Gutter Boy
Tim Sherwood
A lot of labours domestic announcements have been great, if poorly presented. It's their brexit policy that is fudging them. If they made a full on case for a socialist brexit, they'd really be on to something
Squeeze Amazon, they'll declare all of their profits outside the UK and we'll reduce our tax intake."Full electrification of housing? Cannot be done...your'e crazy." Free national health for all? Are you nuts?" "Are you serious? "A national sewage network?" Imagine where we would all be, if this mindset prevailed? Men of zero vision is the definition of the conservative. Squeeze Amazon et al until the fudging pips squeak.
Squeeze Amazon, they'll declare all of their profits outside the UK and we'll reduce our tax intake.
If we didn't currently have a telecomms system in the UK I could understand, but obviously not agree with, your stance. Yet that analogy doesn't work because we do have a telecoms system here and it's owned and run by UK pensions and UK shareholders. It employs thousands of people who then all contribute to the Exchequer.
Interesting you mention the NHS. I pay significantly more in tax on the NHS than I do for private healthcare, yet the service I receive is a miniscule fraction of the quality. The system is utterly fudged beyond repair. It was a nice idea, sweet in its nature, but always doomed to fail in the real world.
LOL. Nobody can save it. It was fudged under Labour, it was fudged under the Conservatives, it was fudged from birth and should have been aborted long before it became the ginger stepchild of our nation's finances.Well the Tories are doing everything in their power to doom it. Vote Labour and save the NHS.
I pay significantly more in tax on the NHS than I do for private healthcare, yet the service I receive is a miniscule fraction of the quality.
LOL. Nobody can save it. It was fudged under Labour, it was fudged under the Conservatives, it was fudged from birth and should have been aborted long before it became the ginger stepchild of our nation's finances.
The entire notion of it is ridiculous and unworkable. The private sector provides me a far better device for a fraction of the cost.
It might surprise you to know that I'm not particularly against state funded healthcare, it's just state provided healthcare that is destined to go to brick.Private medical insurance is fine till you get older or develop any big problems.
I was with Bupa till I retired at 52 ish then it started to rocket in price. I had no claims either believe it or not no illness or hospitalisation of any note. My stepdad had a quad bypass on Bupa and Bupa tripled his paments in the next five years he could not afford the £20k+ pa.
Bupa and some of the rest are great until your not.
It's not just my experience, it's that of everyone I know who has private healthcare. They all receive better service for a fraction of the cost.That’s anecdotal to your experience. The NHS is very very far from ridiculous and unworkable. It’s not going anywhere, it’s the political system that is fudging it, not the NHS itself.
Sitting on my porcelain throne using Fapatalk
It's not just my experience, it's that of everyone I know who has private healthcare. They all receive better service for a fraction of the cost.
If the NHS is working so well, why is there such a large private healthcare industry?
See my post two above this.I never said it was 'working so well'.
It was literally set-up so every single citizen of this country could have healthcare without being crippled by debt to afford it. It's not a business, you're comparing a business-led industry with an institution that is doing its absolute best to provide for the population in spite of the systems around it trying to bring it to it's knees.
See my post two above this.
If you look around the world it seems to be the best combination of quality and cost to do things that way.
Whilst you may see the NHS not being a business as an excuse for its weakness, I see it as a cause.
I can get on board with the state-funded v state provided argument, it’s surprisingly uncommon knowledge that some of the NHS is already privatised whilst still in the overall care of the government.
But I still think your ire is misdirected at the institution of the NHS when it should be directed at the political and societal systems that are creating weaknesses within it.
I also think comparing private-funded healthcare to the service the NHS provides is disingenuous. You’re not getting shinier, better doctors or machines for the most part. They’re the same ones utilised by the NHS for people that can’t afford private healthcare, you just get to skip the queue.
Sitting on my porcelain throne using Fapatalk
And have nicer decor in the rooms and corridors. And not have to sit next to common folk. Jesus...the NHS has had the brick kicked out of it by the Tories. That, coupled with an increasingly service-driven service-demanding society which runs to the doctors at the first sign of a cold and demands ER care is a perfect storm of brick.
When it comes to healthcare, skipping the queue is one of the most important factors. That, private rooms (what kind of barbaric, Victorian workhouse kind of system would have grown adults share rooms?) and more time with specialists when you do see them.I can get on board with the state-funded v state provided argument, it’s surprisingly uncommon knowledge that some of the NHS is already privatised whilst still in the overall care of the government.
But I still think your ire is misdirected at the institution of the NHS when it should be directed at the political and societal systems that are creating weaknesses within it.
I also think comparing private-funded healthcare to the service the NHS provides is disingenuous. You’re not getting shinier, better doctors or machines for the most part. They’re the same ones utilised by the NHS for people that can’t afford private healthcare, you just get to skip the queue.
Sitting on my porcelain throne using Fapatalk
My private medical insurance costs around £1800pa. Obviously I don't pay that, it's a company benefit and I pay the tax on it so I pay less than half. £1800 is the cost to insure me medically for a year though.What it needs is evolution - rather than major changes. People in the organisation know what needs to be improved. They know the inefficiencies but are hamstrung by firefighting. You can't easily make improvements when all your time has to go on patient care or emergencies. A bit of a catch 22.
@Scaramanaga re "I pay significantly more in tax on the NHS than I do for private healthcare, yet the service I receive is a miniscule fraction of the quality."
Is this true? What do you pay in tax vs private cover? Private obviously doesn't cover emergencies or GPs? Many private services are delivered via the NHS too.
When it comes to healthcare, skipping the queue is one of the most important factors. That, private rooms (what kind of barbaric, Victorian workhouse kind of system would have grown adults share rooms?) and more time with specialists when you do see them.
There's also a very fundamental value for money argument. I pay more than most (less than many) but have to receive the same bog standard level of treatment all the unwashed, mobility scooter riding, New Look wearing masses who spend their days fisting Greggs into their mouths and failing to wash properly. That's simply not right.