vegster
Sanity Clause
- May 5, 2008
- 28,273
If anyone thinks the Tory party, especially Moggeth and Bhonson, give a flying **** about the NHS, you are sorely mistaken. As soon as we get this under control they'll continue paying them shit wages and proceed with their dismantling of free healthcare for all.
This is just a minor inconvenience to the ********. These are the same scum that cheered when they successfully voted down a wage increase for nurses. They are encouraging us to clap and cheer and fall silent for the NHS while they have been draining the NHS for years. They wilfully ignored a 2016 report telling them to get more PPE to NHS workers urgently, as a pandemic was only a matter of time. They have blood on their hands.
The Tory's are lying, cheating, profiteering ********s and anyone that votes for the again after this is nearly as bad.
From The Guardian, Suzanne Moore " The brand that is Boris Johnson is back and “raring to go”, says Dominic Raab. Go where, one wonders.
We are to believe that he is fully recovered and able to make the life-and-death decisions of which his cabinet is apparently incapable. It is a sign of the strangeness of the times that I find myself agreeing with the health minister Nadine Dorries, who tweeted that most people who have been in intensive care with Covid-19 need months off, rather than weeks, work to regain their strength.
Of course, we are supposed to think of Johnson as an exception to the rules he has been breaking all his life. Now he gets to make the rules, while trying to be upbeat, but still insisting on this ridiculous language of war and conflict. This is war as a game, in which there are victors and heroes who get medals while flags are waved. Real war is needless slaughter and torture and starvation, but that would spoil the metaphor of triumph.
No one wins in a pandemic. The UK certainly isn’t winning now. We are set to have the highest death rate in Europe, so I am not quite sure what victory looks like – 50,000 or 100,000 dead? No amount of “Boris bounce” can dilute the blocks of loss on the graphs, or make us unsee the abandonment of the social care workers who look after those in “homes”, sleeping there overnight to avoid infecting their own families."