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Re: Tony Blair Mark Two.
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Re: Tony Blair Mark Two.
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Re: Tony Blair Mark Two.
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Re: Tony Blair Mark Two.
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As anyone who knows me on this site will tell you, I have had excellent service off the system and my life saved three times, I have also had plenty of time to study it whilst lying helpless in bed for hours on end, during specialists rounds there is an army of hangers on that last aprox half an hour, then the rest of the day you hardly see anyone. There are no juniors or learners there to give you a moment or two distraction from the boredom, and if you are miles from home as I was a week is a long time between visits, the health service is too fragmented and specialist are few and far between, 1 lung specialist for East Lancs one heart specialist etc all at different locations that is the cause of the problem, to many chiefs and not enough Indians. Getting back on thread I repeat my opening statement that speech will judge the man "I did what George Dubya Bush told me to do". |
Re: Tony Blair Mark Two.
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Re: Tony Blair Mark Two.
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Do you think that the Germans are pondering on that?:rolleyes: |
Re: Tony Blair Mark Two.
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Re: Tony Blair Mark Two.
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And, there are some things the government does well. Highways, universal public education, public libraries, as well as public health initiaitves such as sewage and sanitation, clean water, safe foods, etc. Indeed, a great deal of the improved quality and length of life we enjoy today result from these same public health initiatives. Is government perfect? Of course not (no human system is or ever will be), but certainly some very valuable outcomes. |
Re: Tony Blair Mark Two.
[quote=Billcat;423968]I think anyone who pays the least bit of attention can find many, many examples of individuals who find spectacularly unwise ways to spend their money. Check out the Darwin awards some day! Good for a dark bit of himor and a very practical reminder that there are many folks out there who haven't the sense that God gave geese! quote]
There will always be a certain percentage of people who make poor choices. The rest of us should not be forced into the role of enabler. |
Re: Tony Blair Mark Two.
[quote=Billcat;423968 And, there are some things the government does well. Highways, universal public education, public libraries, as well as public health initiaitves such as sewage and sanitation, clean water, safe foods, etc. Indeed, a great deal of the improved quality and length of life we enjoy today result from these same public health initiatives. Is government perfect? Of course not (no human system is or ever will be), but certainly some very valuable outcomes.[/quote]
We are not getting full value for our tax dollars no matter how you slice it. These things may have begun with the best of intentions but far too often they go off the rails. For example, our public schools, by and large, are a disaster. |
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Re: Tony Blair Mark Two.
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All too often people look at "What it was like under Thatcher" without looking at the big picture. Look at the economy SHE inhreited, drastic changes needed to take place, and they did, and look at where we are now because of that. Thatcher/Major built the foundations which Blair/Brown have built upon, just Thatcher had to make the hard decisions which not everyone agreed with so many of you compare now to then. When in reality if it wasn't for her Blair would not have had such great economic foundations to build on, infact he proberbly wouldn't have even become leader of the Labour party. Because the foundations were so good, and we'd been taken out of a slump, things were on the up, the world not just the UK was in economic growth, he should have used the opporunities to sort out the NHS now that the foundations were set, but he squandered those oppertunities. Anyone including him can bang on about how much investment we have seen, but it means nothing because the performance has not improved in corrolation with the money invested, much of it has been wasted. Yes the NHS was less funded in the early 90's, yes we had huge waiting times, but the staff could get on with their jobs. My grandma has been working for the NHS for 50years now (which is a considerable amount of time since the NHS is 59 years old I think), she says it has "never been worse". That speaks volumes from somebody who has been a working class Labour supporter all her life. |
Re: Tony Blair Mark Two.
That woman is either loved or hated,,,,,,,I am of the later school...........
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Re: Tony Blair Mark Two.
Look, let's break it down:
NHS FUNDS: 1997 - 34bn 2007 - 94bn Front line staff up by 2.6% (then 1,058,686 & now 1,338,140). For me, Blair's greatest achievment is Ireland. If you'd have told any Irish person a decade ago that one day Gerry Adams & Ian Paisley would sit down and talk, they would never have believed you. Of course there's going to be problems but for me he's been great and I hope the next guy continues what Blair started. |
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You can look at the figures of investment as much as you want, im not denying theres been almost 3x more money put in to the health service. I'm saying much of it has been wasted, the NHS has become more topdown, more beaurocratic, countless wasted hours meeting/paperwork which is stopping staff from doing their jobs and actually treating people. The money has been wasted, Blair has reined over a decade of missed oppertunities.
Personally i've had an awful NHS experience, and yeah I can be seen by a junior doctor (not consultant) in around 8weeks, but yet 1.5years later I'm still ill and they still dont know what it is. You don't get to see your consultant, and the doctors you do see are trying to meet targets rather than actually getting you better! |
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