NHS productivity and efficiency?

GEORGE ORWELL once wrote, “Those in power control the future, by controlling the past”. In a rather unorthodox twist, Gordon Brown has adopted an almost opposite position. His technique, both as Chancellor of the Exchequer and now, as Prime Minister, has been in colonising the future rather than the past in order to hold sway over [...]

Equality Bill

In response to an Editorial published by the Guardian Newspaper, entitled: “Equally ambitious”.
 
Harriet Harman is right in bringing forward measures in equalising pay for equal work, but there are complications in how the Bill might be implemented in practice.
In principle, it is correct to pay one person the same as the other for the same [...]

The scarcity of oil?

Michael Meacher MP, writing in the Guardian, says:
… “Growing competition for oil may escalate to something as hot and dangerous as nuclear proliferation”
 
Writing in response:
NOTHING seems to be pleasing the oil traders. Gordon Brown arguing a case, recently, in front of OPEC countries led to King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia in pumping more oil but, [...]

Mental Health

Following a recent editorial by the Observer, dated Sunday 29 June 2008, the following response was made.
The article states: “Mental illness must be taken from the shadows” …
 
It doesn’t matter what level of depression, or mental illness one has, as soon as that person’s illness becomes known unto others, the stigma associated with being treated [...]

Mugabe and the future of Zimbabwe

YESTERDAY, the UN stopped short of calling the run-off Zimbabwean election as ‘illegitimate’. Why it stopped short, seems illogical and pervasive. Comparing Mugabe with Milosevic is comparable in the sense that both men were justified in being brought before The Hague, for crimes committed against humanity. Mugabe is a brutal and tyrannical despot. The recent [...]

North Korea & nuclear weapons?

The Yongbyon nuclear reactor was the source of plutonium for Kim Jong Il’s nuclear arsenal. The blowing up of the North Korean cooling tower is a welcome new departure from the stance that Kim Jong Il had previously taken. In October of 2006, the North Korean’s leader grabbed the attention of the world when its [...]

Iranian secrecy?

WHERE does the world go with Iran? There seems no easy way in ending Iran’s nuclear defiance. The six countries – Britain, France, Germany, US, Russia and China – trying to negotiate with Iran, are continually stuck with protracted dialogue that has got no-where. Israel cannot simply be allowed in taking the law into its [...]

Economic chaos

David Cox, writing in the Guardian, says:
… “Urging workers to restrain their pay demands is the wrong way to tackle inflation. It’s time to bring back monetarism”
 
Respondent as “BritishAirman” 
A DEMAND for increase in wages has come about because of soaring prices – in fuel, in the price of commodities and in the general prices of what [...]

Zimbabwe and Robert Mugabe

MUGABE’S extensive holding of corrupt power in Zimbabwe has allowed him in orchestrating a prolonged campaign of state-sponsored violence which, ultimately, has forced the opposition in Zimbabwe, under Morgan Tsvangirai, to pull out of the presidential run-off. That election was scheduled for Friday, June 27th.
Mr. Tsvangirai now says that he will not take part in [...]

Surveillance powers

David Davis, writing in the Guardian, on 23 June 2008, writes:
“Local councils’ surveillance powers are intrusive, ineffective and expensive without making us any safer” …
 
Respondent as “BritishAirman”
 
ONE:
FROM the steps of the Palace of Westminster, after David Davies resigned from Parliament, Mr. Davis accused the government of presiding over the “slow strangulation” of freedoms and the [...]

Response to Professor Ian Gilmore

Responding to Professor Ian Gilmore, President of the Royal College of Physicians following an article that appeared in the Guardian Newspaper, dated 23 June 2008, entitled: “The NHS has stayed true to the principles of 1948″.
Professor Gilmore writes: “Our health service has got a lot better in the past 60 years. And, despite the changes made [...]

A Question of Trust …

… Can the NHS still be properly computerised?
LAST Saturday’s report by the National Audit Office (NAO) on information technology in the NHS makes depressing reading. The report estimates that the centrepiece of the National Programme for IT in the NHS will not now be ready until 2014, at the earliest. Some experts believe, privately, [...]

About: ‘The Olympic Rings’ …

 
 

 
 
The Olympic Rings are the most recognisable trademark in the world.
Five different colour rings (Red, Blue, Green, Yellow and Black) on a white field was selected so that each participating nation would have at least one of the colours in their national flag, with the rings representing each of the five inhabited continents, with America [...]

US law at Guantanamo Bay …

In a response to David Cole of the Guardian, who on the 14 June, 2008 wrote:
 … “By insisting that US law applies to Guantanamo, the Supreme Court has destroyed the prison camp’s justification”
 
Yes, I agree with that view. The US Constitution, as David Cole points out, has been a fundamental underpinning of the rights afforded [...]