shock at what is the second lethal assault in a year.

One person stated everyone presumed it was another stabbing, but that was the gossip doing the rounds.

Basildon used to be a really pleasant area to live, it had appeal but presently it’s being distracted by stabbings and people being booted in the head and there should be no license for such people and the people who believe it’s okay to do this should be held liable for it.

Basildon is a town with parents and young kids and it’s starting to feel unsafe. What used to be a pretty pleasant place to live has nosedived and it’s exhausting having to go out and about in Basildon, not knowing if one of your kids are going to get hurt or booted in the head.

This caper has to be stopped because there is no reason for this kind of behaviour from another human being, we are not monsters and at the moment the outlook for Basildon appears rather grim.

 

Forced Into Homelessness

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This working family have been driven into homelessness.

This father felt worthless, he couldn’t provide for his family and he couldn’t put a roof over their heads.

Martin Bergin and his wife both work but they couldn’t afford to rent privately after being evicted from their flat.

On the day they were evicted, they went down to the council, as they instructed them to do, telling them, look this is the letter from the bailiffs and that they were now homeless and the council kept them waiting in there for five hours to then put them into a Bed and Breakfast which you wouldn’t put an animal in.

It was terrible and he simply collapsed into tears.

More than 120,000 children exist like this in temporary accommodation in England. 37 percent more than in 2014.

Being unable to afford private rent is the greatest cause of homelessness.

Regrettably, the lady had to sell her home but with the costs of private rent at the moment and they have a young child, they actually require a two bedroom flat. A one bedroom would do but even with a one bedroom flat, the prices were simply not affordable.

Of course, he and his wife work, his wife part time, but with the rents out there, it’s all his earnings gone.

Ministers must do more and to build affordable homes for lower income families.

Nevertheless, the government states it is putting £550 million into supporting homelessness, and still, there are millions of immigrants living in social housing who have never paid a penny into the system, whilst people born in England and have worked laboriously are being put into Bed and Breakfast and it’s sickening.

English is not the primary language of more than half a million students in Britain’s primary schools. The language spoken at home by 567,888 children aged between four and 11 could be any one of the hundreds of foreign languages presently used by migrants from across the globe who have settled in this country.

No one should be shocked by the statistic because it is a straightforward outcome of the huge volume of migration into Britain over the past decade. The more immigrants who come here to live, the more of their children will be taught in British schools and the more our schools will have to deal with students whose first language is not English or who do not speak it at all.

Nonetheless, almost everyone was stunned by the statistic, even though the Government has declared that about 190,000 migrants come to Britain every year and the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has declared that Britain’s population will grow, as a consequence of migration, by seven million over the subsequent 20 years.

We’ve been told often enough that we’re going through a phase of immigration on a scale unparalleled in our history, however, the facts do not appear to have sunk in.

Part of the reason for that may be the degree to which Government ministers can appear set to propagate uncertainty about what those truths are. For example, Phil Woolas, the Immigration Minister, insisted at a hearing of the Commons Committee on Home Affairs that the ONS forecasts were wrong and that the number of migrants would decrease in the expected future.

It is not apparent on what evidence he had for making that claim. He unquestionably did not present any evidence for it which may demonstrate why there is practically no authority in the field who agrees with him.

It is now more or less extensively understood that the net inflow of people to Britain, the amount who come, minus the amount who leave every year is 190,000, and there is no reason to believe that number will decrease in the expected future except if the Government takes extreme action.

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It implies that the inhabitants of Britain will be 70 million by 2028. Frank Field and Nicholas Soames, two MPs from the Cross-Party Group on Balanced Migration, are clear about the gravity of the situation, even if Mr Woolas is not and we are facing a population disaster.

The reason why people from developing nations want to live here is clear. Life is greater here than in the poverty-stricken countries from which they came. However, that is true of all the developed economies of Europe. All are much better places in which to live than the countries of Africa, for example, or the Indian subcontinent.

Therefore that illustrates why so many immigrants target Britain, and why there are such queues at the Sangatte centre in France to get across the Channel to England.

News has got out that Britain is more congenial to immigrants than other European nations, which it is. The legacy of empire indicates we are more used to accepting them and are more ready to integrate them.

One of the great virtues of the British people is their humanity. Our culture is much less exclusive to carpetbaggers than most nations of continental Europe. It is easier to get work here, less restrictive employment law implies it is easier to fire people, so companies are more ready to exploit migrants they can pay less in the first place.

British companies are less distrustful of immigrants than their equivalents in nations such as Italy or France.

Attach the basis that it is easier for immigrants who come here to claim benefits, get council housing and access health and education services for themselves and their children and it becomes obvious why Britain is a destination for migrants.

Understandably, countless migrants are desperate and will use any means they can to guarantee they can settle here. From 1997 to 2002, it appeared that claiming asylum, claiming that you are a fugitive fleeing oppression was the most productive way of obtaining the freedom to live here.

In 2002, 84,000 people claimed asylum. Attach their children and the amount was more than 100,000. The bulk had their cases refused, but very few of them were deported and most were permitted to stay, even if they were not given an approved recognised right to do so.

Since then, the Government has taken measures to toughen up the asylum policy, and last year fewer than 22,000 people claimed asylum in Britain. However, the balance of asylum-seekers who are deported after their application is denied remains small, therefore asylum-seekers continue to be a notable cause of migrants.

The migrants’ desire to get into Britain is only half the story of why so many are here. The other half is the explanation of why the Government chose to let so many migrants into Britain. For years, Labour has been convinced that allowing high levels of immigration should be a policy priority, and it has taken measures to guarantee that it is comparatively simple for migrants to get permanent, legally verified residency here. But why has Labour done that?

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In 1997, Tony Blair and his Cabinet had various motives for wanting to expand the number of immigrants into Britain. One was that they saw an electoral advantage. The outcome of elections in a growing amount of constituencies was, and is, dictated in large part by the votes from comparatively recent immigrants.

People who have travelled here from, say, the Indian subcontinent naturally resented the rules that stopped their families joining them in Britain.

The most onerous of those rules was known as the primary purpose rule, which was imposed by the Conservatives in 1993. It required that someone wanting to follow his or her spouse into Britain to show that the marriage was not entered into primarily to gain access to the United Kingdom.

Establishing a negative, as the rule forced the applicant to do, was very hard, and a lot of spouses were denied admission into Britain as a consequence.

Labour ended that practice shortly following the election in 1997. The move was very attractive in immigrant communities because it made it considerably simpler for families to move here. Immigration by spouses into Britain has grown by 50 per cent since the primary purpose rule was eliminated.

More than 40,000 people were given citizenship here on the grounds of marriage in 2008 alone.

Equally significant indeed, possibly more important in convincing Labour to adopt a much more carefree immigration policy was the idea amongst many ministers and advisers that Britain’s economy would grow if only there were to be large-scale immigration here.

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When he was Home Secretary, David Blunkett announced there was no natural limit to a number of migrants that Britain could absorb. Plus his replacement, Charles Clarke, was similarly blunt about his hunger for more immigrants.

Government statements and press announcements trumpeted the wondrous financial advantages of immigration. High levels of immigration would expand prosperity rather significantly by boosting Britain’s gross domestic product, the volume of how much the country produces each year, it would guarantee an end to labour and skills deficiencies, it would allow the NHS and additional public services to develop at a quicker speed by utilizing low-cost immigrant employees, and it would help Britain to evade the pensions time-bomb created by an ageing society by combining an entirely new tier of young and energetic workers.

That is why Labour drastically increased the number of work permits it issued to migrants wanting to come to Britain. In 1997, 40,000 work permits were issued. More than 130,000, or over three times as many, were circulated in 2008.

The consensus that migration offers substantial financial advantages to Britain has demonstrated to be untrue on every point. A committee of the House of Lords, made up of economists and ex-finance ministers, published a comprehensive investigation into the matter on April 1, 2008.

The report, The Economic Impact of Migration, asserted bluntly that overall Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which the Government has persistently emphasised, is an irrelevant and misleading basis for evaluating the financial impacts of immigration on the United Kingdom.

The total size of an economy is not an indication of prosperity. The focus of investigation should be on the outcomes of immigration on revenue per head of the resident population. Both theory and the accessible observational data show that these are small.

The added revenue created by immigrants is not much higher and may, in fact, be less than a number of people they have appended to the UK’s population, so they do not expand prosperity to any meaningful level.

The Lords’ report went through the other claims made for the financial advantages for immigration and demolished them one by one. Immigration is unlikely to be an adequate instrument for subduing labour and skill deficits, rendering extensive testimony for its claim.

It emphasised that immigrants, even though they played an essential part within public services such as the NHS, were not, in fact, essential to the functioning of those services and local British workers could have, and still could, achieve the equivalent function.

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The report pointed out that immigration cannot defuse the pensions time-bomb because immigrants themselves become elderly and require pensions. Also, it concluded that there was no proof for the argument made by the Government that immigration creates important financial profits for the present UK population.

In fact, there is some indication that immigration indicates that the least-educated part of the workforce is less well-off because immigration provides a competing amount of labour prepared to do the least attractive and worst-paid professions for even less pay.

Labour ministers appear to have given precious little care to other, noneconomic consequences of large-scale immigration. The burden on schools, the NHS and additional public services.

The heightened demand for housing, especially council housing, has been an immense reservoir of anger for native-born Britons who believed they were in line for a council house, simply to be circumvented in support of new immigrants, because the officials earmarking council houses ruled that those immigrants had higher requirements, they had infinitely more children.

There hasn’t been an in-depth investigation of the impact of immigration on council housing, however, the impact on the availability of council houses to indigenous, working-class Britons has surely been seen by that assembly to be urgent.

These are really difficult to assess because they are difficult to measure. But one result familiar from research into communities in the United States that have experienced an unexpected penetration of huge amounts of immigrants has been a diminution of trust.

Immigrant populations tend not to blend, either with other immigrants or with citizens of the host nation. The effect is a potpourri of tightly connected groups that do not mix with each other and do not trust each other.

The idea that the nation is a community based on reciprocal obligation suffers.

The composition of communities changes. Some people like those changes. Others do not. The changes are not restricted to the presence of ethnic restaurants or men and women who wear different clothes.

An inrush of people who are fundamentalist about their faith, for instance, can indicate that some of them do not accept doctrines that mainstream Britain takes for granted. The supremacy of secular over religious doctrine, the equality of women with men, and the importance of liberty to alter your faith without oppression.

How to guarantee that immigrants embrace British values is a dilemma the Government has considered long and hard about but has not solved.

The Government seems to be in the process of acknowledging that a continued penetration of migrants at the speed of 190,000 every year for the indefinite future is not going to be advantageous to Britain. Ministers have started a points method for the granting of work permits.

The problem with that method is that it will only decrease the number of migrants by 5 percent a year and if the Government wants to end Britain’s population from reaching 70 million in the following 20 years, it will have to decrease the number of migrants by 75 percent.

What could be done? Parliament’s Cross-Party Group on Balanced Migration suggests that economic migration should be explicitly separated from the settlement. At the moment, following five years of working in Britain, you have the freedom to live here permanently.

The Cross-Party Group recommends removing that right, which would have a significant influence on numbers.

Three other policies that would have an impact would be introducing some version of the primary purpose rule to decrease the amount of spouses coming to Britain, expanding the amount of failed asylum-seekers that are deported, and strengthening the checks and controls on our borders.

None of these methods will be easy to achieve, and all of them will have some pretty severe outcomes for would-be migrants to Britain, their spouses and their children. But the party that embraces them will obtain electoral support.

The evidence is that the British people are very concerned about the present levels of immigration and want to see them drastically reduced.

What this country screams out for is a government with the stomach to stop the insanity this country has had to suffer. Unchecked immigration has brought this country to its knees and those who find it hard to get to grips with that reality must have their heads buried in the sand.

Over 75 percent of the people in a recent survey want immigration stopped altogether. If this were to happen now, the population of Britain will still go over 70 million because of the huge birth flow amongst immigrant families.

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In August 1980 Margaret Thatcher’s first government, just a year old but already very disliked and bogged down by difficulties, created a Housing Act. Even more than most legislation it was wordy and repetitious, but its clear purpose stood out, to give the right to buy their homes to residents of local authorities.

It envisioned a revolution in how a large minority of Britons lived.

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That change which David Cameron’s government controversially hoped to revive by extending the right to buy to housing association tenants had been an extremely long time coming. Contrary to the prevailing wisdom, expertly propagated by the Conservatives in 1980 and doggedly developed by right-wing Britain ever since, selling off council homes was not a sudden stroke of brilliance by the Thatcher government.

The design was as old as council housing itself.

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Nineteenth-century housing law demanded that council-built homes in redevelopment zones should be sold inside 10 years of completion. Throughout the 1920s council homes were sold on a small scale. Throughout the 50s sales expedited.

5,825 in May 1956 alone. By 1972 even a distinctly leftish Tory environment secretary, Peter Walker, could declare to his party conference that the ability of council tenants to purchase their homes was a pretty fundamental freedom and that they should be granted a 20 percent reduction on the market price.

Later in the 1970s, now a backbencher, Walker went further, proposing that community homes should just be given to their residents. Michael Heseltine, the Conservative shadow environment secretary from 1976, who was close to Walker and like him had a populist side, agreed.

Labour councils, reacting to the squalor and congestion of Victorian and Edwardian towns, and the visible failure of private landlords and developers to deal with it certainly the mirth with which some of them abused it had created much of Britain’s early corporate housing in the 1900s.

Labour councils and governments carried on building it in great volumes for the next seven decades. By the early 70s, some Labour local authorities were even buying up entire streets of crumbling inner-city homes from private landlords, and turning them into council homes a tangible and powerful display of state authority making up for market failure.

By 1980 the balance of all British housing in state hands was large by international standards, nearly one in three homes. Most Labour politicians thought there were several reasons, electoral or moral, to chance to unravel the housing safety net that made an overcrowded country livable for tens of millions.

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However from the mid-70s some important Labour people, such as Harold Wilson’s press secretary Joe Haines and Jim Callaghan’s economic adviser Gavyn Davies, started to question whether renting from the council, usually for life, was a gratifying way for such Britons to be living, and further whether governments could afford to keep developing the essential properties.

By the late 70s, the Wilson and then the Callaghan administrations were frequently short of cash, and their more forward-thinking members were frequently interested in the growth of consumerism and private property, and how Labour might conform to it before the other parties could take full advantage.

Both Labour governments built progressively fewer council homes. In 1977 a high-profile housing study by the Callaghan government believed that for most people, owning one’s house is a fundamental and common desire.

The language adopted by Labour and the Conservatives to speak about the problem was starting to converge.

At the 1979 general election, council-home sales highlighted prominently in the Conservative manifesto. In this slender pamphlet, the right to buy was given as much space as enormous issues such as education and health and explained right down to the precise concessions to be granted to residents.

These were to commence at 33 percent off their home’s market value and were to increase, according to how long they had rented it, to a peak of 50 percent for residents of 20 years’ standing or longer. They further guaranteed the promise that 100 percent mortgages were available.

For any buyer, and expressly for people in late middle age or older, the British age group most inclined to vote Conservative, these were remarkably generous words and you were mad if you didn’t buy.

Whether these terms represented a good opportunity for the state, which had after all created these homes and would lose the rental revenue from them, was not something the manifesto examined. Neither were related even more crucial issues.

Would the country be left with enough affordable homes following the sell-off? Plus would the plan rebound if the population, and therefore the demand for housing, increased? Given that the United Kingdom was part of the EU, and further connected by additional busy immigration routes to its enormous former empire, and to the United States, a stable or declining population, as had existed during the 1970s a time of recognized British slump that Thatcher had noisily agreed to change could hardly be considered.

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But effectively it was. The Right to Buy was started at a time of some complacency in British housing policy. For the first time in over a century, there was not a deficit.

On gaining leadership, Margaret Thatcher made the powerful Heseltine environment secretary. She and the Treasury immediately flattened his idea about giving away council homes. The cash-strapped Treasury needed the cash from selling.

The Prime Minister, with her intense sensitivity and support to Tory-inclined social groups, believed, seemingly with much understanding, that a giveaway would infuriate homeowners who had painstakingly accumulated for deposits and paid off mortgages.

Instead, inside a fortnight of taking up his appointment, Heseltine issued official circular recommending council-home sales. To his disappointment, the bill took nearly 18 months to draft and push through, with stubborn opposition coming from Labour councils and the House of Lords.

However, by August 1980 the bill was passed. Margaret Thatcher herself started the policy in a special television broadcast and said that if someone had been a council tenant for at least three years, she started, sounding her words even more deliberately and precisely than normal, as if speaking to a somewhat dim child, that they would have the right, by law, to buy their house.

The right to buy was a smart trade-mark, clear, quick to say, simple to memorise, and combining two of contemporary Britain’s popular preoccupations, personal liberty and purchasing, while further encapsulating the more alluring side of what the Thatcher government was giving the country.

Her application of the term house in the broadcast, when millions of council tenants really lived in flats, was similarly important. It gave the design an aspirational feeling, reassuringly rural rather than humble and municipal.

The Right to Buy TV commercial that shortly ensued gave further, less detailed hints that the government’s proposed housing transformation would strengthen rather than upset the present social regime.

In a generous, orderly semi without a tower block in view, like the setting for a middle-class sitcom, an envelope containing a Right to Buy circular dropped on to the doormat. A tiny unkempt boy, wearing dungarees, white-skinned, picked it up.

He rushed enthusiastically to the breakfast table. There, his mother, in her mid-30s, decorated in an immaculate white blouse, and with a Lady Diana-like hairstyle, was reading a newspaper and drinking from a genteel white cup.

The old-fashioned suggestion appeared to be that father was out at work. The camera shifted closer to the table, showing that mother was poring over a print advertisement headlined “How to go about buying your council house”.

When a voice-over started in a chirpy cockney dialect, the ad’s one acknowledgement to the existence of working class, notifying spectators that “There are nearly 5 million council tenants in England and Wales, many families like yours. You can decide whether to turn your home into your house.”

Sales began gradually. Through the remaining four months of 1980, 55 council homes were purchased in England under the new law. Some Labour local authorities were intentionally slow in dealing with would‑be buyers.

In the London borough of Greenwich, council workers declined to give out application forms and sometimes dismissed that a Right to Buy existed at all. However, Heseltine empowered almost without limit by the 1980 Housing Act, hammered his municipal antagonists in court.

Then came the sales rush, in 1981, 66,321 English Right to Buy purchases, in 1982, 174,697, a sales summit that would be repeatedly approached throughout the remainder of the 1980s but never surpassed.

In Wales, too, sales climaxed early, in 1982. In Scotland, people were warier, the largest yearly sum did not reach until 1989. There were also regional disparities. In England, sales were fastest in London, the south-east and the south-west, and slowest in the manufacturing, or increasingly ex‑industrial, north.

However specific patterns were universal. Semis marketed better than terraces. Houses marketed better than flats at first by about 50 to one. Low-rise flats marketed better than high-rise ones. Properties with gardens or garages were greatly in demand.

Rural and suburban homes marketed better than city ones. Homes on small estates marketed better than homes on large ones. Homes with non-council neighbours were the most sought after of all.

Similar subtle and not so subtle social gradations determined the buyers. A thorough, politically neutral national consensus conducted by the Department of the Environment in 1985–6 and issued in 1988, staring back at the first five years of the Right to Buy, determined that buyers were an extremely distinct group but definitely not typical of council tenants as a whole.

Buyers were disproportionately drawn from the middle-aged and the better-off, many with grown-up children sharing the home and the expenses. Most were in full-time employment, usually manual proficient or white-collar professions, and with more than one wage-earner in the home.

Buyer earnings were on average nearly double tenant incomes.

Buyers were 10 times less expected to be jobless than nonbuyers. Furthermore, they were twice as likely to know existing homeowners. In fact, two-thirds of buyers stated that all or most of their family or friends were owner-occupiers.

In all these respects, the poll simply concluded, council-home buyers in the first half of the 1980s showed a marked continuation with those who had purchased Council homes throughout the decades before the Right to Buy became law.

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Thatcherism, in some ways, was an extremely accomplished performance in false egalitarianism, as indeed is capitalism itself. The Right to Buy, for all its appealingly inclusive rhetoric, was not a right accessible to all.

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Those who could not afford to exercise it tended to be lone parents, younger residents, people living on their own, or Thatcherism’s financial fallen, the jobless or low-skilled.

There were also emotional difficulties. Non-buyers tended to be cautious of mortgage debt, or of taking responsibility for repairs. Or they didn’t believe property purchase was for the likes of them. Or they really didn’t like their home enough to purchase it.

During the 70s, more vulnerable residents had become more concentrated in the poorest council estates. Frequently, non-buyers were just too bewildered by the rest of their lives. Even following five years of the Right to Buy, the 1988 report observed, nearly a tenth of council tenants were totally oblivious of the scheme at all.

Amongst the surviving nine-tenths, the large preponderance of whom qualified for it, knowledge of the Right to Buy was seen to be meagre and usually incorrect.

The government and its press associates presented the Right to Buy as a victory regardless. Either way, the scheme did win in changing how numerous Britons thought. The 1988 poll asked 1,230 buyers why they had purchased their homes and got hard-headed, individualistic, essentially Thatcherite answers.

Great monetary investment, the bargain which discounts on purchases presented. The feeling of security, of self-esteem, the right to repair or upgrade. The desire to have something to give the family and to move up the housing ladder and to improve mobility.

Two-thirds of those questioned stated they had not anticipated becoming homeowners until the Right to Buy legislation. As in all thriving capitalism, a new market had been formed and then satisfied.

The cuts were crucial to the means. The official figures of the state assets being sold off were respectably huge. In southern England, in 1981 the normal estimate of a right to buy property was £19,557, a tenth higher than the normal price given for a private-sector home by an English first-time buyer.

Yet most Right to Buy buyers actually paid much closer to £10,000: The normal discount obtained nationwide, reported the 1988 poll, was 44 percent. Buyers typically acquired nearly the whole value of their property.

Meanwhile, the government gained a financial windfall, not as exciting as North Sea oil, but plentiful. £692 million from council-home sales in 1980–1, £1.394 billion in 1981–2, £1.981 billion in 1982–3.

Thatcherism chose to manifest itself as a rejection of the postwar, state-driven, more profligate way of doing things. However, in housing, her administration was really the postwar state’s successor, selling off the assets it had built up.

A similar dependency law, virtually never recognized, behind her social and economic changes generally. Her autonomy to make Britain more risk-taking and individualistic in some ways simply endured because the country she had obtained, for all its defects and stresses, was a comparatively steady, consolidated place underneath.

More similar in the late 70s than it had ever been, yet filtered by shared class opinions and mainly at peace, there had been few protests in Callaghan’s Britain. Her government, apparently powerful and new, in fact somewhat lived off this social capital that dull old social capitalism had created.

What would happen when social resources started to run out, like what would happen when Britain ran out of affordable housing, was, in the early 1980s, a subject for another day.

Oddly amongst Thatcher’s ministers, Heseltine had some feeling of the broader importance of the housing of Right to Buy. He strongly asserted that councils should be permitted to retain three-quarters of the income from sales, in order to reconstruct the homes sold.

Contrary to the Right to Buy a small but increasing amount of critics since the 80s, the plan did not kill Council home-building overnight. More than 250,000 state-owned homes were built between 1980 and 1985.

But the speed of construction did slow, year by year. The percentage of the revenue from purchases that went to councils was steadily disintegrated, against Heseltine’s wishes. In 1983 Margaret Thatcher moved him to the Ministry of Defence, in large part to use his bulldozing charm against The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) and the ladies of Greenham Common.

In the meantime, rents for remaining Council residents increased with a new quickness. By 1991 they were 55 percent higher, pertinent to normal earnings than they had been 10 years earlier. If it were not for the Right to Buy, the council housing division as a mass would have created immense excesses from rental income and the growth in actual rents would not have been needed.

Or to put it more directly, home ownership was made desirable for more affluent Council residents by reductions compensated for by their lesser neighbours.

Yet in the early 1980s, the full cost of the Right to Buy was less visible than the new front doors, new kitchens and bathrooms, new paint jobs and fireplaces, new pebbledash and stone cladding, new garden balustrades and double glazing, new porches, conservatories and mock-Tudor panels that started to emerge across the earlier benumbed and communal panorama of British municipal housing.

The Prime Minister posed frequently with new purchasers, in their thoughtfully planned kitchens, on their swept-clean doorsteps, in their trimmed front gardens. The owners usually a little younger than the normal buyer, and dressed up for the event, with photogenic kids at hand.

Margaret Thatcher herself seemed genuinely excited and thrilled, sometimes even resting on a garden wall, winning one of her contests to reshape the country, for once. Until the spring of 1982, and the remote salvation of her character and notoriety by the Falklands war, it did not appear possible that she would gain much more.

However, it was a financial turn around in some sectors of the United Kingdom which was as essential to Margaret Thatcher’s ballot rating improving as the Falklands.

What is frequently overlooked is that at the time banks were a complete beast to get loans from. Mortgages were nearly as easy. Presently, the financial services are the biggest damned cancer in the advanced system, handling buyers like faeces and infringing the law as policy.

The fact that the offspring of Margaret Thatcher’s previous housing minister now owns more than 40 council houses exposes this for what it was, a naked grasp for resources by members of the government. If we observed this kind of thing in a central African country we would scoff at their depravity. Such things don’t happen in England, right?

Margaret Thatcher might not have imagined the mass purchase of Council homes by future nefarious generations. Nevertheless, you don’t require too much understanding to understand that if you’re selling off Council homes to residents at a lowered price, then everybody is going to be on that bandwagon.

Margaret Thatcher was potentially unethical and blinkered to the result of her methods, but financially astute members of her government could recognise the opportunity of getting even richer.

Nevertheless, regarding the market improving in some regions, it may have played a tiny part, but the majority of the reason for her re-election was the Falkland Factor and the creation of the Social Democratic Labour Party (SDLP).

However, her government was quite mild opposed to the lot that is in now, who are simply plain asset strippers.

It was not about enabling residents to purchase their own homes, it was an assault on the notion of social housing. They were to be traded off at a minimum reduction of 32 percent of the market price for a house or 44 percent for a flat.

Councils were not authorised to use the, somewhat minimised, receipts to create new council homes. That’s one reason out of many that we are in the dangerous situation we are to day. Individual desire alone does not point to the greatest satisfaction for the highest number.

The actual amounts of housing stock were the same, whether marketed or not, i.e, continued to be for rent. The major thing is, that those marketing, were not compensated by housing stock for rent, therefore, the poorer families in British society saw themselves squeezed-out of being able to get proper rental accommodation at inexpensive rents.

It might be worth pointing out that Council tenants didn’t somehow inherit their homes.

Most parents who until the 1950’s had shared a two up two down privately rented terraced home with possibly aunts and uncles and so forth. Eventually to realise their vision, a council maisonette on a newly built estate someplace.

Most people were World War II veterans or industry operators throughout the war, and they were all hard working people, in a way people who adopt that expression today seemingly wouldn’t understand.

Nevertheless, in the 1950’s, there they were, breathing cleanish air for once, enclosed by open areas on an estate developed for them, in appreciation of the disparities and atonement they’d endured through decades of hardship, exploitation and conflict.

At no time did these people ever see their Council housing as a money-making tool. They recognised it as a crucial component of creating and giving to a community. Furthermore, they were sold out, not only financially by governments after the 1980’s but by the whole Right to Buy scheme.

A system conceived by people who simply never noticed the short-term gains of money-dealing and didn’t remotely know the histories or requirements, or also the tolerance of people who aren’t like them.

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Housing estates eventually became a three strike and you’re out the place because it had become a dumping area for the most unsuitable housing residents and those that had purchased their homes through the Right to Buy scheme had become discouraged because they had purchased their homes and now couldn’t sell them.

It wasn’t their fault, the place had once been lively throughout the 1970’s and it was presently something of a wasteland, and like so much of this country these days.

There was formerly the normal lives or everyday person who strive every day, who were content to go on holiday to the English seashore and while away the hours with their family. Now, all we have is this huge cultural sporting events, that are hyped and sold to intoxicated punters.

And we have these big time performances, consumerist festivals, but for the real lives of everyday people, they’re not part of that culture. The culture that we once knew is no longer ours, it belongs to the new culture, along with our Council houses.

Margaret Thatcher was a cold hearted Tory excretion of the highest dimensions, and her legacy has enabled even more outrageously greedy, self-aggrandizing poop into government. She knew precisely what their big bang would do for the markets, and she knew precisely what allowing Right to Buy whilst all but stopping district councils to renew their stock would do, medium to long term.

Letting wealthy landowners purchase Council housing in volume is what we are speaking about. The difficulty with the Right to Buy is a portion of it has ended up in the hands of the affluent middle and upper middle-class rather than working people who are now left impaled and renting from deceptive landlords.

The Right to Buy should have made it unlawful to rent out ex-council properties, they should be homes, not investment opportunities.

The most visible distinction is that money that was once paid to the state, which could have been salvaged into creating a new property, is now going into private hands, where it is typically utilised to purchase other current stock in an unwanted feedback circuit.

The city has the capability to manage an organised strategy of developing new homes with rents from existing property. Private residents do not, and will simply purchase whatever’s on Rightmove.

To add insult to injury, the state is presently giving taxpayers’ funds to private landlords to house numerous people on low earnings. This is a horrible state of affairs for everyone other than the private landlords.

Plus whilst the state is permitted to sell off its own property, it is not permitted to sell off other people’s property.

There’s a huge distinction between someone who pursues route A because they think it’s the right one for the well-being of the majority, even if they’re entirely incorrect about that and someone who pursues A because they believe it will serve themselves, their family and their friends even if it screws the majority over.

I believe Thatcher pitched firmly into the first tent. Even if she was deluded, she believed she was serving the working people of Great Britain. I doubt that David Cameron ever believed that he was serving the working people of England.

Yet, like all parties, you don’t actually require much proof to understand that they’re a sly, self-serving wedge of corruption. None of them gives a crap about the people of Great Britain and they barely care about the people who vote for them.

Every other sucker was wrong, as far as she was concerned and she stretched that idea to her own government, although if you’re of a specific age, you should know that.

If you look back and see all those mental hours that people spent slaving to become homeowners. They worked every hour to get a house of their own, and that’s when homes were worth something, something you could pass along to your children.

Now all the government has created, it has produced a nation of self-employed workers with zero hours who are beholden by the stress of an ouster and have to put up with nefarious gang men that call themselves bailiffs, this is what the government has done to us.

It was totally the wrong thing to do and more importantly, it was done for corrupt purposes. It was done to obtain votes and it warped the housing market.

Thousands of ex-council homes are now controlled by Private Landlords and Councils are having to rent back homes they earlier controlled from these Private Landlords to home homeless people on their lists.

Margaret Thatcher, some would say was downright wicked, who should have been judged for deception against the British People for further selling us all down the river of Privatisation. Gas, Electricity and Water Bills, with profits going to wealthy Tories with their acquired wealth, whilst the poor fight to keep warm.

If there is ever another World War I, do you actually want to defeat Great Britain, defeat what? A better Britain, are you joking.

Even though some might acknowledge that selling off state housing stock wholesale was ill-thought through, and Britain at least, which is preoccupied with the idea of house ownership encouraging people to obtain a little security in the structure of bricks and mortar is debatably a great idea, but Margaret Thatcher rather overreached the line.

However, where we should take issue with this piece is in seeking to build a direct association between a strategy was established more than 30 years ago with today’s housing crisis. Too much has happened in the said field for that system to be forced to carry all or even most of the liability.

Not least the dwindling abundance of meagre, local builders and the majority of the national building organisations and an affiliated transit away from hiring a continual workforce of tradesmen in support of contracting self-employed tradesmen has paralysed house-building.

Another consequence is that a number of apprentices in the different building trades have dropped off drastically, pointing to a deficiency of such tradesmen.

Homes are constructed for profit not need. Under the post war governments, Council and then Housing Association homes were constructed for need. Councils have been stopped by Government policy both Tory and Labour from creating more homes and investing the funds from sell offs in home building.

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At least Jeremy Corbyn was discussing the end of this situation, the new homes must continue to be publically maintained. Steps should be further contemplated to take vacant homes into public possession.

The Right to Buy could give our family the promise to subsequently get on the property ladder, but then again socialists want to keep us in our place.

The saddest and most significant symbol of Thatcher’s ploy was not to make privately owned homes the equivalent as Council owned homes, therefore guaranteeing that anyone who’s rent was clear and had lived someplace for long enough they would get a guaranteed mortgage on a reduced obtained home.

It wasn’t ever Thatcher’s aim to give people an investment in their home and it was yet another platform of privatisation, in other words, the elimination of public sector expenditure. Had she well intentioned rather of the ideologically that supported the Housing bill, it would never have seen the light of day.

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Furthermore, she got the concept from one Milton Friedman who she portrayed as a most talented economist. Some years later we know better but there were still lots of economists who maintained Thatcher’s efforts were a delusion.

Margaret Thatcher was the first Tory to be ideologically motivated. Former Tory governments were broadly realistic, essentially managerial. You might agree or disagree with that strategy. If an administration has a fair social system, and I don’t believe Thatcher had one, I would prefer my government to do its best with the importance of the entire country in mind.

Yes, there will be losers, but my beef with the Tories is that too many of the losers are at the bottom end of the socio-economic system and too few higher up and that isn’t how it should operate.

I hate ideologies which I think, whatever the ideology, just twists everything, with what’s occurring being defined and normally warped to suit an ideology. Margaret Thatcher had a small-town mentality and perceived things simplistically.

Labour, on the other hand, made up of a mixture of old socialist and social-democratic beliefs influenced with what they regard as a duty to Satisfy the City are and have been, even Tony Blair, shapeless. David Cameron, who for me was something of a loose cannon, at least is logical, whether or not you agree with the solutions he came up with.

For me, all parties should be one-nation parties. The problem is all parties just pay lip service to that idea.

It was one of Margaret Thatcher’s and the current Tories more deranged policies. Home purchase does make sense for a number of people, but we further demand options, with Housing Associations ready to play a role.

The concept of simply selling off socially-owned housing cheap to those fortunate enough to be living in them, it is insane, and the Buy to Let (BTL) really doesn’t appear to work for anyone but the lucky few.

Margaret Thatcher left office a quarter of a century ago and it isn’t her accountability, that after that we have let in a number of immigrants and allowed fools to hinder new homes being created where people want to live and where builders are keen to develop them.

If a Council house is sold, it should be sold at the market price and the funds accumulated from the purchase of it restored back into the Council housing stock. Margerate Thatcher has been out of office for a really long time now, may she Rest in Peace, but what has any government done since to attempt to rectify the balance?

The discount was a simple bait for votes, and whether by a loss of foreknowledge or intentionally spiteful purposes, it surely resulted in Council house property being run down, a stain being attached to still being a tenant, and profiteering by selling on to landlords who then commissioned greater rents than the Council would have done.

It’s a broken strategy and one which it’s disgusting Labour didn’t get rid of.

I won’t mince my words, selling off Council housing, simply schtup the issue entirely. The character of the neighbourhood transformed gradually from one of the people living in a community, where people helped one another and where our children could play safely, to one where putting your own front door on to show they actually owned your home and to raising the pickets, which were more significant.

Margaret Thatcher’s servile loyalty to the Milton Friedman playbook, in which you privatised everything you could, whilst creating subdued mortgage serfs as promptly as she could, and it started to scatter the seeds of the divide in this country, that we’ve actually never recovered from.

The Tories like selling off public assets to their contributors and followers, that is the only policy that these inept kleptomaniacs have consistently adhered to. Their financial mismanagement relies upon the sustained looting of what we paid for, being sold at a knockdown rate.

How to gain votes, the pretension at the time of turning us into a Home owner Democracy. Looks pretty sick now with all the wretched Buy to Let swindlers, doesn’t it? Just another Tory trick, say one thing and then present precisely the reverse effect.

The problem is that quite substantial amounts of people cannot provide their own housing, they really can’t afford it, and most wages are consistently low for frontline workers, which makes it increasingly stressful, that is why we had Social housing in the first place.

Social housing for people who worked on the frontline and did not earn enough money to purchase their own homes and it worked surprisingly well, for a pretty long time until Margaret Thatcher became in charge and was permitted to call all the shots.

She subdued the selling value of Council houses to boost people to purchase them said homes and they were made to believe they were some variety of dignitary and the tabloids described it as something of an excellent scheme.

After all, it was simply a scheme and Council residents were the examples of that money making plan, making their homes into some sort of shrine and people were enthusiastic. Of course, there were some people that were opposed to the idea but it was like Thatcherism had taken an entire community of people and stole them.

They were encompassed by the arms of Thatcher like a clamp, but the entire theory was cloaked in a façade and you couldn’t actually whine about it because people had been fooled into thinking that by purchasing their homes they would be much better off, or at least the country would.

If you’re thinking that the Right to Buy did not cause the housing crisis, you’d be right…

People who purchased their Council home, were as one would say already a Council tenant. The dilemma was that each resident would move on eventually, whether it be because they required a smaller home or larger one or they died and did not then require one at all, or indeed, they got evicted.

If you purchased your Council home, it was then yours and not the Councils any longer, therefore they had lost that housing asset completely because it could not be rented out to another resident if it went empty.

Therefore, the funds they had earned from a purchase of housing stock was supposed to be put back into the kitty to develop more fitting homes for our ever expanding population. After all, we grow larger, not smaller in dimension for the ever growing population boom that we now call immigration.

Everyone who purchased a council home had to be a resident, normally of long standing. When they purchased they stayed, no one else lost a home, there were precisely the equivalent amount of homes and people as before.

It was simply that one less family rented and one more family owned and back in time when the Right to Buy came in, there was no actual housing deficit, not like today.

It’s not even the fact that Margaret Thatcher permitted people to buy their Council homes, but the reality that the United Kingdom is far too short of ground and we are a pretty tiny country in regard to other nations such as America or Australia, and we are gradually running out of places to create more homes for the needy.

The Right to Buy was not wrong in itself, but what was completely crazy was the refusal on councils not using the cash they got from selling houses and flats to spend in creating more housing. Along with decreasing the funds given to them by the central government to finance developing new homes.

It is that which has created the crazy and unsustainable increase in house costs, and the growth of Buy to Let landlords who take money as donations from inside government discursively by rising rental costs to residents who frequently need housing benefit to rent the things.

There could be a contention that Buy to Let landlords are themselves a little like the scroungers who are frequently scapegoated by this government, albeit indirectly.

When David Cameron first became Prime Minister in 2010 he pledged to decrease the amount spent on Housing Benefit from the absurd heights of £20 billion a year.

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Next, he put the fool Iain Duncan Smith in charge and allowed the bumbling simpleton George Osborne to base his entire financial plan on a nice little house price bubble.

The result was Bedroom tax, limitations on young people demanding and all kinds of nastiness and a £24 billion a year Housing benefit proposal in four years. If they were to carry on this way they would see a 50 percent rise in 10 years with £30 billion a year being claimed or millions destitute.

The Right to Buy further meant that more people would have assets in their homes that they could then be made to use when they required elderly care and presumably the Englishman’s home is his castle, and there is nothing more English than purchasing a home, seeing it go up in price, then being complacent about the reality that money has been made without putting any energy into it or using any skill.

We English are a group of idle, worthless good for nothing moronic idiots.

The compromised policy and on the outside so fair and honest, protecting the destructive truth that surfaced later once the policy was unchangeable and the harm was done. This idea extends with Iain Duncan Smith, the already, doubly failed leader wreaking destruction with his deceptive credit system.

Entirely believable but view beneath and simply inhale the reeking mass of decaying baloney that was there waiting to burst through.

Labour did not end the Right to Buy. They did end the under occupancy of privately rented social housing, funded for by Housing Benefit, however, did not implement those rules to publicly owned Social housing, that left a vulgar time bomb.

Everybody will have a varying viewpoint of this subject, but the Right to Buy would have operated remarkably well if the capital from those assets had been utilized to create new homes. The funds were supposed to have been put back into the reserve, however, most of it never was.

Combine that with our population boom and congestion and we get a formula for disaster, a genuine catastrophe. What was thought to have a positive result ends up collapsing and one which it appears we will never overcome now?

Teenager From Nigeria

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The United Kingdom is a country where a teenager from Nigeria moved here aged 16 and had the distinguished honour of representing Saffron Walden.

Conservative MP Kemi Badenoch applied her maiden address to mark how she went from immigrant to parliamentarian in one generation.

She stated that there are few nations in the realm, where you can go, in one generation, from immigrant to parliamentarian.

Michael Howard talked of the British dream, people choosing the United Kingdom because of its humanity and its opportunity. It is a country where a teenager from Nigeria could move here aged 16, be accepted as British, and have the glorious honour of serving Saffron Walden.

Growing up in Nigeria for this young lady was somewhat different. The United Kingdom was a beacon for her, a radiant light, and hope of a normal life.

Often, we hear the radical reformer John Bright misquoted, that the House of Commons is the mother of all parliaments. What he actually said was that this country is the mother of all parliaments.

Our political systems may not always be held in high respect, however, she thinks that politics is a mirror held up to society. It can sometimes be irksome and we see human frailty on display, but it further embraces much that is great in our country.

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As Woody Allen said about sex, “If it’s not messy, you’re not doing it right.”

She then stated the same was true for democracy.

It’s not always predictable, its results are not always balanced, it can throw up results that no one anticipated, but we adapt.

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The British Parliament always has adjusted, and that is why it is the greatest in the world because it takes its direction from the British people.

If it took its lead from the British people we wouldn’t be in the mess that we are today and we wouldn’t have to pick up the faeces that the government leave behind in its wake of devastation. This nation is in a real pickle and the people of this country familiarise the government of this every day with their rallying and contestations as they wander the streets fighting against what the government have done over the years.

This government is going down the pan, and the pace it’s going down is astounding, particularly with the government’s plans to make it so. Our government is unpredictable and nothing that they do is effective and they are silly if they think they can get away with it.

What we want is a sharp-witted leader who knows the kind of society we live in. One that has grown up in hardship and knows what it’s like to be impoverished. Not some ignorant narcissistic leader who is crafty and dishonest.

We need a powerful leader but who has been affected by life and who has wisdom and common sense. Who gives support to the needs of others who are striving every day.

Currently, our government is a blemish on our society and they want to stamp out anybody that does not fit into their little pigeon hole and they want to carve out a society that fits in with their ideas and plans.

Most people shudder when they hear the term “government” or “politics” and that is a shame because there is no need. The government may have the notoriety of being a tad scary and they might well be a well-established clan, but for those that seek to suppress us can be knocked down.

Conservative MP Kemi Badenoch might have come from Nigeria when she was 16 and now have the special recognition of serving Saffron Walden but she is simply an MP and she might have a voice but a voice will break after a while.

She is inexperienced and impressionable and attending her peers, she will either get tougher or decline with the romance and at the moment is under the misapprehension that these people in government consider her to be an asset.

She may have the potential to talk a good talk but does she have the skill and prowess to be different? If she has empathy, understanding and good morals then she will go far, but she will have to compete for a position because the conservatives don’t like good people.

 

 

Mixed-Sex Wards

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A number of patients experiencing the embarrassment of mixed-sex hospital wards have risen by about 50 percent under Theresa May and more than 8,500 patients were put in such wards throughout the Prime Minister ’s first year at No 10, up on 5,700 the year before.

Hospitals are penalised £250 per patient per day for breaching rules on keeping patients on single-sex wards. However, Labour announced Tory cuts mean hospitals are bursting at the seams with no option but to breach the rules.

MPs called it a scan­­dal, maintaining mixed-sex wards are an affront to basic human dignity and the Tories promised to abolish mixed-sex wards effectively in both their 2010 and 2015 manifestos but the promise had disappeared when it came to this year’s election.

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From July last year, when Theresa May first moved to Downing Street, until June this year there were 8,546 examples of mixed-sex ward use, up 49 percent on the 5,720 in the year before.

The numbers were slipped out hours before Theresa May began her three-week summer holiday.

Patients demand dignity and respect in hospital but this Government is letting them down and it’s an absolute disgrace and an insult to basic human decency and we must make certain the Tories start properly financing the NHS to stop this offensive practice.

After the Tories introduced penalties in 2010 a number of episodes dropped 94 percent from almost 12,000 a month to 687 in June this year and the Government’s obvious determination to abandon its pledge to stop mixed-sex wards is but another sign of the economic demands on the NHS.

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But do you see Jeremy Hunt or any other political body in an NHS ward or mixed department for that? Not in a million years, yet Jeremy Hunt tells us all is well, therefore why do the Tories even have a manifesto, when they don’t even carry out anything in it?

Didn’t the Tories say they would deal with this dilemma, many moons ago? But then again they say a lot of stuff.

Website-NHS.pngMixed-sex wards on the NHS have been the subject of manifesto promises and political promises for over a decade. Labour pledged to remove them in 1997. Now, years later, the government has promised to do precisely the same but they have now been abolished it in Scotland.

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Andy Burnham concluded that 95 percent of hospitals are now able to implement single-sex care, while the conversion of the other 5 percent would install an added fiscal strain on the already cash-strapped NHS.

So why is getting rid of mixed-sex wards such an article of faith? Given reasonable measures of privacy at the bedside, is there any great demand to have zero patience of mixed-sex accommodation? Why should it be more convenient to obtain treatment or recover amongst members of the same sex?

Everything is wrong with mix-sex wards, particularly when you’re relying on others to assist you with bodily functions, the last thing you want to fret about is if you’re flashing at a member of the opposite sex.

Dignity, privacy, respect and when people are enduring treatment and having to spend it in mix-sex wards, some patients can find the experience very embarrassing and upsetting and mixed wards are unacceptable.

Most people want single sex wards for the same reason that most people want single-sex changing rooms in public sports or social amenities.

We don’t have same sex public toilets, so why should we have same sex hospital wards?

Being in a hospital makes people feel helpless because in addition to the disheartening or terrifying reality of being sick, and incapacitated, they have to cope with forced intimacy with strangers in ways that don’t occur in their everyday lives and men and women have their self-esteem about not being seen by strangers of the opposing sex, especially, (except for professionals) in such circumstances.

Mixed sex wards in psychiatry are frequently dangerous to women and their chance of being sexually violated rises exponentially on entry to an acute psychiatric admissions ward. Furthermore, there could be challenges under the Health Research Authority (HRA) from women kept in mixed sex psych wards on the grounds of debasing treatment if there is the inadequate division of gender provision for bathing, dressing and so on.

On a mixed sex adult psych ward, it is extremely hard to guarantee women’s safety, especially when they are themselves sexually disinhibited and this frequently leads to intensive care unit admissions that could have been evaded had they had single sex provision.

The worst thing about a stay in a hospital, apart from being ill, that is. Is the guy in the next bed refusing to stay in bed and also refusing to put his withered rooster and gobbled neck nuts away as he wonders around the ward?

It’s not only horrible for patients of the opposite sex, it’s also horrible for visitors. People just want a bit of dignity, for themselves and others.

It’s not just a concern to elderly women, but the young woman also feels immensely unsafe, particularly when you’re put in one of those terrible open at the back gowns when you’re hauling yourself to the loo keeping the thing sealed with one hand while wheeling a drip bag with the other, with the worst concern of all, that a collection of men are getting a flash of your butt.

The quality of nursing has evolved dramatically, which is rather horrifying when patients are being managed with a total absence of respect, particularly dementia patients, who are apparently being left laying on beds with their genitals completely exposed.

Evidently, when it was brought to the nurses attention she just giggled, rearranged his attire and under her breath responded to her coworker that he was a big boy, now this might have been amusing in a Carry On film, but this is entirely unacceptable in a real life situation, and whilst this man’s embarrassment wasn’t severe enough in an all male ward, it would have been considerably worse in a mixed ward.

Obviously, not all patients can have their own room, but we should have single sex wards, particularly when the dignity of patients is sadly too often not given the preference by nurses that it should be.

Maybe we should have public toilet that are unisex and that we all urinate in one place, failing that we could all wander down the street with our arses hanging out of our pants, but that would be classified indecent exposure, yet it’s okay to wander around like that in hospital or leave a dementia patient with his tackle on show because he or she has no idea what is going on.

Most people would not want to stay in a mixed-sex ward in a hospital, and rightly so, and just because you’re in a hospital doesn’t mean you have to leave your dignity and need for privacy at the door.

Mixed wards genuinely bother some people and upset others. Just as single sex restrooms, which some companies have attempted to introduce.

Some patients roam around in the night as well. I was in the hospital once and one patient was rambling about talking to herself, she unquestionably had some form of dementia. I am a rather laid back person, so was not too concerned, however, when she started coming over and peering through my bag, that’s when I began getting a little concerned. Regrettably, during the night, the unfortunate lady had a heart attack.

What matters is how people feel. If they already feel vulnerable, as various people do in a hospital, then every attempt should be made to ensure they are comfortable and as at ease as possible.

Human beings are not robots and they have feelings.

One of the greatest health hazards posed to humans is a lack of sleep, sleep is far more critical to our overall health than the public appears to appreciate. If you are put in a situation of staying vigilant because falling asleep leaves you vulnerable, your health and your overall care is dangerously jeopardised.

You will need a prolonged stay in the hospital and you won’t improve as well. All of this costs. Analyse balancing those costs against the costs of having single-sex wards, identifying of course that the vast preponderance of current wards is single sex.

Sometimes, when you are sick or medicated, you are less apt to manage your attire when moving around the ward, particularly if that attire is a hospital garment.

Sometimes the curtains are opened and closed carelessly by staff, family members et cetera, exposing the patient to the view of other patients and possibly visitants.

Sometimes doctors and nurses want to discuss intimate things with patients, or vice-versa, and noise transfers through curtains. That’s serious enough, but if there are members of the opposing sex present, it simply adds to the humiliation.

Those of you who insist on believing that this is all about people being prudish, spare one minute to reflect those that have been victims of sexual attacks and we should quit attempting to transform this into a simplistic modern’ vs ancient philosophy thing because it really isn’t.

I am not at all prudish, I wish Britain was less prudish about the human body, but that is immaterial to whether or not hospitals have mixed sex wards.

Should you be one of those who are assaulted on a mixed sex ward I can only imagine that your opinion would change and had you previously been a victim of a sexual attack then your position would be different, to begin with.

Men and women’s bodies are not only different to look at they are medically diverse and we have different issues, a single-sex ward could be seen as more specialist, as the staff would have to consider less likely complexities than they would on a mixed sex ward.

Most people would view their dignity as utterly essential and would not sacrifice it other than in a life-or-death situation. Segregated wards are comparatively simple to arrange in an economical way.

Preserving your dignity while in the hospital is up there with getting the appropriate doctor, the proper medications and the appropriate aftercare. Not everybody will agree on this, but there are lots of people out there that do, and it’s their health service also.

Wards are places where patients go to heal, sleep, eat and rest. They are not a place where actual, surgery, et cetera takes place.

It should be obvious that if any interruption of this healing process happens, then it’s a health problem and most people feel that mixed sex wards are a disturbance and a problem, hence influencing the health outcomes of the patients.

It’s all extremely liberating and all that to not mind being on a mixed-sex ward, but the truth is that there is a huge portion of the populace who did not have the opportunity of growing up in these oh-so-enlightened times and feel vulnerable and unsafe in such a situation.

Attacks and numerous other abhorrent confrontations do happen in hospitals, and many people can deal with it, however, they shouldn’t be put in that position in the first place.

The health service is not a charity, we fund and are empowered to have a say in how we want it to be run, but there are a number of people who state that we should be thankful for what we get kind of approach, which is nonsense, we should demand to be treated with respect in spite of the fact that there are funding difficulties with the NHS.

Do you believe that the likes of Theresa May and all the other cabinet gatherings would accept being jostled into a mixed sex ward against their will? No, of course not. They think that their money gains them reverence so they can command their options.

Well, we fund for the NHS too, and should be treated with reverence, and not accept the stance that appears to be being presented here that, somehow, we are not worthy enough so should simply accept what we’re given. Well dangly bits to that.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Burdens To Society

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Disabled people are actually being made to feel like burdens to the community and that doesn’t help the feeling that it’s okay to grow older, to be sick, or to be a disabled person and therefore what we’re witnessing is a very continuous manner of oppression.

Which shows us and tells everybody, that you don’t really want to end up like that because that would be the saddest thing in the world. Therefore, you’d be better off going before you end up like that and that’s a very divisive and undermining thing because everybody has a contribution to make.

People that are really sick or terminally ill don’t want a painful, tortured death and for their children to have to witness them screaming and in agony. They would want to pick the moment in which they are ready to say that this is when I want to go and my children can see me and say goodbye.

Children don’t want to see a parent have a painful death but there are ways of doing that. If you see what the British Medical Association (BMA) are suggesting, they’re utterly against assisted dying and what they’re looking for is a high quality, comprehensive and precise scope of palliative care that guarantees everybody gets the sort of dignified death that they require.

Assisted dying lets a dying person the opportunity to control their death if they determine their pain is intolerable. It is unlawful in the United Kingdom.

The large bulk of the public support a shift in the legislation on assisted dying for the terminally sick, mentally competent adults. This comprises the overall populace, people of faith and people with disabilities.

54 percent of GPs are supportive or open-minded to law reform on assisted dying and polling reveals that 87 percent of people maintain an assisted dying legislation would increase or have no impact on their confidence in doctors.

Amending the legislation would grant a dying person to have free and candid discussions with their doctors regarding assisted dying. This is currently impossible within the law.

The appropriate legislation for the United Kingdom is one that enables dying people, with six months or shorter to have the opportunity to control their death.

Dying people are not suicidal, they don’t want to die but they do not have the determination to live. When death is imminent, suffering should not be. Along with great care, dying people warrant the option to control the timing and manner of their death.

Assisted dying should be established by the dying person. Dying people should have assistance to take the concluding action that brings about their peaceful death.

Dying people are already ending their days to evade painful and undignified deaths. Many spend thousands of pounds to fly abroad to ensure a safe and peaceful death. They do so to obtain a certified and reliable way to manage their death with medical guidance.

Euthanasia is the performance of intentionally ending a person’s life to alleviate pain. For example, a doctor who gives a patient with terminal cancer an overdose of muscle relaxants to terminate their life would be deemed to have carried out euthanasia.

Assisted suicide is the performance of intentionally aiding or abetting another person to kill themselves.

If a relative of a person with a terminal illness were to get strong sedatives, knowing that the person planned to take an overdose of sedatives to kill themselves, they may be deemed to be assisting death.

Both actual euthanasia and assisted suicide are prohibited under English law. Depending on the situations, euthanasia is considered as both manslaughter or murder and is punishable by law, with a supreme punishment of up to life imprisonment.

Assisted suicide is forbidden under the articles of the Suicide Act (1961) and is punishable by up to 14 years’ imprisonment. Trying to kill yourself is not a criminal act in itself.

Euthanasia can be classified in several ways, including active euthanasia, where a person consciously interposes to terminate someone’s life, for instance, by injecting them with a high dosage of drugs.

Passive euthanasia is where a person causes death by denying or removing treatment that is essential to sustain life, such as denying antibiotics from someone with pneumonia.

Euthanasia can further be categorised as voluntary euthanasia, where a person makes a deliberate determination to die and requests support to do this.

Non-voluntary euthanasia is where a person is powerless to give their permission, for example, because they are in a coma or are severely brain damaged and another person takes the decision on their part, usually because the sick person previously stated a desire for their life to be terminated in such situations.

Involuntary euthanasia is where a person is killed against their expressed wishes.

Depending on the events, voluntary and non-voluntary euthanasia could be viewed as both voluntary manslaughter, where someone kills another person, however, factors can somewhat explain their actions or murder.

Involuntary euthanasia is essentially invariably viewed as murder.

If one is nearing the end of life, they have a right to good palliative care, to manage pain and other manifestations, as well as emotional, social and spiritual relief. Therefore they’re allowed to have a say in the treatments they receive at that stage.

For instance, under English legislation, all adults have the freedom to decline medical treatment, as long as they have enough ability to use and interpret information to make a determination. If you know that your capability to give permission may be affected in the future, you can arrange a legally binding advance decision, previously acknowledged as an advance directive.

An advance decision sets out the procedures and treatments that you agree to and those that you do not agree to. This means that the healthcare professionals treating you cannot perform specific procedures or treatments against your wishes.

Active euthanasia is currently only allowed in Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg. Under the legislation in these nations, a person’s life can be intentionally terminated by their doctor or other healthcare experts.

The person is normally given an overdose of muscle relaxants or sedatives. This induces a coma and then death.

Nevertheless, euthanasia is only allowed if the following three criteria are met, that the person has made an actual and voluntary plea to end their life. It is believed that they have enough mental ability to make an informed choice about their care and it is agreed that the person is suffering unbearably and there is no hope for an improvement in their health.

Capacity is the ability to manage and learn information to make a choice.

It’s reasonable to debate about the way arguments get split up on the subject of euthanasia, and various reasonings could fall into several classifications.

Some moral reasoning states that euthanasia undermines society’s regard for the sacredness of life or that allowing euthanasia affirms that some lives, particularly those of the disabled or sick are worth less than others.

Intentional euthanasia could be regarded as the start of a slippery slope that leads to involuntary euthanasia and the slaughter of people who are considered defective and that euthanasia might not be in a person’s real interests.

Euthanasia affects other people’s rights, not merely those of the patient.

There is rational reasoning that says that decent palliative care makes euthanasia unnecessary and that there’s no way of properly monitoring euthanasia.

Furthermore supporting euthanasia would lead to less good care for the terminally sick. Also, allowing euthanasia undermines the commitment of doctors and nurses to preserving lives. However, euthanasia could become a cost-effective method to treat the terminally sick.

Moreover supporting euthanasia could hinder the exploration for new cures and treatments for the terminally sick and that euthanasia weakens the urge to give great care for the dying, and good pain relief.

In April 2002, the Netherlands became the prime nation to sanction euthanasia and assisted suicide. It inflicted a stringent set of requirements, that the patient must be experiencing unacceptable pain, their disability must be incurable, and the request must be made in absolute awareness by the patient. In 2010, 3,136 people were given a deadly cocktail under medical supervision.

So-called palliative sedation has further become a broad practice in hospitals, with 15,000 cases a year following 2005. Patients with a life anticipation of two weeks or shorter are put in a medically induced coma, and all nutrition and hydration are removed.

The law has stirred a furious dispute over the right to suicide because assisted suicide outside of the standards established for euthanasia is still prohibited and is calculated as a homicide.

In France euthanasia and assisted suicide is against the law. The president, François Hollande, pledged to look at the right to die with dignity but has constantly dismissed any plan of sanctioning euthanasia or assisted suicide.

In 2005 the Léonetti law introduced the idea of the right to be left to die. Under stringent circumstances it enabled doctors to decide to restrict or hinder any treatment that is not beneficial, is disproportionate or has no other purpose than to artificially lengthen life and to use pain-killing medicines that might as a side effect, shorten life.

Two recent high-profile incidents have made the headlines because a doctor was accused of supplying drugs that accelerated the deaths of seven ageing patients and was acquitted, and France’s high court approved doctors to quit treating and feeding a young man who had been in a vegetative state on life support for six years.

In the last case, the patient’s parents had appealed to the European court of human rights and were anticipating a determination. A parliamentary paper on the matter was expected.

In the United States doctors are authorised to prescribe deadly dosages of medication to terminally sick patients in five US states. Euthanasia, nevertheless, is prohibited. In recent years, the aid in the dying movement has made incremental gains, however, the issue continues to be uncertain.

Oregon was the leading US state to sanction assisted suicide. The legislation took effect in 1997 and allows for terminally sick, mentally able patients with fewer than six months to live to ask for a prescript for life-ending medication.

More than a decade later, Washington state approved a proposal that was moulded on Oregon’s legislation. Plus last year, the Vermont lawmakers passed a comparable bill. Court judgments declared the practice constitutional in Montana and, most recently, in New Mexico.

In 2013, about 300 terminally sick Americans were prescribed deadly prescriptions, and about 230 people died as a consequence of taking them. Some patients prefer not to take the medication.

In Germany and Switzerland, the word euthanasia is usually shunned because of its connection with the eugenicist methods of the Nazi period. The law, therefore, tends to differentiate between assisted suicide (beihilfe zum suizid) and active assisted suicide (aktive sterbehilfe).

In Germany and Switzerland, active assisted suicide, ie a doctor prescribing and giving over a deadly medicine is banned. However German and Swiss legislation does permit assisted suicide within specific conditions.

In Germany, assisted suicide is allowed as long as the lethal drug is taken without any aid, such as someone supervising or helping the patient’s hand. In Switzerland, the code is more informal. It allows assisted suicide as long as there are no self-seeking reasons involved.

Switzerland has tolerated the creation of groups such as Dignitas and Exit, which grant assisted dying assistance for a payment, after all, everything has its cost even death.

In a poll, two-thirds of Germans stated they would approve a bill that authorised active assisted suicide too. However, the government has declared it wants to toughen the legislation around assisted suicide, with the health minister, Hermann Gröhe, declaring that he wants to outlaw groups like Dignitas in Germany.

Belgium enacted a bill in 2002 legalising euthanasia, becoming another country in the world to do so. The bill states doctors can assist patients to terminate their lives when they openly declare a desire to die because they are experiencing unmanageable and intolerable pain.

Patients can further receive euthanasia if they have explicitly affirmed it before entering a Coma or a comparable vegetative phase.

Assisted suicide is not specified in the bill, which does not define a means of euthanasia. They don’t make a distinction in the semantics. Nevertheless, the doctor has to be present at the bedside of the patient to their last breath, unlike the Oregon rule where the doctor provides just the prescript of drugs.

Some people have their individual motives for wanting to terminate their lives, particularly if their life is coming to a close and they’re in agonising pain. We think nothing of putting a pet out of its pain because it’s in distress or it has cancer and nothing can be done about it, yet we have to see our loved ones suffer till the very end.

Morally it is sinful to put someone out of their suffering, but if it is their choice, then shouldn’t we consider that request and let them go out with some sort of dignity?

There have been continued endeavours to sanction assisted dying with the assistance of assisted suicide and voluntary euthanasia across the United Kingdom, for those who have made a distinct determination, free from pressure, to end their lives and who are actually incapable of doing so themselves.

In numerous instances, there is a clear ethical case to restrict support to the terminally sick and there should be a reformation of the bill that would be sympathetic to the demands of other people who are enduringly or incurably suffering.

In recent years organisations have mediated in support of Tony and Jane Nicklinson’s and Paul Lamb’s struggles to improve the legislation on assisted dying for the terminally sick and incurably suffering by taking human rights cases through the courts, as well as supported parliamentary efforts to sanction assisted dying for the terminally sick.

Humanists support the freedom of each person to live by his or her own particular preferences, and the autonomy to make choices about his or her own life so long as this does not result in injury to others. Humanists do not share the attitudes to dying embraced by some spiritual devotees, in particular, that the method and moment of dying are for a divinity to choose, and that intervention in the course of nature is unacceptable.

Of course, we should firmly uphold the right to life but we should further understand that this freedom brings with it the freedom of each person to make his or her own decision about whether his or her life should be lengthened in the face of unnecessary suffering.

Currently, the needs and autonomy of patients are frequently overlooked. Numerous people are in fact assisted to die by doctors or nurses but without the safeguards that law would bring. Sympathetic doctors, who support the choices of their terminally sick or incurably suffering patients by helping them to die, and risk being charged with assisting suicide or murder.

The prevailing policy further results in close relatives being faced with the immensely difficult decisions of whether, knowing that it is illegal, to help a loved one who is pleading for relief to put an end to their misery or not to act and therefore lengthen their pain.

No one should be put in the situation of having to make such judgments, or certainly into a situation where they think that they have no other alternative but to terminate the life of someone they love.

Being able to die, with dignity, in a method of our choice must be recognised to be a major human right, a position established by the landmark decision in the Purdy case, where our greatest court established that the European Convention on Human Rights can be invoked in association to the end of life.

Sanctioning assisted dying would guarantee that stringent judicial safeguards are in position and enable people to make conscious judgments over their end of life care, freed from pressure. The option of an assisted dying should not be instead of palliative care for terminally sick people, but a core component of overall, patient-centered approaches to end of life care.

It is essential that there are clear safeguards in any assisted dying legislation and worldwide data from nations where assisted dying is lawful displays that safeguards can be useful, and recently assisted dying laws in the United Kingdom have had effective safeguards written into them.

Humanists UK was the only group to mediate in support of Tony and Jane Nicklinson and Paul Lamb’s difficulties to the illegality of assisted dying in the United Kingdom.

Initially, Tony, who had locked-in syndrome following being paralysed in an accident and only being able to move some muscles in his face, disputed at the High Court that his right to private life was disrupted by the fact that he could not be helped to die.

Nevertheless, following the High Court decreed against him in the summer of 2012, Tony died. As a result, Tony’s wife Jane took up the matter at the Court of Appeal, claiming that her right to family life was disrupted by the fact that her husband was refused an assisted death.

Paul Lamb, who also has locked-in syndrome, further became a petitioner on the same grounds as Tony, while Humanists UK mediated in aid of Tony, Jane and Paul. At the Supreme Court Humanists UK was backed by witness accounts from humanist philosophers Professor Simon Blackburn, Professor A C Grayling, Professor John Harris, and Professor Richard Norman, as well as the pathologist Professor John Lee and Sir Terry Pratchett.

The cases were declined by the Court of Appeal in 2013, the Supreme Court in 2014, and the European Court of Human Rights in 2015. Nevertheless, in rejecting the proceedings, a preponderance of Supreme Court judges showed their willingness to contemplate declaring a declaration of incompatibility between UK legislation and the European Convention on Human Rights’ right to private/family life, but as the issue is such a high profile public ethical issue, a preponderance further decreed that it was right to Parliament to first of all endeavor to settle the matters at hand.

This judgment was mimicked by the European Court.

The judges took this approach in part because they were conscious that at the time the House of Lords was contemplating a private member’s bill, tabled by Lord Falconer, that aimed to approve assisted dying for terminally sick people with fewer than six months to live, but not incurably suffering people like Tony and Paul.

However, while the proposal passed through the 2nd reading stage of discussion in summer 2014, it made no additional development before the 2015 general election as the Government declined to schedule enough time for it to be completely debated.

Following the general election, two additional assisted dying proposals have been tabled. In the House of Commons, Rob Marris MP’s proposal was discussed in September 2015 and lost its second reading vote indicating it too will proceed no further.

Furthermore, MSPs voted against a Scottish bill in May. In the meantime, Lord Falconer has re-tabled his proposal in the House of Lords, but again the Government has indicated that it will not schedule enough time for it to progress before the end of the parliamentary assembly.

This indicates that any development on the bill around assisted dying before 2020 will apparently have to come through the courts.

Humanists UK has proceeded to work on this matter regardless, for example with people such as Simon Binner and Jeffrey Spector, who have used their individual suffering to highlight the injustice of the illegality of assisted dying.

In 2011 a new Commission on Assisted Dying was founded, as a way of preparing for Lord Falconer’s proposal. Humanists UK was summoned to give testimony to the Committee. They gave verbal testimony in March, accompanied by a written submission in April.

In May 2010, Humanists UK presented a memorandum to the End of Life Assistance (Scotland) Bill Committee, which is examining The End of Life Choices (Scotland) Bill in the Scottish Parliament.

In February 2010, they supported proposals for a nonpartisan inquiry into the law on assisted dying for terminally sick adults and instructed members of the House of Lords for a discussion on the matter, and in March they asked MPs to call for legalisation of assisted dying in the United Kingdom.

The Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) has published a prosecuting policy in instances of assisted suicide, listing the rules that are taken into account when determining whether or not to prosecute someone who has helped another person in ending their life.

This plan was formed in response to a judgement of the Law Lords in the notable example of Debby Purdy, Multiple Sclerosis suffer who strongly fought in the UK’s highest court that it was her prerogative to know the grounds on which a prosecution may be made against her husband if he assisted her at a later date.

Humanists UK reacted to the initial draft policy in 2009, and presented a comprehensive memorandum, before embracing the final prosecution guidelines on their release in 2010. Nevertheless, it is Humanists UK’s staunch belief that the legislation on assisted dying in the United Kingdom is in demand of thorough reformation.

They think that legalisation, with stringent safeguards in place, is ethically greatly better than our existing law and would be by far the best way to protect vulnerable people.

Throughout the passage of the Coroners and Justice Act 2009, they briefed Parliamentarians on an amendment which would eliminate the threat of prosecution for those attending terminally sick loved ones overseas for an assisted death, in a country where that is allowed, but, that amendment did not succeed.

In 2006 they supported Lord Joffe’s Assisted Dying for the Terminally Ill Bill, which was overturned in the Lords on 12th May 2006. Ahead of its second reading in the Lords, Humanists UK published research that exposed the breadth of the religious lobby on the Bill, and the scaremongering and misinformation being given out by religious assemblies about the issues.

Humanists UK continues to lobby government for a change in the legislation and will make submissions to government on any prospective Bills which propose to amend the law around assisted dying.

Humanists UK discusses with its members on the subjects of assisted dying/assisted suicide/voluntary euthanasia, through their newsletters, web forums and local humanist group discussions. They embrace comments on these points, which serve to develop their campaigns.

To date, members have seldom displayed resistance to the legalisation of assisted dying, provided that there are sufficient safeguards in place to protect patients, their families and doctors.

Not everybody agrees with assisted dying, but that should be down to the patient themselves on the decisions that they make, so long as they are not coerced into something they don’t want to do.

If the patient calls for assisted dying then there should be no punishment and they should be permitted to die with some manner of decorum. There should be a bill that makes it easier and not to hinder and support should be there.

Of course, we should not encourage people to die, but for those people that are in such pain or dying, then they should not be permitted to languish in their pain, yet there should be some manner of control on the way legislation is set out in such circumstances.

If we are going to go down the moral path, there is no morality in a person that is suffering from such pain and we have no right to hinder that judgment that the patient has made and it should be pointed out that this is not a shopping centre for people who simply want to terminate their life, this is solely for people who are dying or are in such pain that there is no other choice, and it is their decision.

At the end of the day people decide to have children all the time, but we do not intervene on that choice, neither do we meddle if a couple chooses not to have children, it is their decision, so why do we take away the right from a terminally ill person, the decision to terminate their life?

What gives us the power to determine the outcome of another person?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Withered PM Can’t Function

 

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Senior Tories are concerned that a shrivelled Theresa May is fighting to come to terms with her botched Election campaign and the increasing peril to her leadership. They fear it could make it difficult for her to carry out her promise to stay in Downing Street at least until the United Kingdom leaves the EU in 2019.

According to one senior leader close to the Prime Minister, she is really depressed at times. A leading Conservative who knows her well stated he was horrified by her health at a meeting in No 10 last week.

Evidently, she looked shrivelled and fought to engage and apparently, she seemed actually smaller than she did when she stood so tall and bold on the steps of No 10 when she became Prime Minister. It is a disaster for Theresa May and she has been poorly attended by those who were close to her.

Nevertheless, they can’t continue like this indefinitely, it could open up a Pandora’s Box, and they may have to consider having a new leader. Nevertheless, No 10 maintained that news of the Prime Minister being too depressed to perform well was entirely incorrect and it was said that she was engaged and getting stuck in.

But evidently, it’s all rubbish. She had revealed the Election went badly but was set to make the best of it and that she was staying firmly put.

In discussions to mark her first year in office, Theresa May revealed she shed a little tear on June 8 when she was devastated to discover her Election venture had blown up in her face. She was a human being, she reflected but had quickly decided to get a grasp of things and carry on in power.

She would stay as Conservative leader as long as they wanted her. But, significantly, she repeatedly declined to commit to competing in the next General Election as a leader. Instead, Theresa May stated she required a few more years to get on with the business of completing Brexit.

The discussions declined to stop raising speculation that she could be made to stand down in October at the Conservative conference in Manchester. Worried Tory managers are now taking measures to dodge a repeat of the party’s unfortunate 2003 conference which led to the downfall of Iain Duncan Smith.

Facing comparable allegations that his leadership had lost its way and his self-esteem was shot, officials established supporters in the conference hall to give his conference talk a standing applause.

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Iain Duncan Smith’s weak endeavour to gather support, saying that the subdued man was turning up the volume, fell flat. The fans sprang to their feet on the signal, however, the Tories did recognise that the game was up, and their leader resigned inside days.

The Conservatives limited the damage of Iain Duncan Smith’s departure by planning the crowning of Michael Howard as his replacement, thereby bypassing a divisive leadership battle.

Tory insiders stated that would be much more challenging this time, not least because Theresa May’s likely replacements and their individual camps are now fighting like grubs in a sack behind the scenes.

Furthermore, unlike Iain Duncan Smith who was in competition, the advantage of becoming Prime Minister is much greater. One Tory MP announced the conference will be a week-long post-mortem into how Theresa May performed combined political self-destruction for all of them.

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Party chairman, ex-miner Patrick McLoughlin, is under pressure to quit for failing to get the Tory vote out in huge numbers. Patrick McLoughlin is an amiable lagoon, but they can’t go on having him in the Cabinet simply because he is the only Tory to have held a coal pick and he must be put out to grass like a pit pony.

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Mr McLoughlin’s forerunner as chairman, Sir Eric Pickles, and senior MP Graham Brady, chairman of the backbench 1922 Committee, has almost finished a report on how the Election went so wrong.

They are expected to be scathing about Theresa May’s failure to advise Ministers about vote-losing manifesto policies such as the so-called dementia tax concerning social care expenses for the ageing, cutting free hot lunches for schoolchildren, and stopping the triple lock which safeguards pension increases. All three proposals have been evacuated.

Pickles and Brady will not be pulling their punches.

The Tories are disintegrating before our eyes, going from one failure to the next. It won’t be long and the weary Tories will have to request a general election. Then we will have a Labour government headed by Jeremy Corbyn driving us into Brexit. The revolution is beginning.

Theresa May is defeated. She requested a silly useless election and has put the nation and the Tory party in a terrible disorder, propped up by the DUP, now we have this Tory fighting when Brexit should be their priority.

However, examine photos of any Prime Minister following a year in office, it is a staggeringly difficult task for anyone and it wanes them all.

 

 

 

 

 

Minister Moved To Tears

A minister in the House of Commons was driven to tears when he stood alone and expressed his heart whelming description of what transpired at the Grenfell Tower and bestowed his sorrow with the people.

On his visit to the Westway, and learning of the disturbing accounts of survivors had been the most humbling and emotional experience of his life. The families that he has engaged with have been through unbelievable torture.

This is a disaster that should never have occurred and he stated they are determined to do all that they can to make certain that something like this never arises again, and he replied to a number of statements which have been made declaring that people are being advised to move far from London.

Or that they will be considered homeless if they do not take an offer. He wanted to be utterly transparent to the House, that if this is ever suggested to a victim then it is totally unacceptable. He has already said that if anybody is knowledgeable of an individual family which is not receiving that proposition they have been promised, then they need to tell him and they will fix it.

These people have lost their home and all that was within that home as well as losing their families in the disaster and it is essential to make sure that these families are looked after and provided with another home, not outside of London, but around London, close to their families because they will require all the help that they can get.

The government can’t put them on the lost and found pile and it’s the government’s duty to make sure they are homed properly. The government can’t dismiss these people but they will not take them into consideration when housing them.

These people are not a stain on our society and the government cannot stamp on them whilst they’re down. However this is not a caring government, it’s parched and inanimate, it bears no compassion at all and they will make a trifling struggle at looking great.

The entire situation is really disheartening because, following all the media coverage regarding Grenfell Tower, it appears that the media has gone rather quiet on the matter and what was today’s news is now tomorrow’s history.

We wouldn’t forget a fallen soldier because we are reminded of it continually but a tower block sets on fire and even though the media coverage was excellent at the time, two weeks later it’s not so relevant anymore and it’s taken a bit of a nosedive.

There should be a little more consideration for the people that lost their homes and their families in the fire, with a little bit more sympathy from the government who are tactless and invariably don’t pay attention to the stuff that is especially significant.

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Theresa May has given DUP £1 billion simply so she can stay in government, which was obviously more valuable than the lives lost in the Grenfell Tower incident. That £1 billion could have created new homes for those people and given them a brighter future, even though it will never bring back those that perished in the fire but for those that are still breathing £1 billion would have been more than enough to make their lives a little easier.

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In fact, this pretentious DUP settlement will eventually cost Theresa May far more than £1 billion.

This arrangement rocks the columns that prop up not merely the politics of Britain but the politics of Ireland and Northern Ireland too. The price Theresa May has paid for it is hugely disruptive and probably bankrupting and will greatly overshadow the £1 billion price tag for the DUP’s proposal of support deal.

However, as the minister ended his talk about his humbling encounter, was this not simply an excellent bit of acting because if anybody believes that a Conservative housing minister is actually humbled perhaps they should reflect again or is it simply damage control, convincingly delivered by its government lackey?

It’s a tragedy, and even though they were kind words by the minister, the Conservatives are corrupt – money before human lives and heads must roll, this government must make good the commitments they made to the survivors and hopefully the people will not accept anything less.

This man is at the very top and at the very core of careful and deliberate upscaling and dispersal of working class communities happening under Tory and Labour Councils up and down the country.

People and families have been scattered to the four winds. Not only is he delivering this, he has blood on his paws over the Grenfell Tower fire. If these were real tears they were only brought on by a build-up and excess of liability.

In time, the talk he gave will quickly mutate into a scoundrels words. He is a dangerous Tory and a pretty superior rodent at that.

People have lost everything, a community has been ripped asunder, lives interrupted in the saddest way, people have lost family and people have been charred to death. Just how bad are their lives and situations, but you zoom in on a rich Tory who goes home to a no doubt beautiful house and family each day.

He is in command of billions of public funds and resources and can offer possibly even announce an order incorporating all housing in the United Kingdom, yet there he is having chatted to a few victims who tore him to shreds, shedding a tear, but presenting no actual course of action.

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He cried when he saw Grenfell on television but he is feeble and does not retain his position and presently he’s on the news lamenting and gets a hint of compassion, why doesn’t he leave his home and let some of the victims from Grenfell stay there, even then he would probably be able to trot off to a second home someplace.

The housing system that is running is all about social cleansing, not simply in Westminster but it’s occurring all over London and it’s been occurring for a very long time now. However, the Grenfell fire has made it much simpler for the government to purge.

Large social cleansing forces tens of thousands of families out of London and data reveals that the numbers claiming free school meals have fallen by about a third in some areas, suggesting regions are becoming stores for the wealthy.

Tens of thousands of impoverished families have moved out of inner London in the preceding five years, generating social cleansing on a large scale, leaving vast parts of the city as the store for the rich, figures imply.

The size of the problem is exposed in data that shows a number of children qualified to free school meals, and a broadly used indicator of deprivation has fallen by nearly a third in some London areas following 2010.

The figures depict a mass displacement of impoverished families from inside London just when the government has launched a boat of changes to the welfare policy. Even though there is no obvious connection between welfare changes and the decrease in free school meal applicants. Sadiq Khan, who obtained the figures, announced that government policies were generating a separated capital.

This evidence confirms that the government’s strategies on welfare and housing have created social cleansing in London on a huge scale. Families have been forced out of large portions of the city and this is not the sort of London we want our children to grow up in.

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Boris Johnson announced that Tory welfare reforms would not lead to Kosovo-style social cleansing, promising that we would not see thousands of families ousted from the home where they have been living.

However, the latest numbers reveal that this is what has occurred after the government cut housing benefit, introduced the benefit cap and exposed proposals to sell off social housing.

Runaway rents and a deficiency of social housing are eradicating families from inner London and preventing others from having children in the first place. The housing pressure is not simply upsetting education for children who are forced to move away from their schools, it drives workers farther from their workplaces and that puts stress on companies and public services.

The creation of districts that help particularly the wealthy is damaging neighbourhoods, ruining the marketplace and damaging social versatility.

The numbers note that whilst there has been a 3 percent reduction in those qualified for free school meals across England, four inner London districts have noticed a deterioration of 25 percent or more. Across inner London as a mass, there was a mediocre decline of 16 percent.

Some of those families seem to have relocated to outer districts where even though there was an overall reduction in the numbers qualified to free school meals, some regions observed an abundant appreciation.

In Merton, there was a 19 percent growth, Bexley 15 percent, and Croydon 11 percent and other families have moved out of the capital completely. Innumerable families have been ripped away from their family and friends, with children required to travel an hour and a half just to get to school.

They’re separating London into more rich and poor sections that will generate tremendous destruction to London’s well-being and hasten the burgeoning bias in the city. We’re being socially purged.

The rent goes up, and the benefit cap doesn’t satisfy the rent. That indicates that people are either required to go hungry or move away from their families and the lives they’ve developed.

The flight of disadvantaged families from the capital is, in part, a result of government administration. Government schemes like the bedroom tax and the benefits cap appear to have had a displacement impact and that is what we seem to be witnessing.

These policies have established an open-ended trend that, following the 1990s, has observed inner London growing more prosperous and more costly and if inner London is being emptied out it would have consequential implications and would be something to take action on.

The findings match other matters about the social cleansing of London and found that in 2012 more than 11,000 Londoners were located in housing outside their district, with more than 2,000 being moved outside London completely and leaked government data revealed that 50,000 London families have been located outside their area since 2011.

When questioned regarding the declining amount of children that qualified for free school meals in inner London and claims that this indicated block social cleansing, the Department for Work and Pensions stated, that their welfare changes guaranteed the long-term sustainability of the welfare policy whilst further providing a £80 billion safety net for those who require it.

They also said that families in work make choices on where to live based on what they can afford every day, and they thought it was only right that households on benefits face those same decisions.
Khan, who was shadow minister for London, announced if he was selected as mayor he would create more affordable homes and launch a living London wage, combining rent levels to income.

He stated that he would do all he could do to hinder the government’s proposals to diminish the welfare cap and sell off more affordable family homes and that we need to make sure that the city continues to be affordable to all those who want to live there.

What a poisonous capital city it has become. But never mind the capital, what a wicked country we’ve become, it has become tainted to the core.

Let’s not overlook the part local governments are participating in allowing the process of social cleansing and upscaling. Quite good council estates being destroyed and the land auctioned off to individual housing developers.

The social cleansing of the Woodberry Down Estate in Hackney and the Aylesbury Estate in Southwark two instances in point. Interestingly enough, both were done under the auspices of the new Labour-run councils.

The Oxbridge Three have nothing to say about this matter.

We have become an embarrassment and should be humiliated and it brings a whole distinct spin to the phrase rotten boroughs. Different tactic, the same offensive consequence of manipulating the boundaries.

And we should all accept that there was a limited separation between New Labour and old Tories. This is presently the principal edge of the extreme far right neo-lib Tories and their followers in all parties.

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You only have to look at the death casualties of welfare reforms, NHS cuts, et cetera, our amazing austerity to understand that the poor are getting killed and elbowed out the way for the rich, particularly in hyperinflated London.

But the truth is that disabled people require help more than the rest. Help that’s being ideologically rejected by a system that handles highly complex specific people as nothing more than statistics, quota’s and headline fodder and that is the dilemma. Meanwhile, sick and disabled people get treated worse than dogs, until abuse is normalised.

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Only the DWP are continuing to obscure at each conceivable turn the publicity of data that would settle things one way or the other. This enables them to maintain the published data that doesn’t support this or that conclusion, but without willingly presenting data of their own.

However, the DWP was ultimately compelled to show that there were raised death rates amongst those elected to carry the brunt of the bank bail-out, and other justifications for the stamping down of the disadvantaged and defenceless.

One figure alone recorded 4,000 dead who was pronounced healthy to work and that was simply the tip of the iceberg.

If the people that had their benefits cut because they were deemed to not have a disability or illness and then they die, clearly that would show that assessor who considered them not sick or disabled wrong in the first place.

There have been a number of claimants who have been before an assessor who has examined them, one man was told that he should get to his doctor quickly because there was something dangerously wrong with his heart.

The claimant was considered to be eligible for employment and died some weeks later!

The death percentage of those refused ESA was 48 times greater than for the average working population in the two weeks post assessment. Refuse ESA and death happens inside two weeks.
Sadly this is most positively conceivable in the event of some poor people.

These people had permanent health conditions but were considered eligible to work by an assessment which isn’t fit for purpose. A portion of them died inside two weeks of that judgment. In some instances, they killed themselves, in more their sickness killed them, with death pretty likely to have been accelerated by the pressure of a long drawn out assessment process and then being refused money at the end of it.

The report didn’t need to prove causation, that would have been to illustrate a really malevolent intention on the part of the DWP. What we have is proof of a hackneyed callousness that rules the sick fit to work, a truly fatally flawed social policy.

The work-related activity group is comprised solely of people who are presumed to recover from their sicknesses and be well enough to return to work inside a year. In that group, there should be no mortality at all, barring accidents, so why have approximately 10,000 people lost their lives after being assigned there?

The Department for Work and Pensions acknowledged failure in its effort to suppress a number of people who have died whilst claiming incapacity benefits following November 2011 and has declared that the number who died from January that year and February 2014 is a surprising 91,740.

This represents an increase in a percentage of 99 deaths per day or 692 per week, amid the start of December 2011 and the end of February 2014 compared with 32 deaths per day/222 per week between January and November 2011.

The DWP has laboriously stated that any causal effect within benefits and death cannot be calculated from these statistics.

The DWP has further alleged that these isolated figures present insufficient scope for examination and nothing can be obtained from this publication that would enable the reader to reach any conclusion as to the outcomes or impacts of the Work Capability Assessment.

Mortality in the support group and the assessment stage are more problematical since they involve people who do have severe disabilities, many of who may be expected to die whilst claiming. But are these deaths being stimulated artificially by the DWP’s handling of them?

A statistical announcement issued (August 27) in answer to a Freedom of Information inquiry dating back to May 28, 2014, asserts that the cumulative number of deaths involving claimants of Incapacity Benefit, Employment and Support Allowance and Severe Disablement Allowance between the start of December 2011 and the end of February 2014 is 81,140, including 50,580 ESA claimants and 30,560 IB/SDA claimants. All figures are rounded up to the nearest 10.

Join this to the 10,600 deaths that were previously known between January and November 2011 and you have 91,740.

Information for ESA claimants shows:

7,540 deaths whilst claims were being evaluated, bringing the perceived sum to 9,740.
7,200 deaths in the work-related activity group, bringing the identified whole to 8,500.
32,530 deaths in the support group, bringing the perceived sum to 39,630.
Also, 3,320 deaths in which the claimant was not in receipt of any benefit payment and is consequently listed as unknown.
The total number of claimants who flowed off ESA, IB or SDA whose date of death was at the corresponding time and of those the number with a WCA decision of fit for work, mid-December 2011 to February 2014 was 2,650 2,380 ESA, 270 IB/SDA.

Furthermore, the entire number of people who ran off ESA, IB or SDA whose date of death was at the corresponding time with a completed appeal following a WCA decision of fit for work, Great Britain: December 2011 to February 2014 was 1,360 1,340 ESA, 20 IB/SDA.

The latest figures infer the average amount of mortality per day mid-January 2011 and February 2014 was about 79.5 – 556 per week.

This compares with a percentage mid-January and November 2011 of about 32 per day – 222 per week.

This Writer has not yet checked the DWP’s accompanying statistical release, presenting the candied Age-Standardised Mortality Rates mid-2003 and 2014. The data in this one asserts that fatality decreased from 1,111 deaths per 100,000 across all three benefits to 1,032.

However, claims for Incapacity Benefit, ESA didn’t exist at the time were at an all-time high in 2003, of almost three million throughout the year. The numbers claiming this sort of benefit have both declined and increased since then.

So what are we to presume?

Firstly, the numbers released need to be more examined, in-depth research that can be accomplished by This Writer inside an hour or so of its announcement. Second, that the DWP should withdraw its appeal against publishing them, for obvious reasons. Third, that the Age-Standardised Mortality Rates give a misleading understanding of the amount of mortality.

Finally, that pressing questions must now be questioned about the way incapacity benefits are being delivered by the Department for Work and Pensions and we should feel physically sick, the number of people dying is expediting under our government, so what do we do to prevent this?

The Tories intend to abandon the Human Rights Law so I doubt they care about what the overall citizens consider, they only want views from the wealthy who have a large dwelling and loads of cash, because they can afford to support themselves with high-priced advocates from the Tories if they say anything adverse.

There are a 100,000 disadvantaged people, reduced to existing on the state, and the state simply cuts that inadequate lifeline and they die!

The foul piece of work accountable for this had a great education, then espoused wealth, so he’s not even a self-made man. He led his Political Party until they realised what he was, and got rid of him.

He has now been perceived to be a trickster and a piece of dirty excrement and he has been regurgitated out of our system.

We did once have a pretty good country but it’s now sick and lame and it brings a tear to my eye that our government have a policy that kills and the one thing that Tories are good at is manipulating data and numbers, but this is contemptible even for them.

Any other company or person would have judicial measures taken if they were responsible for this sort of crime, sadly, this government are above the law, and I hope the minority of people who voted them in are happy, I believe forced euthanasia will be next.

Sadly, that would be too dignified, the government would want us to suffer right till the very death and generate as much pain and distress as possible.

No one should be beyond the Law, Government included. Pursuing this train of thinking, and I could just be inventing out of my backside on this, but since we are in a style, subjects of a selected Government, we are all citizens to the Crown.

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Now I am convinced that the Queen would not want to get entangled in any way publicly with this, but the Crown, in this Kingdom, has an old-fashioned commitment towards the Crown’s subjects. I am sure you understand my gist, but I’m uncertain as to how this could work because the Monarchy is now completely Constitutional.

Nevertheless, any public interference by the Monarch would constitute legal mayhem. It appears the Royals only mediate behind the scenes, and in their own interests – even though I stand willing to be admonished.

There appears to be a modern-day Nazi Party manipulating the Press and our TV programme executives promoting their sickening misuse of the impoverished regime. The Tories are continuing where the Coalition left off.

How many times have you noticed programmes aired on channel 4 and 5 regarding so-called benefit rogues or spongers? You have Undercover Benefits Cheat, The Great Big Benefits Wedding, 12-years-old and on Benefits, Britain’s Benefit Tenants, Benefits Street, Benefits Britain et cetera.

They are all intended to make the benefits claimants seem like spongers-of-the-state to anyone viewing those programmes. They want to make them appear blameworthy for being in a position where they require assistance.

The press too, and of course, they are continually pumping up on anything out of the norm to help sell their newspaper. But when they report on a claimant that has had something they shouldn’t have they intensify it and make even the tiniest fiddle into such an enormous deal that the readers are ready to go and stone the person to death.

Melodrama, it is all invented to help turn the nation’s community upon the disadvantaged and defenceless in the community who need to rely on donations. But really, there is much more depravity going on than that inside the ramparts of Parliament by the highly regarded people who are driving those attacks upon Britain’s vulnerable.

Many of our ministerial leaders and MP’s are using redirected funds accumulated by not paying out benefits to claimants who innocently find themselves put on sanctions, and those denied ESA or JSA, to line their own carnivorous pockets.

We have discovered them with their hands in the public till decreasing their own tax duty whilst rising hard-working Briton’s tax, defrauding thousands of pounds in expenses demands from the tax man, and putting up their own salaries above inflation, et cetera.

But this is okay, nothing bad is said about them on TV or in the Press, they are exempt from any penalty. Why are there no shows on TV about Minister Cheats, MP Swindlers, Parliament Spongers, et cetera?

There is no equality. Merely extremely evil people who would like to see the poor launched into the workhouse like back in the dark ages of antiquity, and we know what happened to most of them, don’t we!

Human Rights are being stamped on for the poor, disabled and vulnerable here in Britain in this, the 21st century by our own Government, but it is alright as they have further manipulated the rules of the country so they can stay in government for at least another two years.

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Corporate manslaughter might be a valuable position to begin. The DWP put out figures in 2012 showing the amount of mortality among ESA claimants mid-January and November 2011, a tally of 32 per day.

Now it has published numbers confirming the amount of mortality among ESA claimants mid-December 2011 and February 2014, an average of 62 per day, approximately double the former average.
Ministers at the DWP would have been conscious that the amount of mortality was growing but they did nothing about it.

That may be deemed to be out-and-out neglect by the people controlling policy at the DWP, leading to the deaths of other people.

It’s frightful, inevitably there must be some way the government can be held responsible over this? Although, we could go with impeachment.

Impeachment is when a peer or citizen is accused of high offences and misconducts, exceeding the scope of the law or which no other authority in the land will prosecute. It is a procedure that is aimed in particular upon Ministers of the Crown.

The first reported impeachment was in 1376 and the last in 1806.

It is the most tragic thing for all of these unfortunate people and there should be an extended drive in all of this terrible nightmare which just goes on and on and gets worse and worse.

The follow-up should be a demand for those people who believe these sanctions on poor people are acceptable and they should stand trial for the excess mortality caused, which appears to be about 55,000 up until February 2014 but is rising at about a hundred a day.

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While David Cameron was alongside it all supporting and encouraging it, this level of death from the government’s abuse is lewd, and heads of government need to roll.

This should be headline news. It just goes to prove that governments are still picking days to hide bad headlines. I mean, look who owns Sky and of course they won’t mention it, the Tories have the media bought or is it Murdock that has the Tories bought?

Myself, I speculate it’s more an alliance of preference, both worship money and control and when they operate collectively that is what they get.

The government is unfit for purpose and should be dismissed and taken to court to acknowledge their cruel disregard for the lives of those who have died and those who have lost relatives or friends because of these actions. The government have supported this all the way.

Nazi genocide in which Hitler killed many Jews, the sick and the disabled, and this is no different because the government are suppressing a race of people, but this time it’s the poor that are suffering and being killed.

The government tell us rubbish and hogwash, they cut benefits by these sanctions and they write letters to claimants in an endeavor to stress them out and then you go round in a never ending loop of telephone calls, posting letters to them and evidence that you’re in need of benefit or disability, but you simply end up going round and round in an never ending circle, and for those that get engulfed into the insanity, it invariably causes the demise of many.

There are people out there suffering from cancer, that are having to wait an entire 6 months to get their money, money that they’re entitled to. In the meantime, they are suffering because they can’t afford heating, fresh food and laundry.

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Isn’t it astonishing though that ATOS are still doing the assessment for the DWP even though everybody was told they had lost the contract?

Disabled Britons are being put through terrifying examinations and tribunals simply to obtain essential benefits who may have been brutally denied funds after assessors have been accused as policing claimants out the window in entirely unethical assessments devised by the Government.

After the Conservative Government shifted from Disability Living Allowance (DLA) to Personal Independence Payment (PIP) in 2013 thousands of people have been re-assessed and denied much-needed benefits. However, these examinations, outlined by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) and carried out by private firms are now being brought into question over the walking component.

Assessors for French data firm ATOS and British company Capita needs to ascertain whether the claimant can walk 20 meters unaided, amongst additional everyday tasks, according to DWP rules.

But, experts have stated they think assessors are policing disabled people from the window of assessment centres and cynically ticking off the mobility criteria without the person even knowing, or having the opportunity to be challenged on it.

If such methods are being carried out, the assessors are neglecting to present the Department of Work and Pensions (DWP) with the proper information to evaluate a case. Nevertheless, both have demonstrated they are carrying out examinations and following practices set by the DWP.

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Under the reliability criteria, assessors must verify whether or not the 20 metres can be initiated every day and under changing circumstances. Alternately, at assessment centres, informal observations are being carried out which campaigners state cannot possibly match what is set out in law.

Important information which is frequently obscure, the claimant must be questioned if they can always walk the distance required. If they can’t walk it in all situations, satisfying all the criteria, it must be acknowledged they can never achieve the task.

Notable disability campaigner Baroness Thomas of Winchester faced her own struggle with the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) and won.

Fighting for the rights of disabled people, the peer in the House of Lords stated the four essential reliability criteria she had included, along with Lib Dem MP Steve Webb, are being overlooked at assessment centres operated by Atos and Capita.

What Baroness Thomas got entered into legislation was that the four reliability criteria had to be more than mere guidance.

The four were, in the case of the Moving Around distance, that the claimant had to be able to walk the distance, even 20 metres, safely,
and to a satisfactory standard, repeatedly and in a reasonable time period.

The Government made those rules compulsory. Yet, the DWP maintains their examinations led by contractors ask specific questions which can verify someone’s abilities every other day.

A spokeswoman announced that they do not look at a snapshot of someone’s life, despite the fact that the assessments barely last forty minutes which is mind-blowing and would not give them a decent chronicle of somebody’s health requirements.

You can’t form a view of somebody’s ailing health, which leaves me utterly mute and in scepticism on how well these evaluations are being dispensed with. This is not a game, these claimants have a debilitating ailment, which several experience excessive tiredness, weakness and pain, which leave many in isolation.

Giving them money does not relieve their discomfort, but it does make their lives a little better. Most live in agony and that tiny fraction of funds that they do get is a blessing, after all, they don’t aspire to be impaired or disabled.

And they require all their energy to get through each day but then they come across these silly guidelines that are established by boundaries and are a genuine pain in the posterior and cost many their lives. Most of these people have integrity and it’s a disgrace that they are being managed this way, like complete and utter animals, in fact, most animals get handled better.

The Government have stated that if a person can walk that distance on some days but not other days, then they must be considered not to be able to do the distance according to the guidelines.

In a PIP assessment, a person is only required to be able to walk 20 metres unaided, just two bus lengths. This was formerly fixed at 50 but shifted abruptly in what was deemed to be a silly money-saving tactic.

This was clearly going to save the DWP a bunch of money and mean that a number of higher rate DLA claimants would lose the higher rate PIP and therefore not be eligible for the Motability car.

Those that were entitled will not be any longer as the government sink their fangs into the jugular and it’s an outright insult as they treat all claimants with rebuke, almost like a blow to the mouth with a fist.

When the Government announced the PIP regulations, they abruptly altered the initial 50-metre guideline.

The point is that the walking evaluation must be an outside test, and needs to take into account of weather situations, the state of the pavement, crowds, dropped kerbs, even if we’re simply talking about walking 20 metres.

Firms like ATOS and Capita have deposited more than £500 million in taxpayer money through the DWP contracts.

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However, after taking the DWP contract for PIP assessment in 2013 aged, weak and disabled people have been forced into evasive re-assessments which leave them afraid and sometimes poverty-stricken.

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Wheelchair using UKIP councillor and disability spokeswoman Star Anderton, 45, was also forced to go back for assessment. She maintains it is common that, people are viewed as perfectly capable of satisfying the guidelines if they can walk the requisite distance only once.

So many people say that’s what occurs. They go for assessment and it is essentially considered if they can do that distance once, they can do it all the time.

That’s the contradiction of the Government guidance and they might be able to do it every now and again. The reliability criteria is specified in forms by ATOS and Capita and the reliability criteria were promptly included after the boundary shifts from 50m to 20m.

Even though it’s in all the forms they don’t take any notice at the assessment centre and the rules aren’t being adhered to. It is as if all they want is to put everybody on standard rate and seek to get the figures down.

ATOS has frequently rejected such allegations but campaigners have blamed them of satisfying workers who bring down the number of claimants on the DWP. Supposedly, they carry out examination as proposed by the DWP and do not stray from the set test which they carry out and transfer back to the DWP for a settlement.

Capita echoed this comment.

However, people who had been for a DWP evaluation with ATOS and Capita stated they were not questioned whether they could walk the requisite distance reliably, and to a satisfactory standard, repeatedly and in a generous time period.

In fact, when their assessment data was recovered from the DWP it stated they were informally observed. It’s reported as many as 800 people per week are being dismantled of their benefits, or the higher rate, leaving them too sick to work and too nervous to challenge the judgment in court.

One woman who found out about the reliability criteria and wrote about it in her appeal following her losing all her disability benefits.

Despite having kidney failure and being hospitalised three times per week for treatment, the retired grandmother who worked for more than three decades had benefits withdrawn following her PIP assessment.

After pointing out, under the reliability criteria, she could not carry out the necessary distance safely, to an acceptable standard, repeatedly and in a reasonable time period, her benefits were reinstated.

There have never been points for mobility before and now there is.
It’s nothing but a trick. People were never asked the questions they’re asked now, aside from how far you could walk and the person would tell them that on a normal day I can walk this far and on a bad day I can’t walk that far.

The DWP doesn’t care who you are or what your difficulties are, you are a number and they want a smaller number. ATOS has distributed data about the rules online and campaigners state examiners do not adhere to the guidelines.

It says, the reliability criteria must be considered for every activity and will be viewed as an essential part of the information-gathering method whether at a face-to-face interview or throughout a paper-based evaluation.

An ATOS Healthcare spokesperson stated that as one of the suppliers to Personal Independence Payment (PIP), they engage each evaluation in stringent accordance with the Department for Work and Pensions PIP assessment guide.

And the reliability criteria is fundamental and that means and all their Health Professionals are thoroughly taught in their performance and application. This covers evaluation for mobility for which an evaluation of an individual’s capacity to walk takes adequate account of the guidelines without limitation.

Apparently, they guarantee the criteria of their reports and that they’re kept in line with all guidelines established by the DWP and the process is further reinforced by an objective review process which reports to the DWP.

The DWP, not Capita, makes the determinations on whether to grant a benefit or not and the level and time of those awards.

Assessments are taken into consideration by the DWP adjacent to all other proof offered by a claimant and assessors are qualified to recognise when and where everyday observations may be used in line with DWP guidance.

A Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) spokesperson justified the use of informal observations, alleging they were relevant to the assessment process. Evidently, they are practised adjacent to the healthcare professional’s own evaluation, the claimant questionnaire and any other proof.

The spokeswoman stated that they demand the highest standards from the contractors who conduct the Personal Independence Payment (PIP) evaluations and work closely with them to guarantee PIP is operating in the best way imaginable.

Decisions for PIP are made after viewing all the data given by the claimant, including any supporting proof from their GP or medical professional, and anyone who opposes the ruling can appeal.

For those people that are refused PIP but are nevertheless obviously sick, they are then put onto Universal Credit. An employer will pick someone who, amongst many other things, will turn up regularly, not go sick or let them down.

Somebody who does not need the work place to be altered so that they can work and above all, be reliable. Therefore, they will not waste their time on the person who has cancer, multiple sclerosis, or epilepsy amongst all the other illnesses that could cause one to be late for work, or not be able to get into work at all.

These people might not have qualified for PIP, but that does not mean they’re not ill and it’s far more awkward for them to get a job that people without disabilities don’t have. Nevertheless, if they do have a disability, how long will their boss continue to hire them when they’re not able to turn up for work?

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Mental Health problems will no longer be a component of PIP, this was unobtrusively put through throughout the by election and will see countless people losing payments.

There are of course people out there that will maintain that all those who want to cheat PIP will declare that they can’t walk 20 meters.

And it may be that some people will choose to deceive the benefits policy, but choosing to put disabled people through incorrect or skewed assessments is not fair to those people who require the benefit.

Maybe if MPs didn’t give themselves a pay increase all the time and stopped giving out so much overseas relief and gave it to their own people and they quit funding immigrants benefits and grants to furnish their homes, then perhaps some of those disabled claimants would not lose their dignity.

This government is attempting to destroy the benefits system for disabled people, having previously closed the workshops that those people obtained self-esteem, even though they were paid a paltry wage, these workshops were killed off on the terrains of cost.

The MPs must look at their personal self on a number of tax-free benefits they get. They chose to cut the benefits by £30 of those on disabilities, but receive a wage increase for themselves whilst claiming expenses for small things like paper clips.

When there are hundreds of thousands of immigrants with outstretched hands expecting to be supplied with easy money it is the most defenseless in our society that repeatedly takes the punch to guarantee that the non-contributors continue to get their free donations, and the governments of the past and present should dangle their heads in embarrassment as should the voters who keep voting in these dirtbags.

They gather money by cruelly penny-pinching from those least able to stand up for themselves, where they will, no doubt prize themselves a nice profitable gratuity and pay increase.

Recommendation for PIP or previously Living Disability Allowance should never have been outsourced outside of the NHS, it should have been the local GP of the person who was making a request for that benefit to carry out the evaluations and present the report to the DWP.

It creates too much stress for the claimant and their doctor is more insightful of their disability and requirements, particularly if they have a succession of ailments, then they can give an imagery of their health.

After all, the patient’s doctor knows them better than anybody else and they would presumably have been their patient for an extended time and they would be capable of presenting the DWP with all of their conditions and how it changes from day to day, how far they can walk and what they can and can’t do for themselves.

Assessors should not be evaluating medical matters with benefits of recipients where they do not have the medical training or the ability to deliver a good bed side manner that a GP would and why should a sub-contractor who is not medically able be permitted to direct probing interrogations for information which is protected under patient confidentiality with the NHS?

There are some shysters out there who fraudulently claim benefits but then there are also people genuinely in need that are not being handled with the dignity and respect by a nation that puts Great in front of its name.

Nobody less than a medical doctor practising in disability appraisal should be permitted to evaluate or make any judgments correlating to what a disabled person can or cannot do. There are some people who seem fine one day and then completely crippled up and powerless to do anything the next day, that is, sadly, the nature of some disabilities.

The reliability criteria state that if you can’t do something repeatedly then it is to be interpreted as if you can’t do it at all. Those are the DWP’s own rules set in deliberation with well educated and qualified medics who know the science behind the symptoms.

Some people are judged by fantasy stereotypes, propelling an extrapolation of their own ability. It stands to reason that you can’t implement your expertise to evaluate other peoples ability if they are sick and you are not.

For some people, it would take three or more days to recuperate from a brief trip to the store, but they will still try to do that trip because if they don’t they would be stuck indoors all the time. However, with healthy people, it wouldn’t take that much time to recover from such a light activity and they could do it three times a day in lunch breaks whilst maintaining a job.

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Yet Tony Blair’s government attempted to spin comparable populist attitudes that all disabled people are closet criminals. They abused this manner of bias and cumbersome reasoning to sidetrack awareness from their own misdeeds like the dodgy dossier and expenses disgrace.

It was a persuasive weapon and redirected a lot of anger, disability hostility crime rose a lot. The Tories maintained the wrong this allowed without reinstating an air of fair play because it assisted their plan of austerity to refuse people benefits. That is what PIP is all about.

The disabled have been utilised like a political kitty plaything to divert the eye of the media and the people, and as a whipping boy to disgrace everyone into accepting their own portion of the spending cuts.

While cuts may be inevitable for all quarters following the consequences of irresponsibility manifested in the banking disaster, this sort of deceitful gyration and wrongful execution of defenseless human beings by government has lead immediately to the grass root rebellions we are dispensing with now in the United Kingdom with Brexit and a transition of control to the Labour movement.

Judges have been granted an 11 percent wage rise. The MP’s have now been granted an inflation busting pay rise and the House of Lords get £300 a day simply for signing in. It’s a society for bottom burpers to interpret the news in leather bound seats while consuming food and of course drinking, smoking, and nodding off all the while they are paid £300 a day five days a week for this.

£1500 a week for doing nada and they’re clamping down on the sick and disabled.

The government wants to save money and entered into an arrangement with a private company which wants to make money, a union made in heaven but sadly the loser is the claimant.

Evidently, the assessors have always appraised people out of windows and they further plant people in the nearest car parks to the assessment centre. Other methods that are used are toilets that they put out of order signs on and lifts that are not permitted to be used by wheelchair users, stating it is because of health and safety issues.

Apparently, the receptionist scrutinises people in the waiting room, as do others who purport to be people waiting to be assessed. Then there is the use of uncomfortable seats to see how long people can remain in the chairs, usually without arms to assist people getting out of them is a typical deceitful trick.

There are are a number of people out there that are not falsifying it but the papers disregard this reality. Some of the might not look sick, but then you have others that might have terminal cancer, which after several yards becomes obvious if people stopped to observe, but they don’t, they simply assume and walk off all self-righteous.

Disability cars, well most cost, except the basic ones, and there is a price limit of 30K on them, therefore loads of people pay £500-3,000 deposit if they, for example, have a big family or require wheelchair access, plus the expense of the conversion et cetera.

Then they lose their higher rate of payment for the three years, plus if they come out of the scheme after say two years, plus insurance companies then view you as a new driver, as 96 percent of insurance companies don’t take on people from the mobility scheme and the ones that do are the more costly companies, so it’s not as black and white as people imagine.

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