http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Jewry
I was referring to the Danzig massacres.
What sources have you used for the ‘Danzig massacres?’
What sources have you used for all of your assertions?
The dictionary definition is for the term Jewry. NOT ‘global Jewry’ the former is easy to understand, the latter is fantastic in the true sense of the word.
And I assume you read further down the list of the definitions in that link
3. the Jewry (in some anti-semitic literature) the Jews conceived of as an organized force seeking world domination
And just in case you are not sure what I mean by that
2.
imaginative or fanciful; remote from reality.
“fantastic hybrid creatures”
synonyms: fanciful, extravagant, extraordinary, irrational, wild, mad, absurd, far-fetched, nonsensical, incredible, unbelievable, unthinkable, implausible, improbable, unlikely, doubtful, dubious; More
What relevance is that? There’s nothing that takes away from their ordeal in the above.
have you heard of the phrase “if you are in a hole, stop digging???”
the concept of ‘global Jewry’ is as nonsensical as ‘Global Islamry’ or ‘Global Christianry’
the most damning thing you have written is the answer to the following by Creaking door:
So, yes, I’d say the holocaust was (to use your words) was a ‘terrible over-reaction’…
your answer with my highlight
Having researched it I don’t think it is actually.
Make up your mind. Oh, and perhaps you can provide sources for your “research” on this. Other than a 70+ year old newspaper headline
Not really, I haven’t denied the holocaust or the number killed in it one little bit. Nor do I condone it or excuse it. I merely pointed out that in reality Hitler didn’t just awake one morning and say, “what to do today then, oh I know, a nice holocaust.” That may tend to be the official position peddled but seriously, does it sound legit?
“Not really” !!!
If you read your post#27, whether by intention or perhaps Freudian slip, you seem to be implying, “well they asked for it”
Sorry, following that by saying “I don’t condone it” that simply doesn’t cut it.
Mycroft, you are David Irving and I claim my £5
A significant problem in A&E is the lack of social care provided by councils due to austerity cuts forced on them by central government, and crucially A&E attendance is up in a percentage higher than the increase in population
Nigel Edwards, the chief executive of the Nuffield Trust, said the situation could deteriorate further in the next two weeks, when the NHS was usually most stretched. NHS England insisted hospitals were coping, but Edwards said “there are reasons to be really quite concerned”.
He pointed out that hospitals were having to cope with a 4% increase in A&E attendance ,which is more than expected from population growth. At the same time, problems in social care were making it “really tricky” for hospitals to free up beds, he said.
From the Guardian article about the issues in Worcester Royal Hospital which is in the neighbouring county to me.
One of the real problems for Worcestershire is that they have closed a number of A&E departments in smaller hospitals and as a result people are being shipped in from further afield. AS the local MP has said, the WRH was built to service the City but is now servicing much of the county.
The Kings Fund has completed research into the rise in waiting times. The number of attendances at A& E has risen from 16.5 million in 2003/4 to 22.3 million in 2014/15 a rise of 35%, in the same period the population grew from 59 million to 64 million, a 9% increase.
as part of their conclusion they stated stated
Although attendances have increased over time, for many hospitals this is not the primary factor impacting on waiting times. A&E is in constant interaction with other hospital departments (for example, to request diagnostic tests and/or to transfer patients to beds in other parts of the hospital). A&E performance is therefore dependent on processes and capacity in other hospital departments, as well as other parts of the health and care system.
The number of people needing to be admitted from A&E into a hospital bed has increased over time, with rates tending to be highest in the winter. Those waiting for admission tend to wait in A&E longer than other people (Blunt 2014). This is particularly a problem in hospitals when the bed occupancy rate is already high as there is nowhere to put these patients. While there are a number of factors driving bed occupancy rates up, delays in discharging patients out of hospital and back into their homes or another more appropriate setting (such as social care) are a particular concern.
Difficult to assess anything else when they never even gave them an interview. My guess is that preference goes to foreign students paying full tuition fees rather than domestic students and they then go off to their home country and we get left desperately trying to get some of them back claiming that we need more immigration. No you need to give preference to domestic students making the grade and then you won’t have a shortage.
I fear you are confusing the number of doctors trained over the whole NHS and those who choose to become GP’s
It is the dramatic fall of those electing to train as a GP rather than an anaesthetist , or surgeon or paediatrician etc. that is really concerning. For whatever reason (and the vilification in the tabloids has some culpability) the numbers electing to train is dropping as a percentage of the cohort. For example in the the two surgeries that I work at that are training practices, the pool of available trainees is roughly half that it was five years ago. And the projected number in two or three years time based on preferences expressed by doctors in training at the local teaching hospitals is even lower.
Those at do complete their training are often not then going the ‘traditional’ route of becoming partners in a practice. Many are electing to become salaried GP’s or into the locum pool. This has obvious implications for continuity of care. Twenty years ago when one of the practices I work for advertised for a GP partner they had 25+ applications. When they advertised for another partner last year, only one person expressed any interest. Luckily they were entirely suitable ( and by the way he was trained in India and completed GP training in the UK) but there are other local, more rural, practices in the area that have had no applicants at all for vacancies.
Oh, it’s all a big coincidence isn’t it? Well let’s just say that what we were doing wasn’t working, so we’re trying something new and maybe it will improve, or at least stop deteriorating, by coincidence too. What was the alternative, do nothing and complain?
I’m sorry but that’s garbage, the people in the areas worst affected by immigration are the same ones that are having trouble getting school places and booking GP appointments etc. The stay campaign tried very hard to sell it another way but fell flat on their face because people are not stupid, they have been observing the situation for the last 20 years…… well everybody except the millennials have anyway.
On the NHS issue I have first hand experience as I work in three GP’s surgeries.
It is without a shadow of doubt the case that the aging population and their increasingly complex heath needs combined with the reduction in the number of doctors who choose to become GP’s that is really driving the crisis in primary care.
Not immigration,which may well have a small impact, but it is far from being the primary cause.
I see Nige is whinging about the honours system in the Torygraph today……
Sour Grapes?
Happy new year to one and all. Even Nige Gump
Yes, enjoy the festive season one and all.
I’m thinking about 4,000 innocent souls brutally murdered by Islamic fanatics since 2001. This statistic continues to shape my thoughts concerning the actions of our politicians in bringing this about. Brendan Cox should not make any excuses, they should be repeatedly condemned.
The death of MP Jo Cox was as repellent an act as any of the above.
How big of you.
I think you will find that Brendan Cox has, like his wife, repeatedly condemned extremism and terrorism in all its forms. If you only get your information from the Daily Heil you may have missed this point.
I suggest you actually watch his piece on Channel 4 that has been outlined by SnAfu, rather than get the distorted perspective that the Torygraph or Fail will undoubtedly spin it, to get the true measure of the man.
You may very well still disagree with him but at least it is from first hand information.
and the so-called far right who haven’t killed anyone.
Jo Cox was killed by a far-right extremist. And I think you have a very short memory about all the other far right atrocities since the Nazis. Ask Rpr about Timothy McVeigh for example, or the Norwegians about Anders Breivik, or the Germans about Ali Sonboly
He is just decending to be a poor man’s Katie Hopkins-a cheap shot shock Jock.
Speaking of Ms Hopkins I note that the Fail and she have had to pay a rather large sum to a muslim family they libelled. Perhaps the same will happen to Nige. Here’s hoping
Brought up in the countryside and live in deepest Herefordshire myself! Not that that is of any relevance whatsoever.
It is not always a bad move to remove the whole unit. On our VW Polo it takes less than five minutes to change any of the bulbs in the front, just undo two Philips screws, pull the unit off its rubber mounts and change the bulb. It even means the fiddly bit can be done in the warm inside the house. I much prefer that to scrabbling about deep in the bonnet with scraped knuckes etc.
I wonder John if you regard yourself as one of the ‘low grade” people Nige is now happy to be rid of now he is no longer UKIP leader?