the people

Silent Majority Speaks

Blair wants to leave his mark on history - looks more like a stain to me.

Peter Thorndyke, Diss, Norfolk - Daily Mail, May 23, 2005

I know I'm me - why do I need an ID card?

"Sorry, officers, I don't have an ID card. I never applied for one. It seemed a bit steep at 300 quid. I do have my free passport, my driving licence and my London freedom travel pass, each with my photograph. I have my NHS medical card, with its lengthy number, given me at birth, my RAF service book with my Armed Forces number, and a chit authorising me to wear a few gongs -including a General Service Medal with Malaya bar, for fighting communist terrorists on behalf of my country, or so they told me.

"I've also got various credit cards and store cards, all with my signature on the back, generally good for buying the everyday requrements for life as well as the odd luxury. If you decide to arrest me, I suppose I'll have to be photographed and given another number, besides my PINs.

"I'm afraid I haven't got a pension book; it was taken away."

"By thieves, sir?"

"No ... well, not exactly. By the Government. By the way, may I see your warrant cards please, gentlemen?"

Oh dear, they've disappeared. E. Harry Gumer, Romford, ESSEX - Daily Mail, June 1, 2005

NO means NO

When does NO mean MAYBE? When it's not the answer the EU wants. With the courageous French NON resounding in their ears, shabby, undemocratic self-interested leaders of Europe propose ignoring the part of their precious constitution that requires ratification by all members and continuing without one of the biggest founder members to prevent derailing the gravy train.

As in Ireland, they refuse to accept any NO votes, ignoring the will of the people, and re-stage votes until they can engineer the 'correct' answer. Sadly, Foreign Secretary Jack Straw dances to their tune like a puppet on a string. With tactics such as these, how can anyone really believe the EU has our interests at heart. Letter from Steve Penny, Kingsnorth, Kent - Daily Mail, June1, 2005

Surely the French result makes the £1million the EU recently spent on a treaty signing ceremony seem a trifle premature and extravagant. Letter from Keith Wiseman, Bury, Lancs. - Daily Mail, June1, 2005

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Britain has traditionally been one of the biggest net contributors to the EU because we do not get as much money back from Brussels in farm and regional subsidies as our rivals.

According to Treasury figures, between 1995-2002, Britain's average contribution taking the rebate into account, was £2.6billion, or £43.55 per head of population.

The French - the biggest recipient of farm subsidies - contributed £1billion a year or £16.08 per head of their population.

Tony Blair should know that respect comes by example - from the top. If a country's leader has no respect for the rule of international law and no respect for the truth, how can he expect anyone to have respect. Letter from P.J.Atkinson, Ashford, Kent - Daily Mail, January 12, 2006

The Chancellor's single greatest act of vandalism in almost nine years in office has been his wanton destruction of Britain's private retirement industry. By slapping a massive tax on pension funds, now worth £7.3billion a year, he has helped to turn the best private retirement industry in Europe into a basket-case in perpetual crisis. Together with the adoption of European accounting rules - which make it much riskier to operate a company pension scheme - hundreds of firms have shut their final salary plans to new employees and slashed benefits to existing staff. From Allister Heath: "I've seen the future and its grey" in THE SPECTATOR - April 15, 2006

Nine years ago the British people were sold a fantasy of clean and competent government of principle and honesty. Its shiny wrappings stripped away, the product now reveals its true nature: Personal greed, arrogance, incompetence, shamelessness, rash warmongering and an inability to accept - as is clear to almost everyone else - that it is time to go. Editorial - The Mail on Sunday, May 28, 2006

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April 16, 2008 (1751) days since war ended)

Death Toll: 4036 US - 176 UK - >1,000,000? civilians - 25 media

March 24, 2008 (1728 days since war ended)

Death Toll: 4000 US - 175 UK - >1,000,000? civilians - 25 media

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Our PM has been Mr Bean and a Runner Bean.May he soon be a Has-Bean .. please!

'Straight to the point' - from Harry Dodd, Bath - Daily Mail, December 18, 2007

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Half the country has no dentist

Shock figures reveal thousands of desperate patients are demanding treatment at A&E

By James Cameron - Deputy Political Editor, Daily Mail, April 17, 2008

The full desperate state of dental care across the country can be revealed today. Half the population has received no dental care on the NHS in the last two years.

And thousands of suffering patients are turning up at hospital emergency departments for treatment because they cannot find an NHS dentist.

Shocking figures seen by the Daily Mail suggest there have been 27,000 more hospital admissions since the Government bungled the introduction of a new contract for dentists.

Tory health spokesman Andrew Lansley said: "We know that there are people out there who are pulling out their own teeth because they cannot find a NHS dentist."

In total, 23,161,368 people in England - almost half the population - received no dental care on the Health Service in the two years up to last September. That is an increase of 840,342 - or 4% - since the introduction of the contract in 2006.

The revelations will deepen concern about the service almost a decade after the Government pledged all patients would have access to treatment on the Health Service within two years.

Mr Lansley, who obtained the statistics, said: "These shocking figures are proof that Labour cannot negotiate a contract with NHS professionals. Dentists are being forced out of the NHS and some patients clearly have no other option but to take their dental problems to hospital A&E, a service which is already under pressure."

Michael Summers, of the Patients' Association, said: "This really is a scandal. People tell us it is almost impossible to find an NHS dentist in many parts of the country. So they either have to find the money to pay for private treatment or they go without check-ups and treatment for years on end. There are real dangers in that, because on of the objects of regular check-ups is to identify infections or signs of oral cancers."

The figures, from the NHS Information Centre, show that as the number of people without an NHS dentist has increased, so the number of admissions to hospital for dental treatment has gone up.

The East Midlands has seen the biggest increase in those without an NHS dentist for two years or more - 8% -- and also a 20% rise in hospital admissions for dental treatment, the biggest in the country.

Last year there were nearly 240,000 such hospital admissions - up 6% since the introduction of the Government's contract aimed at simplifying patient charges and allowing more patients to register with the NHS.

It created just three bands of treatment - £15.90 for a basic examination and X-rays, £43.60 for root canal work or other treatment, and £194 for construction work, such as crowns.

That means patients face a minimum charge of £15.90 where previously they could pay as little as £6 for a check-up. Dentists complain the contract does no reflect the amount of work they actually carry out - for example, they receive the same amount of money regardless of whether they provide a patient with two fillings or ten.

Many have left the NHS, complaining they are not being properly paid. Last year, a survey found that one in 20 patients had resorted to DIY treatment, in some cases pulling out their own teeth. One patient in Lancashire claimed to have removed 14 teeth using pliers.

Overall, the survey found that almost half of NHS dentists were not accepting any more patients. Earlier this month, Elizabeth Green, 76, from Winchester, Hampshire, told how she was turned away by 12 dentists. As a result the grandmother, who was in agony with two front teeth, pulling them out herself.

A Department of Health spokesman said: "We are working hard to improve access to NHS dentists and the Government remains fully committed to expanding services. Access to an NHS dentist has remained broadly stable since the introduction of the new contract. No one can receive dental treatment in hospital without seeing their dentist first. Routine dental treatment is not carried out in hospitals, and referral to hospital for secondary treatment is done purely on clinical need.

"Anybody having difficulty finding a dentist should contact their local primary care trust."

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