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When I worked on Teesside this was a source of considerable tension between 3 of the patch team leaders, who wouldn't run internal waiting lists, on the one hand and the other patch team leader, supported by the service manager, on the other, who did actively run screening and an internal waiting list and also happened to be the partner of the service manager... When I jacked it in in 2013, we'd had a new "system" forced on us, which we were forced by management to misuse in order to get folk off the visible waiting list and on to the invisible internal list. This was about the third time up here we'd had managment enforced internal lists, which some of us had refused to go along with - I was threatened with disciplinary action and reporting to the NMC, but I called **** For Brains' bluff (why, yes, I actually DID have a manager called **** For Brains)...And had a hard time for several years as a result. I did out last **** For Brains who was made redundant, along with the next 2 up the line, during some Stalinist purge. |
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Heads must roll for this cruel and unusual punishment. :rolleyes: |
The Haunted Pencil (JR-M) appointed "Minister for Brexit Opportunities and Government Efficiency" whatever the hell that means. Talk about made-up job titles.
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Perhaps he could also be on the lookout for bigfoot, unicorns and Brigadoon...:rolleyes: |
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Dave |
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I see absolutely nothing of substance in Javid's "proposals", just a load of vague blether.
No acknowledgement of the role the Cameron/Osborn regime played in hacking NHS and related budgets to pieces; no acknowledgement of the role played by the Tory decision to cut training places on subsequent staffing issues; no acknowledgement of the loss of senior clinical staff of all disciplines as a direct result of austerity cuts (loss of leadership, clinical experience and expertise, service culture, training supervisors and all the rest is hard to quantify, but is very real). It's just like all this appeared overnight and wasn't already problematic BEFORE Covid hit. And even then no real ideas about what will be done to improve matters, but the same useful idiots who voted for them over the last 12 years will still carry on voting for them because reasons... |
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And WTAF are these "NHS reservists"?
No such thing. Does he mean folk who retired and are supposed to be offered part-time work following retirement? Which doesn't always happen anyway - I wasn't offered this option, but that might have something to do with me telling HR that I would not consider it without a written apology for certain actions of some specific managers and the head of HR for nor proerly, i.e. according to policy, investigating my complaint about one of those managers. That and I wasn't prepared to accept the ridiculously low banding they tend to offer: you want that level of experience and the rest, then pay me. |
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What we can conclude is that...Well, we all know what the answer to that is... |
https://www.theguardian.com/society/...s-crumble-away
And I didn't spot Javid addressing any of the above either. But getting any government to take MH seriously is nigh on impossible - the last Labour lot were better than any other of my experience, but they still weren't great, just a bit better than all the useless ones. |
Oh, look! An ex-Tory (well, kinda) involved in harassing Starmer and spreading lies - https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/...-resistance-gb
The last paragraph of that piece is especially telling: “It is nonsensical and alien to the concept of personal responsibility for us to be blamed for any of the tens of thousands of comments hosted by tech platforms.” Can't blame us for spreading misinformation! The big boys did it and ran away! How exactly do you define "responsibility"? |
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https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politi...d-who-26172523 The slow-motion coup continues. |
Channel 4 News
Record breaking profits have been announced by oil giant BP. But exclusive research for this programme has revealed their north sea oil operations paid zero tax for five years. In fact, they've actually received money from the taxpayer. |
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Meanwhile, BlowJob, who is happy to make statements which would be slanderous if he wasn't cowering behind parliamentary privilege, is making threats about legal action because someone wrote something far less deliberately nasty about Poor Carrie - https://www.independent.co.uk/news/u...-b2010170.html
I'm sure there's a word for someone who behaves like that... |
Drip drip drip
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politi...boris-26181071 Quote:
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To be fair, that question said the picture showed him 'surrounded by alcohol and food'; which is...somewhat of an overstatement.
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Dave |
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There was an initial shock and outrage but Boris Johnson knew that if he could survive the week after the initial scoop, then people wouldn't care any more. There could be a picture of Boris Johnson taking a dump on Captain Tom's grave and the response from the right wing press, the majority of the Conservative Party and the majority of the British electorate would be "Poor Boris, getting caught short like that...." :mad: edited to add.... Poking at this a little more.. Quote:
I think he's right about people not caring but of course the Conservatives won't do anything to address what "really matters" either - just make things much, much worse. |
Northerners should accept lower wages because 'London is London', top Rishi Sunak aide says
Tim Leunig said “the only way towns and cities that are less well connected can compete to attract firms is to accept lower wages". https://www.manchestereveningnews.co...wages-23031350 |
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However, he goes on to say: Quote:
One of the largest IT companies in the world is based in a tiny village in Baden-Württemberg and Omaha manages to be a financial services hub. |
Perhaps the lower density of Michelin starred restaurants?
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Boris Johnson's ethics chief is investigating the Prime Minister's new Commons Leader over racism allegations, it has emerged.
The former Chief Whip was handed a promotion in Tuesday's reshuffle, when it was already known he was at the centre of a Cabinet Office probe into claims made by Tory MP Nusrat Ghani that she was sacked because of her "Muslimness". Now Mr Spencer, who will begin attending the Prime Minister's Cabinet meetings in his new role, has confirmed ethics chief Lord Geidt - whose job it is to probe breaches of the Ministerial Code - is investigating him. Ms Ghani said last month that she was told by the then-Chief Whip she was sacked as Transport Minister in 2021 because her Muslim faith "had been raised as an issue” and made colleagues uncomfortable. The Commons Leader - who is responsible for representing backbenchers and upholding standards in parliament - identified himself as the whip involved in Ms Ghani's complaint, but denied the claims, which he said were false and “defamatory”. No10 originally claimed a broader Cabinet Office probe would "establish the facts" but Mr Spencer himself has now confirmed Lord Geidt is leading the probe. https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politi...ating-26183040 Well, that didn't take long. Boris is like Trump, everything he touches turns to ****. |
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My girlfriend likes "haunted pencil" |
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/b...y-b981697.html
Looks like the new party on 15th December is now going to be investigated by police Quote:
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They have already fixed the NHS problem - had headlines yesterday and today, energy prices - that was solved with £200 quid each headlines, and jobs... well 2/3 headlines isn't bad. (I'm sure they can announce some target to deal with the jobs problem and get a good headline or two.) See all fixed. And if it isn't fixed that is because of the mess labour made of everything when they were in power a couple of years ago.... |
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Michael Fabricant tweeted
@Mike_Fabricant The Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) is head of the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) with personal responsibility for its 7,000 staff and approximately 800,000 prosecutions undertaken by it every year - and for decisions NOT to prosecute. Quote Tweet Molly Giles @mollygiles2015 Sorry but this is a game changer. I hadn’t appreciated that, from the dispatch box, Keir has repeatedly used his time at the DPP as evidence of his success and leadership skills. Pointing out the failures is therefore totally fair game. Absolutely no apology is necessary. |
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"He was not the reviewing lawyer in charge of probing the Savile allegations." Reuters fact check etc... |
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