the people

Silent Majority Speaks

Rescuing Democracy in the United Kingdom from our current Elected Dictatorship

Spin, not face-to-face confrontations with the voters, is the Government's chosen method of communication. Ordinary people are dangerous. Ordinary people might ask a question which throws a politician 'off message'; the Cabinet member might reveal himself or herself to be a human being like us, and not a programmed android. Worse still, he or she might tell the truth.

Ann Leslie - Daily Mail, September 16, 2004

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

February 22, 2007 (1364days since war ended)

Death Toll: 3150 US - 132 UK - >650,000? civilians - 25 media

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STOP PRESS

Shock figures on hospital infections

Superbugs kill 5,400 patients in ONE year

By Jenny Hope, Medical Correspondent - Daily Mail, February 23, 2007

Deaths from hospital superbugs have soared to record levels. Latest figures show Clostridium difficile and MRSA between them were involved in 5,436 deaths in a single year. Experts fear the statistics are just the tip of the iceberg and say many infections go unrecorded.

The toll has intensified concerns about poor hygiene in hospitals, aggravated by Health Service spending cuts, as well as fears over ward overcrowding and lack of isolation facilities. Official surveys show one in three hospitals is flouting guidelines aimed at controlling C.diff.

Yesterday's figures, from the Office of National Statistics, show deaths involving C.difficile shot up 69% from 2,247 in 2004 to 3,807 in 2005. MRSA fatalities rose by 39%, from 1,166 to 1,629.

Sick treatment

Comment - Daily Mail, February 23, 2007

A hospital, according to the dictionary, is where the sick go to be treated. In today's health service a wider definition is required.

Too often nowadays they are where people pick up terrible bugs, with fatal consequences for thousands.

Three years ago, when John Reid was health secretary, he promised that the incidence of MRSA would be halved by 2008. Instead it has risen alarmingly. Figures released yesterday showed that deaths from the worst bug, C.difficile, are up by 69% and from MRSA by 39%. But even that does not represent the true picture. The real number is far greater as hospitals remain loathe to admit that superbugs are responsible for many deaths.

We are stricken by an epidemic caused by filthy wards, unhygienic operating theatres, hot-bedding and scandalous cleaning practices.

Billions are spent on an NHS which in many areas does a wonderful job. But what is the point of all that money and brilliance if it can't master the simple art of cleanliness?

This means two in every 500 death certificates cited C.diff as a contributory or main factor, with one in 500 mentioning MRSA> The death toll was more than twice as high as that on the roads.

In 2004, the then health secretary, John Reid, promised to halve the MRSA rate by 2008. But campaigners said the figures showed the Government was failing miserably.

Graham Tanner, chairman of the National Concern for Healthcare Infections, said there was still 'vast under-reporting' because many doctors failed to follow guidelines on certifying the cause of death. He said the true toll could be as high as 27,600. There were at least 230,000 infections and their average mortality rate was 15%.

Katherine Murphy, of the Patients' Association, said: "The date reinforces the picture we already have of a substantial increase in C.diff and MRSA cases. Our worry is these figures will continue to rise as other priorities take precedence. "Inaccurate reporting on death certificates is a constant feature of calls to our helpline. Bereaved relatives should not have to fight for accuracy, doctors have a duty to provide it."

Chostridium difficile (C.diff) can trigger a catastrophic infection of the gut in elderly people. The bug produces toxins which damage the lining of the bowel, resulting in a sever form of diarrhoea. It is usually spread via the hands of healthcare staff or contaminated surfaces.

Those over 65 are at highest risk especially when they are being treated with antibiotics which destroy the normal balance of the gut, allowing C.diff to take hold. But there is concern that the bug be getting more severe and affecting younger people.

MRSA is unwittingly carried by many people on their skin. It becomes dangerous when it enters the body, meaning that patients who have had surgery or other invasive treatments are at particular risk. The cost of MRSA to the NHS is put at £1billion a year.

The pressure group Health Emergency warned that shortages of beds and staff mean it is impossible for UK hospitals to adopt the European model of isolating patients, and decontaminating whole areas in order to control infection. As a result, the UK has levels of infection and death rates are far higher than comparable countries in Western Europe.

Geoff Martin, the groups head of campaigns, said: "Over the past 12 months nearly 3,000 hospital beds have been closed in the NHS. That has created serious capacity problems and leads to 'hot bedding', which makes a mockery of any attempts to control infection. With hospitals under instruction to hack back another £13billion of deficits this year we will see more bed closures and staff cuts which will create a breeding ground for MRSA, C.diff and the rest of the killer infections gaining a foothold in the wards."

Shadow Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said: "Ministers are failing to face up to the dangers of MRSA and C.diff. Hardworking NHS staff are not getting the support they need to deliver a comprehensive strategy against hospital acquired infections. The staggering increase in deaths from C.diff and MRSA is worrying enough and the increasing presence of more dangerous strains will become an even bigger problem without an urgent and rigorous strategy now. Labour's save bed cuts over the past two years have allowed deaths from C.diff and MRSA to grow to this appalling level."

Liberal Democrat spokesman Norman Lamb said : "The Government's drive to cut waiting times at all costs conflicts with what should be an absolute priority of cutting infection rates. The simple truth is that in hospitals where targets dictate where patients are kept, and beds are filled to burst point, nurses are not able to isolate patients and clean wards in order to beat the bug. There must be an urgent reassessment of the reporting procedure for hospital acquired infections. Some death certificates are still failing to document where an infection led to a patient's death."

But Health Minister, Lord Hunt, said 'vastly improved recording was responsible for the apparent rise.' He said: "We have set very tough targets for trusts to reduce infections and put a hygiene code and tougher inspection regime into law, to drive up standards of hygiene and infection control. As a result we are now starting to see significant reductions in the rates of MRSA infections. Many people who have healthcare-associated infections are very sick and vulnerable to infections, not all of which are avoidable. We are ensuring that the NHS has good hand hygiene and correct clinical procedures to prevent the ones that are."

Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt announced in December that hospital trusts can bid for up to £300,000 each from a £50million fund to help combat C.diff.

In November 2004 Mr Reid said: "I have made it clear that lowering rates of healthcare-acquired infections is a top priority. I expect MRSA bloodstream infection rates to be halved by 2008. NHS Acute Trusts will be tasked with achieving a year on year reduction up to and beyond March 2008."

Some experts warn that bugs are here to stay as the price to pay for advances in medicine. Even with the perfect environment and perfect infection control practice, there would still be infection because increasingly frail people are being save who would have died a few years ago.

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