British Politics
#1
Posted 05 March 2012 - 09:29 PM
Andrew Lansley had a go today, with a visit to the Royal Free in Hampstead. The press were pretty much not allowed, and Lansley took a police guard with him.
#2
Posted 05 March 2012 - 09:40 PM
#3
Posted 05 March 2012 - 09:44 PM
Seriously, when the Health Secretary can't go into an NHS hospital without a police guard, surely he has to realise there's something fundamentally wrong with things?
And watch and see if this is on the BBC News at Ten tonight.
#4
Posted 05 March 2012 - 10:31 PM
You might think that, I couldn't possibly comment.Dangerous places hospitals. Full of undesirables.
Seriously, when the Health Secretary can't go into an NHS hospital without a police guard, surely he has to realise there's something fundamentally wrong with things?
And watch and see if this is on the BBC News at Ten tonight.
#5
Posted 05 March 2012 - 10:34 PM
This isn't - Lansley afraid to walk the corridors of an NHS hospital without a guard
(And it gets worse - all of the medical staff not carrying an emergency page were apparently summoned for 'mandatory training' in the hospital lecture theatre and not told Lansley was visiting)
I am fiercely proud of the NHS. It saddens me that I am rapidly losing faith in the BBC, an organisation from Paxman to Dimbleby to the news editors who seem afraid to confront the Government over its failings, for fear they might be next.
#6
Posted 05 March 2012 - 10:55 PM
#7
Posted 06 March 2012 - 09:24 AM
#8
Posted 06 March 2012 - 10:45 AM
#9
Posted 06 March 2012 - 11:31 AM
David Cameron's visit to the RVI was absent from the media.
Andrew Lansley had a go today, with a visit to the Royal Free in Hampstead. The press were pretty much not allowed, and Lansley took a police guard with him.
Hurrah!
I'm very familar with Royal Free Hospital as my mum has been going there as a dialysis patient for over 30 years now (with many long stays there). I'd hate to see the quality of service we received from there, and many other fine hospitals, irrevocably changed for the worse because of these cutthroat clowns.
Though, with their conduct recently, especially over the last year - the public aren't going to trust the word of Politicians over Doctors (and speaking of softpeddling journalists upthread - the only way I'd see Murdoch's papers being popular again is if they backed the Doctors on this).
#10
Posted 11 March 2012 - 09:46 PM
Clegg's turned into an apologist Tory lapdog, so desperate for cast-off's from the hand of power that he'll ignore any vestige of integrity he might once have had.
Clegg has been a disappointment on a grand scale. I will be more saddened if the likes of Charlie Kennedy and Paddy Ashdown don't have the strength to acknowledge that they do not have the backing of their membership and make a stand before it is too late.
And Floella Benjamin. Dear God, seeing Floella Benjamin vote to dismember social welfare in this country was bad enough. If her vote is one of the ones that gets the Health Bill through the Lords, I'm not sure I'll be able to cope without having a wee retroactive psychotic episode.
Speaking of which ... am I reading the Catholic Archbishops' letter on marriage wrong or is it actually saying that the only people 'marriage' is good for are religious Catholics?
#11
Posted 11 March 2012 - 10:22 PM
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/clegg-calls-budget-fairness-030501061.htmlNick Clegg has said the NHS bill was "stopped in its tracks" because of the Liberal Democrats - but party peers have been told to withhold support for it in the House of Lords.
Activists voted 314 to 270 to remove a crucial line in a pro-change motion calling for peers to back the final stages of the Health and Social Care Bill .
However, it does not mean Lib Dems in the House of Lords will vote against the bill and it does not bind MPs to vote against it in the Commons.
Regardless, it is an embarrassing blow to leader Nick Clegg at the party's spring conference in Gateshead.
Sky News political correspondent Glen Oglaza, reporting from the conference, said it showed "disconnect between Lib Dem activists and parliamentarians".
<SNIP>
#12
Posted 12 March 2012 - 10:19 AM
Speaking of which ... am I reading the Catholic Archbishops' letter on marriage wrong or is it actually saying that the only people 'marriage' is good for are religious Catholics?
I would hope that a Catholic Archbishop did hold that view. Otherwise, he's not doing his job properly.
#13
Posted 12 March 2012 - 07:37 PM
Clegg has been a disappointment on a grand scale. I will be more saddened if the likes of Charlie Kennedy and Paddy Ashdown don't have the strength to acknowledge that they do not have the backing of their membership and make a stand before it is too late.
No kidding. I expected that the Coalition would break down once Clegg said "Stuff the Tories", but it's more likely to go because the Lib Dems say "Stuff Clegg". It can't happen soon enough now.
#14
Posted 12 March 2012 - 08:07 PM
Is that official Catholic policy? To only recognise 'marriage' as a concept applicable to people of their own faith? I've never heard of the Catholic hierarchy not recognising Jewish, or Muslim, or even atheist marriages before?I would hope that a Catholic Archbishop did hold that view. Otherwise, he's not doing his job properly.
I'm quite happy if that is their position, as it makes their stance against equal marriage in general quite plain.
My view of religious folk in general is coloured by the fact that the Christian church in the town where I was a teenager was a very liberal one with one building and three ministers from different branches of Christianity, who all got on very well with each other (they were all called Iain, which was slightly odd). The idea of the Roman Catholic one telling the Church of Scotland one that he didn't recognise his marriage as valid is bizarre.
#15
Posted 12 March 2012 - 10:45 PM
I'm sorry to say that it'll happen AFTER the next election.No kidding. I expected that the Coalition would break down once Clegg said "Stuff the Tories", but it's more likely to go because the Lib Dems say "Stuff Clegg". It can't happen soon enough now.
#16
Posted 13 March 2012 - 09:46 AM
Is that official Catholic policy? To only recognise 'marriage' as a concept applicable to people of their own faith? I've never heard of the Catholic hierarchy not recognising Jewish, or Muslim, or even atheist marriages before?
"The care of all those sacred rites [i.e. sacraments] has been given to the Church of Christ." (Father Billot, S.J.)
I couldn't tell you what is policy, because modern Catholic policy seems to be all over the place and I haven't kept up with it. I was raised Anglican, not Roman Catholic. But it is doctrine, which I would think should be more important. The Council of Trent defined Matrimony as a sacrament, and as such it given to us by God to allow us to better come to God -- which clearly we can only do if we are proper ("proper" meaning Catholic) Christians.
"Matrimony gives the graces necessary for those who are to rear children in the love and fear of God, members of the Church militant, future citizens of heaven." (St. Thomas.) (Incidentally this does not exclude same sex marriages, as it is for rearing children, not bearing children
"In adults, for the valid reception of any sacrament ... it is necessary that they have the intention of receiving it. The sacraments impose obligations and confer grace." This quote (from the Catholic Encyclopedia) is basically saying that you must be willing to accept grace if you want to receive the sacrament, which fits doctrine because nobody believes that Christ forces himself on people -- they have to accept him willingly. Also: "it is a general law that application for the sacraments should be made to worthy and duly appointed ministers", only Catholics being worthy and duly appointed, of course.
I'm sure that if a Jew or a Muslim accepted Christ's grace and applied to an ordained Catholic minister then he could be married...
#17
Posted 13 March 2012 - 01:20 PM
#18
Posted 13 March 2012 - 02:05 PM
None of you unbaptised heathens are getting into heaven, either, just so's you know. And that goes double for you protestant heretics!
You are clearly deluded, it is obviously Catholics who are heretics not Protestants.
#19
Posted 13 March 2012 - 02:35 PM
#20
Posted 13 March 2012 - 02:52 PM
i found it all very interesting going through the rigmoral of marrying a catholic girl in a catholic church, me being a heathen.
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