Originally posted by teamsaint
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Congratulations, Gordon
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amateur51
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostYou are right, of course, and belies my stated belief that there are too many people on the planet and especially in the UK. That is the one thing that I can't square within myself. We need more and more people of younger age to earn money to pay tax to fund the pensions and the drain on the NHS of the ever-increasing number of elderly.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostYou are right, of course, and belies my stated belief that there are too many people on the planet and especially in the UK. That is the one thing that I can't square within myself. We need more and more people of younger age to earn money to pay tax to fund the pensions and the drain on the NHS of the ever-increasing number of elderly.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostPreventative health, much spoken of but under-implemented, is the solution to many of the costly illnesses requiring research and new drugs. Saying so won't do much for the present generation, or even the overweight next one, but that coupled with better diet will be the logistical solution in the longterm.
I suspect that it is the various industries involved. They would be daft not to.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostPreventative health, much spoken of but under-implemented, is the solution to many of the costly illnesses requiring research and new drugs. Saying so won't do much for the present generation, or even the overweight next one, but that coupled with better diet will be the logistical solution in the longterm.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostOf course he wasn't, but he and his henchpersons nevertheless did little to reduce its adverse effects.
Well, apart from coordinating global action to avoid a depression, and then saving the banking sector in the UK.
Meanwhile let's not forget that before the crash the Tories were complaining that there was _too_ much regulation in the city.Steve
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Originally posted by Stunsworth View PostWell, apart from coordinating global action to avoid a depression, and then saving the banking sector in the UK.
Meanwhile let's not forget that before the crash the Tories were complaining that there was _too_ much regulation in the city.
It is also forgetten that Labour had to spend a considerable amount on schools and the NHS in particular after they had been starved of funds from 1979 .
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostPreventative health, much spoken of but under-implemented, is the solution to many of the costly illnesses requiring research and new drugs. Saying so won't do much for the present generation, or even the overweight next one, but that coupled with better diet will be the logistical solution in the longterm.
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by teamsaint View Postyes, quite right, S-A. When I hear about the apparently inevitable, ever rising cost of healthcare, and the requisite neceaary increase in spending,I tend to wonder exactly who is telling us that costs must keep rising.
I suspect that it is the various industries involved. They would be daft not to.
Cue better preventative medicine but that isn't going to have much effect on the elderly. To be honest, looking at the ToL waddling down our local High Street I don't hold out much hope for the future either. Are these people so ignorant that they don't realise what they are doing to themselves?
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostI am not in the business of supporting the labour party, but another lie put about is that labour was reckless with public spending.
The truth is that until the banks crashed, they broadly kept public spending at the long term average for governments of both parties.In fact for most of their tenure, it was well below the important 40% of GDP level.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datab...-spending-1963
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amateur51
Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostThe costs keep rising because of the 'tick-box' and 'outcomes' culture that has been pushed onto the NHS by both this Government and the last one. GP's seem increasingly to be the entry point for a load of hospital tests for something that is nothing more nor less then old age and the general breakdown and wear and tear of the body and for which there is no 'fix'. Other than to re-educate expectations of some of the elderly for whom these never-ending visits to the doctors and the hospital are as much a social diary as anything to do with health. And because modern medicine has got to the point with pills for cholesterol/hypertension/adult-onset diabetes then the life expectancy HAS increased but now aches and pains which are part of the body getting old come to the fore. Prior to the daily pill intake, these aches and pains wouldn't manifest themselves as the patient would be dead.
Cue better preventative medicine but that isn't going to have much effect on the elderly. To be honest, looking at the ToL waddling down our local High Street I don't hold out much hope for the future either. Are these people so ignorant that they don't realise what they are doing to themselves?
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Resurrection Man
ams, I have no expectations but understand the realities of life and of getting old. I don't relish it. In ten years time I will be 73. I may well go out in a blaze of adventure, fun and lust.
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