hindsight is a wonderful thing don’t you think? I can understand perhaps things got off slowly, but deliberately so??? Nah I could never agree there
Did you know today is ‘National Hindsight Day’? Or really, it should have been.
hindsight is a wonderful thing don’t you think? I can understand perhaps things got off slowly, but deliberately so??? Nah I could never agree there
Did you know today is ‘National Hindsight Day’? Or really, it should have been.
StolenI always try to keep an open mind about stuff, until the evidence (not conspiracy theories or hunches or 'because it is China and we can't trust them') is too strong to ignore.
Cor blimey, and after singing they wouldn't get fooled again..What's your beef with the WHO btw?
_____________________________
China have used WHO to mislead the world from the very start of this crisis.
The WHO is either complicit or dangerously incompetent
China also refused the WHO’s request to send a team of scientific observers to Hubei province, the centre of the outbreak. Two days later, they praised Chinese efforts to contain the disease.
The government of Taiwan claimed that the WHO had ignored its own early reports of human-to-human transmission of coronavirus as part of a larger history of appeasing China – which has blocked Taiwan from joining the WHO (and the UN) for decades.
The World Health Organisation act more like FIFA, than a body with the publics best interest at heart. Well worth delving into some articles for your own take on it. But me, I'm not happy at all.

You must log in or register to see media
This from a Guardian article, https://www.theguardian.com/comment...myVynkQllMiiDg6aEN6u2AoOeE#Echobox=1586615917 NICE I think not.
"The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) was forced to make a U-turn last week on their advice for the NHS to deny disabled people treatment, but only after disability groups threatened legal action. Nice had told doctors they should assess patients with conditions such as learning disabilities and autism as scoring high for “frailty” - thereby meeting criteria to be refused treatment - based on the fact they need support with personal care in their day-to-day life".
That is one of the most appalling things I have ever heard of Jabbo. I bet none of those arseholes making up such evil policies at NICE have disabled children or relatives. They had better keep their identities well hidden because if I found out who they were I would take a ****ing baseball bat to them. What a bunch of cold hearted cowards they are to sit in an office somewhere, deciding what value someone's life has. I very much doubt any doctor or nurse would have accepted that 'advice'.
NICE - National Institute for Callous Extermination.
Welcome to SS GB.
Calm down mate, it's in a paper and may be false or made worse than it was. It wouldn't be the first time stuff was reported out of context, would it?
The article says the NHS has to prioritise in some situations, not out and out **** the disabled people.
You could say that about anyone not being a priority, there was one woman and its tragic, her husband has MND and he just died of this, others may have been prioritised over someone more healthy eith greater chance of living longer. It's an unimaginable decision to have to make, but possibly the correct one.
Threatening to take a baseball bat to someone is pretty stupid, and I'm sure you dont mean that.
One Q for the forum, if you can only save 1 life out of 2 people in front if you, one disabled and the other not, who would you save, or would you save no one?
I'm not saying which way I'd go, so please dont read into something that's not there...
Impossible to answer for me. Every life is as important as another - being 'able' to do stuff doesn't make your life more important than another.
Stephen Hawkin - that is all.
Yep it's not easy, is it.
But somewhere, somehow, someone has to make that decision.
Calm down mate, it's in a paper and may be false or made worse than it was. It wouldn't be the first time stuff was reported out of context, would it?
The article says the NHS has to prioritise in some situations, not out and out **** the disabled people.
You could say that about anyone not being a priority, there was one woman and its tragic, her husband has MND and he just died of this, others may have been prioritised over someone more healthy eith greater chance of living longer. It's an unimaginable decision to have to make, but possibly the correct one.
Threatening to take a baseball bat to someone is pretty stupid, and I'm sure you dont mean that.
One Q for the forum, if you can only save 1 life out of 2 people in front if you, one disabled and the other not, who would you save, or would you save no one?
I'm not saying which way I'd go, so please dont read into something that's not there...
@Hong Kong Saint @chinasaint
@Susan
I know Susan doesn’t live there anymore but might be still have friends there.
Any news being on correct figures being edited coming out of China?