Person 1 sees someone flourish and says… good for him. I’d like to succeed like that and see others do so too. His taxes will pay for a lot.
Person 2 sees someone flourish and says… why does he have that and I haven’t? It’s bad. Take it from him.
Which do you wish to be?
This is beyond desperate. Keir Starmer has brought back a man he sacked for wrecking his government.
Then Boris Johnson days never got this bad. The government is literally a joke that’s gone on for too long.
Many forget how dire Britain’s decline was in the 1970s—economic stagnation, union paralysis, and national malaise. It took Margaret Thatcher to break the grip of the socialist state, revive the economy, rebuild British strength, and stand alongside Ronald Reagan in defeating the Soviet Union. Britain needs another Thatcher.
Keir Starmer: “We are reforming welfare.”
Sorry?
5,000 new claimants for Disability benefit every day.
EVERY. SINGLE. DAY.
Benefits bill is now higher than the entire income tax take.
Can we put to bed this nonsense that the one thing that Starmer was good at was being on the world stage? It was always bollocks, and anyone who knows anything about defence knew that.
We very nearly lost the brilliant and irreplaceable Kathryn Porter because of the dire state of @NHSWales.
It’s appalling. The ambulance service would shame a third world country. My mother’s elderly Welsh neighbour fell and waited 17 hours on the floor.
How much longer can the British people stagger on with this appalling health service?
I’m so glad @KathrynPorter26 lived to tell the tale.
This really worries me
A month ago in Wales I suffered a ruptured aneurysm in my abdomen. I lost over 2 units of blood
But the Welsh ambulance service refused to send an ambulance. I was still breathing so apparently didn't need one
I spent 7 hours lying on the ground in a car park. Every time I moved I threw up from the pain. The owners of the car park called 999 6x
One of the people there was a fireman. He couldn't believe that 999 treated each call as a separate incident and couldn't see the details or link to previous calls. He was frustrated because they could see I was seriously ill but you can't see internal bleeding and so there was no way to persuade 999 that it actually was an emergency
Eventually my husband arrived by taxi, journey of more than 3 hours from our home
He gave me my pain meds (the car park people were worried about liability and I was too ill to get them myself). This meant I was able to crawl into the car and he drove me to A&E
He got me into a wheelchair. We waited 75 minutes to see a doctor. I was shivering, heaped with blankets and threw up all over the floor
As soon as a doctor looked at me I was taken straight to resus. The next day I was transfered by blue light ambulance to another hospital, had a blood transfusion and spent 5 days on the high dependency unit
If my husband hadn't been able to come and look after me I have no idea how I would have survived. As it was I nearly didn't
I would not have been able to get myself to hospital nor would I have been able to log into some digital triage system
This scheme seems to assume if you're seriously ill you'll arrive by ambulance and if not you're well enough to navigate a digital portal
My experience suggests that's a dangerous assumption
A week later, back home in England I had another ruptured aneurysm. This time an ambulance came in 2 hours and again I was taken straight to resus
It wasn't the same because I had a recent diagnosis of a ruptured aneurysm so we could tell 999 I was almost certainly bleeding internally. But I was too ill to get myself down the stairs and out to the car. We still needed that ambulance and I still wouldn't have been able to fiddle around with an ipad
Proper triage REQUIRES an actual doctor to look at the patient. It takes a matter of minutes to differentiate between a life threatening emergency and not a life threatening emergency. That's not minutes to get a diagnosis but to know that the person is stable or not stable and if not that needs immediate attention
Seriously ill people can't do it themselves. It doesn't matter how smart or articulate they are normally. Or how tough. Expecting people to manage their own emergency care isn't what a modern health service should do
https://t.co/RMi7L44fUy
Blunt resignation letter to PM from Healey. Says proposed increase in defence spending falls far short of what’s required. And reveals defence spending would still only be 2.68% by 2030 (currently circa 2.5%). A quite pathetic increase.
This is a devastating blow for Starmer at a time when he couldn’t be more vulnerable. Interesting to see what Andy Burnham says. Not said a dickie bird about defence so far.
UK Defence Secretary John Healey has resigned. I said his position was untenable and advised him to resign on @timesradio this morning. He must have been listening 😜
Rather than address the concerns of the electorate, the politicians are prioritising silencing them. They will then feign surprise when disorder escalates.
'Clearing the backlog' always meant 'just let people in without remotely checking who they are and whether they might pose a threat to society'. We have an elite that doesn't care about the safety of the people. https://t.co/sd1TPUvwrk
In 1979, The Concorde 001 chased a Solar Eclipse by flying at 56,000 ft. over the Sahara Desert at a speed of Mach 2. The jet stayed in the umbra of the moon for a record of 74 minutes.
What possible justification can there be to incentivise firms to employ foreign workers when we have an unemployment crisis among British citizens, especially the youth?
This is an issue that isn’t being taken seriously enough.
The Telegraph has an article about it.
‘While Middle East conflicts drive up fertiliser and fuel costs, Keir Starmer’s government is sitting on its hands.
The NFU is warning that growers may stop planting crops entirely because they cannot afford the soaring input costs.
Farmers are seeing fertiliser prices jump by 40% to 50%, alongside severe spikes in the cost of natural gas and red diesel used for machinery.
Instead of protecting our domestic food supply, Labour’s inaction is pushing British farming to the brink of collapse.
Food production is national defence - when will this government wake up, step in with emergency support, and protect our supermarket shelves from empty supply chains’
Given Ed Miliband’s policy that includes us eating less meat and dairy - you wonder if Labour is deliberately throwing some of these farmers to the wolves.
"Look over there. Another bad thing is happening."
I'm sorry, but I just don't think these arguments work anymore. Twenty years ago, maybe. But no longer. We are experiencing massive state failure in the area of asylum and immigration, and it is having real-world consequences on our streets. Dusting off the old slogans - "Diversity is our strength", "Don't look back in anger", "We won't let them divide us" etc - is a dead end. The public mood has shifted dramatically. People need to realise it.
The MSM is in denial tonight about events in Belfast. They pay lip service to the story, before swinging into full ‘organ of reassurance’ mode. The story demands they suspend their obeisance to the cult of open borders, globalisation and ‘all cultures are equal’ multiculturalism. They can’t do it.