Anonymous ID: 6b30cb July 5, 2022, 7:55 p.m. No.16613959   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Did you know the NHS was born in Manchester 74 years ago today?

Happy birthday to the NHS! July 5, 2022

 

 

Today, as ourtreasured National Health Service(kek) marks its 74th anniversary, we’re taking a look back on its extensive history and the substantial role Manchester played in its creation.

Life before the NHS was a bleak one; before 1900, healthcare was typically provided by charities, poor law (the local welfare committees who operated workhouses) and a criminally unregulated private sector.

 

Others, including many in the lower middle class, struggled to afford treatment, relying on hospital casualty departments, kind-hearted doctors or dubious folk remedies – as a result of these archaic conditions, women frequently died during childbirth and the life expectancy for men was just forty-eight.

 

 

But in 1911, that was all set to change.

 

The National Insurance Act of 1911, something that many regard as the original groundworks for the NHS, was introduced and, for the first time, provided access to general practitioners for manual labourers and lower paid non-manual workers earning under a certain income.

 

 

However, this groundbreaking new system wasn’t without its flaws – fees for GPs were increasing for the middle class and wealthy who were outside the system, and the wives and children of National Insurance members were excluded, as was hospital treatment, meaning that many had to pay further fees or rely on older workers’ society insurance schemes or free, less reliable clinics for mothers and children.

 

 

Something needed to change.

 

Nearly two decades later, the Local Government Act 1929 gave authorities the power to transform Poor Law institutions and develop them into the modern hospitals we know today. And, fast forwarding another two decades and another world war, Aneurin Bevan was appointed as the minister of health and thus, the wheels for the UK’s first National Health Service were set in motion.

 

 

On July 5th 1948, after years of hard work from various medical and political figures who felt the current healthcare system was insufficient and needed to be revolutionised, the first NHS hospital offering free healthcare for all, regardless of class, was launched at Park Hospital Manchester – known today as Trafford General Hospital.

 

 

On that historic day, Bevan arrived to inaugurate the NHS by symbolically receiving the keys from Lancashire County Council. Nurses formed a ‘guard of honour’ outside the hospital to meet him and, from that day forward, the healthcare of the nation changed forever.

 

 

In the early days, there were of course some teething problems – not long after its launch, expenditure was already exceeding previous expectations and charges were considered for prescriptions to meet the rising costs. However, by the time the 1960s rolled around, these early adjustments were altered and it was considered to be a strong period of growth for the NHS, characterised by new developments in the availability of drugs.

 

 

Since its birth here in Manchester, our NHS has gone through many changes, improvements, updates and modernisation processes, with no one back in 1948 ever fathoming the way in which the service has developed, pioneered and expanded from Manchester across the entire country.

 

 

However, there’s still room for improvement.

 

Today, the NHS continues to face a national crisis – the Covid-19 pandemic highlighted the impact that years of underfunding has had upon our health care service and the long-serving staff members and medical professionals that continue to hold it together.

 

 

In October 2020, it was revealed by the International Council of Nurses (ICN) that as many NHS nurses died from Covid than were killed during the entirety of the First World War.

 

But regardless of the hurdles thrown in its path, the NHS continues to valiantly serve the British public – the idea of a National Health Service once upon a time would have been unheard of, yet today we cannot imagine a life without it.

 

Happy 74th birthday to our wonderful NHS!

 

 

https://propermanchester.com/category/feature/

Anonymous ID: 6b30cb July 5, 2022, 7:56 p.m. No.16614057   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16494554

 

Illegal Drugs, pot, RX drugs and gun ownership

 

 

Destroy & Take Over A Country From Within:

 

 

Greatest threats to their country from abroad, 53 percent listed drug trafficking & drug addiction.

 

 

Weaken the population and Military with drug addiction…bring in armies, mercenaries from other countries….army aged men invading USA now by illegally crossing our borders aided by the Obiden Adm. & bringing in army aged islamic refugees

 

 

Crime and personal security has become a crucial concern to most Citizens…Crimes linked to drugs & drug addicts

 

 

“Socialism not only takes away from people the access to basic food and medicines, but also creates an environment in which life is worth nothing,”

 

 

Venezuela’s fall from a free-market powerhouse to a poverty-ridden, socialist police state.

 

 

How Venezuela became a socialist country…

 

 

Chavez succeeded in re-writing the Constitution, which came with new rights to things like free government-provided health care, college, and “social justice”.

 

 

Chavez “stacked the courts”

 

 

“Constant attacks on private property, the implementation of very harmful economic policies, criminalization of dissent, censorship,

 

 

Thousands of private businesses were nationalized – including media outlets, oil and power companies, mines, farms, banks, factories, and grocery stores.

 

 

Chavez’s economic policies, caused massive food shortages and hyperinflation. And then controlled the amount of food citizens would get…even that amount wasn't available.

 

 

Citizens only spent their time trying to find food and medicines to survive.

 

 

The Venezuelan government justified the gun bans and confiscations by saying they were needed to combat the country’s violent crime and murder epidemic.

 

 

The poverty rate is 60%.

 

Children eat from garbage.

 

Families cook their dogs.

 

Doctors operate by flashlight during frequent electrical blackouts.

 

Violent Crime

 

Rolling blackouts

 

And if you complain…you might disappear or be shot by government-sponsored street gangs called “Collectivos.”

 

 

  1. To shape truth, control the media:

 

 

  1. To shape future generations, control the schools:

 

 

  1. To shape the political philosophy, infiltrate the government:

 

 

  1. To shape the sense of nationalism, dilute the culture and the language:

 

 

  1. To shape the economy, spend, spend, spend and tax, tax, tax: Destroy their economy

 

 

  1. Exploitable natural resources, corruptible and/or incompetent military

 

 

  1. Control a nation’s healthcare and you control the people.

 

 

  1. Enforce restrictions, regulations, fines and laws that eliminate jobs

 

 

  1. Increase the debt to unsustainable levels, then increase taxes and create more poverty.

 

 

  1. Confiscate guns so the people cannot revolt

 

 

  1. Take control of every aspect of people’s lives: food, housing and income.

 

 

  1. Separate people from their religion and ridicule it

 

 

  1. Divide the people with class & race warfare

 

 

  1. Fear

 

 

 

 

 

Eight ways to bring down a great country

 

 

https://www.tomcollinsauthor.com/www.tomcollinsauthorblog.com/2019/10/12/how-to-create-a-socialist-state

 

 

https://www.lcsun-news.com/story/opinion/2015/12/30/eight-ways-bring-great-country/78098402/