Anonymous ID: c33ea4 Jan. 28, 2024, 8:13 a.m. No.20318124   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8125 >>8130 >>8202 >>8378

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/jan/25/warehouse-disabled-people-bristol-city-council

 

Think of this: a plan to ‘warehouse’ disabled people. What kind of nation is Britain becoming?

 

Cash-starved Bristol city council is not the real villain here, but its proposed strategy tells us some lives matter less than others

 

If you want a symbol of this country’s shredded safety net, look no further than Mark in Bristol.

 

For the past 30 years Mark, who has cerebral palsy, has lived in his accessible bungalow with the support of personal assistants. That care package has enabled the 58-year-old to build a life at the heart of his community: from being a governor at the local school and training as a social worker, to holding a season ticket for his beloved Bristol City football club, “It’s more despair than joy,” he smiles.

 

From next week, that life could start to disappear. As the latest local authority to strain under growing social care costs and dwindling resources – the city faces a budget hole of £17m next year, expected to rise to £32m in the years to come – Bristol council is proposing a “cost-effective” solution: if a disabled person’s in-home care is not considered “best value”, they could be told to live in a care home instead. It is the stuff of a domestic horror movie: a bureaucrat deems your life too expensive, and you’re forced to pack your bags and spend the rest of your days in an institution.

 

Sitting in his wheelchair, his computer screen on the desk, Mark is not going down without a fight. He and a dozen other disabled people in the area are campaigning against the policy: a weekly Zoom meeting to coordinate the fightback from their front rooms. The team has already had one win – pressure meant the council extended the public consultation to the end of January – but with only days left to get the word out, Mark is running out of time. “I’m worried the people who’re affected by it don’t even know,” he says.

 

When we meet, Mark speaks and then asks his PA to repeat his words to me. Since his parents died, it’s only Mark’s long-term PAs who can understand his speech. “Not even my closest friends can fully,” he says. In a care home without his own staff, he would effectively be trapped alive: he would talk, and no one there would be able to understand him.

 

Mark is keen to put those he’s campaigning for first – “It’s not about me,” he says – but admits thoughts of his own future are taking their toll. “I feel terrified what could happen to me.”

 

At its heart, this is a story of savage public funding cuts and growing need, of what happens when more than a decade of Westminster austerity collides with already bruised communities and squeezed local services. But it is also a story of who exactly in society matters: who gets to have a decent life, with a safe home and loving family, and who doesn’t.

 

Mark

Back in the 1970s and 80s, disabled people in Britain were routinely put in out-of-town institutions – or “warehoused”, as it was known – as a means to reduce the costs on the state. The term “warehoused” conjures up the chilling reality: human beings stored under one roof without autonomy, control or dignity.

 

It would be comforting to believe this treatment of disabled people was firmly in the past or that the dark cloud currently hanging over Bristol is a one-off that will not be repeated. Neither is true.

 

NHS England (which, alongside councils, is responsible for home care) has already introduced upper limits on the amount spent on supporting disabled people to live in their homes – a move the Equality and Human Rights Commission warned in 2017 would see adults “interned” in care homes in a “potential breach of their human rights”.

 

Others have “chosen” to go into residential care after their 24/7 care at home was reduced to dangerous levels or they could no longer pay the extortionate social care charges. I’ve spoken to disabled people as young as 30 who have been placed in nursing homes; millennials forced to live with elderly dementia patients old enough to be their grandparents.

 

It is not as if institutional care even guarantees safety. Just as the scandal of people with learning disabilities and autism being housed in hospital units for years has carried on with little fuss, the managed decline of the care home industry – at its worst, leaving residents with dirty rooms and without proper food and medicine – is widely accepted.

 

p1

Anonymous ID: c33ea4 Jan. 28, 2024, 8:14 a.m. No.20318125   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20318124

And yet, to most of us, even the best-run facilities would feel a humiliating way to live out our best years against our will. As Mark puts it to me: “I’d have no control over when I’d go to bed, when I’d eat or work.” Brutally, he tells me some of his fellow campaigners fear they’ll be separated from their husbands and wives. “People assume disabled people don’t have intimate relationships,” he says.

 

When I asked Bristol city council about the policy, it said it was “co-developed with disability advocacy groups and people who draw on care, as well as third sector organisations”, and will “consider all feedback received during the consultation period before any decisions are made”. It’s cold comfort for those at risk, but the council is not the villain of this piece. It is simply another cash-starved council facing terrible choices while being charged with providing a service for which demand is increasingly impossible to meet.

 

With nearly one in five council leaders in England now warning they are likely to declare bankruptcy in the next 15 months, and a governing Conservative party already checked out, such unpalatable choices are only going to spread.

 

The risk, as ever, is that what starts off shocking soon enough becomes the new normal. We should all be wary of the ease with which we convince ourselves that rationing public services is perfectly OK as long as it’s really necessary. When “tough economic times” hit, it is remarkable how quickly the unthinkable becomes permissible. At least when it is happening to other people.

 

In his bungalow, Mark is finding escapism by binge-watching Mr Bates vs The Post Office – a drama about another ordinary campaigner who took on injustice and won. “I can watch what TV I like,” he reflects. “I couldn’t do that in a home.”

 

These are the simple parts of life we all take for granted: sleeping in our own bed, choosing what’s for tea or which box set to watch. Mark is all too aware of how basic rights suddenly come under threat. “If it can happen in Bristol,” he says, “it can happen anywhere.”

 

Frances Ryan is a Guardian columnist

 

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Anonymous ID: c33ea4 Jan. 28, 2024, 8:15 a.m. No.20318131   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8146 >>8202 >>8378

https://twitter.com/wideawake_media/status/1751547196070105563

 

Wide Awake Media

@wideawake_media

When the same narrative suddenly appears in country after country at the same time, in total lockstep, you can be certain there's a pre-planned and centrally co-ordinated globalist agenda afoot.

 

This time the pre-planned and centrally co-ordinated globalist agenda appears to be "all-out war" with Russia (aka WW3).

 

Your real enemies, as always, are the unelected globalist psychopaths who deliberately manufacture these global crises (as a pretext to seize power and control on a global scale), and the puppets they have installed into key positions of power within the governments, NGOs and mainstream media outlets of the world, to push their pre-planned and centrally co-ordinated globalist agendas.

Last edited

4:06 AM · Jan 28, 2024

Anonymous ID: c33ea4 Jan. 28, 2024, 8:18 a.m. No.20318146   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8147 >>8202 >>8378

>>20318131

https://www.news.com.au/technology/innovation/military/australia-must-consider-bringing-back-conscription-as-allout-war-with-russia-looms-expert-says/news-story/b1ced960b821027163b05b15ad47e5e6

 

Australia must consider bringing back conscription as ‘all-out war’ with Russia looms, expert says

 

Australia must consider reintroducing conscription to boost its troop numbers in the face of a looming “all-out war” with Russia, an expert says.

 

New recruits train to join Ukraine’s army to fight in war

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Australia must seriously consider reintroducing conscription to boost its troop numbers in the face of a looming “all-out war” with Russia, a defence analyst says.

 

Rapidly rising global tensions in eastern Europe and the Middle East threaten to “drag Australia into an orbit of an open confrontation”, Dr Alexey Muraviev, Associate Professor of National Security and Strategic Studies at Curtin University, said.

 

He added it may be “time for Australia to consider another uncomfortable subject — the return of national service”.

 

“Back in 1972, Labor under Gough Whitlam abolished the national service in peacetime, even though it could still be reactivated in times of war,” Dr Muraviev wrote in an op-ed for Sky News Australia on Sunday.

 

“Fifty-two years later, we should be asking ourselves and Labor under Anthony Albanese if we should consider reintroducing a form of national service to increase a pool of trained reserves while we still have time. Or should we wait to be dragged into a major conflict, and deal with the consequences?”

 

Successive Australian governments have recognised the inadequate size of the Australian Defence Force, with former Prime Minister Scott Morrison pledging a 30 per cent increase to a target of 80,000 personnel by 2040 — a policy supported by Labor.

 

Special Operations Task Group soldiers salute fallen Corporal Scott Smith. Picture: Department of Defence

Special Operations Task Group soldiers salute fallen Corporal Scott Smith. Picture: Department of Defence

Last year, top-secret war-gaming exercises conducted for the Albanese government’s defence review concluded Australia would be “f***ed” if China established a military base in a nearby Pacific nation such as the Solomon Islands.

 

“The question of the ADF’s size came to the fore during Australia’s contingencies in Afghanistan and Iraq, both of which required considerable commitments supported by regular rotations of personnel,” Dr Muraviev wrote.

 

“As the risk of Australia being drawn into a major war increase, we are facing a short window of opportunity to address some of the shortfalls in our defence capability.”

 

Former Prime Minister Tony Abbott last year floated the idea mandatory military service for school leavers.

 

It comes days after similar comments from European leaders, including former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who used his Daily Mail column on Saturday to pledge to fight in the British army if war ever breaks out with Russia.

 

Mr Johnson was responding to comments last week by General Patrick Sanders, the UK’s highest ranking army officer, who warned that British citizens should be prepared to fight in a potential land war.

 

A destroyed apartment block in the city of Bakhmut, Ukraine. Picture: Armed Forces of Ukraine/AFP

A destroyed apartment block in the city of Bakhmut, Ukraine. Picture: Armed Forces of Ukraine/AFP

“No sooner had I posed myself the question — would I sign up to fight for King and country? — than I had the answer. Of course I jolly well would,” Mr Johnson wrote.

 

Mr Johnson said that while he hoped and believed his “services will not be called upon” in a “direct military confrontation, with Russia or any other potential adversary”, it would be “deluded” to think that “war is impossible”.

 

“History teaches us that the best way to preserve the peace is to be vigilant,” he wrote. “The best way to deter the aggression of men such as Vladimir Putin is to be strong. The best way to prevent a war is to prepare for it. Si vis pacem para bellum.”

 

And two top defence officials in Sweden — which is set to become part of NATO — have also made headlines by urging Swedes to prepare for war.

 

 

p1

Anonymous ID: c33ea4 Jan. 28, 2024, 8:18 a.m. No.20318147   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8202 >>8378

>>20318146

Civil Defence Minister Carl-Oskar Bohlin warned that the country faced the risk of war after almost 210 years of peace. “Are you a private individual?” he asked. “Have you considered whether you have time to join a voluntary defence organisation? If not — get moving.”

 

Sweden’s military commander-in-chief, General Micael Byden, later backed his comments, telling the national broadcaster that “we need to realise how serious the situation really is, and that everyone, individually, need to prepare themselves mentally”.

 

European leaders have urged their populations to prepare for war. Picture: Department of Defence

European leaders have urged their populations to prepare for war. Picture: Department of Defence

In his speech last week, the General Sanders, the UK’s chief of the general staff, said any conflict would need to be a “whole-of-nation undertaking” and that citizens should be trained and equipped to be in a state of readiness.

 

The general’s remarks come after the UK Defence Ministry said last year that it would cut overall numbers in the UK’s professional army from 82,000 to 73,000 by 2025.

 

“Taking preparatory steps to enable placing our societies on a war footing when needed are now not merely desirable but essential,” General Sanders said in a speech at an armoured vehicles conference in southwest London.

 

“Within the next three years, it must be credible to talk of a British Army of 120,000, folding in our reserve and strategic reserve.”

 

General Sanders, who steps down later this year, said the UK could not rely on its navy and air power, arguing that “we must be able to credibly fight and win wars on land”.

 

UK allies were already doing so, he said.

 

“Our friends in eastern and northern Europe, who feel the proximity of the Russian threat more acutely, are already acting prudently, laying the foundations for national mobilisation,” he added. “Ukraine brutally illustrates that regular armies start wars — citizen armies win them.”

 

Should Australia reintroduce national service? Picture: Department of Defence

Should Australia reintroduce national service? Picture: Department of Defence

Earlier this month the chair of NATO’s military committee, Admiral Rob Bauer, said civilians in member states should be prepared for a potential future war with Russia.

 

A large number of civilians would have to be called up if conflict accelerates in Europe, he added.

 

UK Defence Secretary Grant Shapps said that the UK wants to increase defence spending from 2.1 per cent of GDP to 2.5 per cent in the future.

 

In a speech this month, the Minister said that the world was “moving from a post-war to pre-war world”.

 

The UK, he said, must ensure its “entire defence ecosystem is ready” to defend its homeland.

 

Richard Dannatt, who was chief of the general staff from 2006 to 2009, compared the current situation to the 1930s when the “woeful” state of the UK’s armed forces failed to deter Nazi aggression.

 

“There is a serious danger of history repeating itself,” he wrote in The Times newspaper, calling for UK defence spending to reach 3 per cent of GDP.

 

“If our armed forces are not strong enough to deter future aggression from Moscow or Beijing, it will not be a small war to contend with but a major one.”

 

frank.chung@news.com.au

 

— with AFP

 

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Anonymous ID: c33ea4 Jan. 28, 2024, 8:21 a.m. No.20318159   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8162 >>8188 >>8202 >>8268 >>8378

https://www.science.org/content/blog-post/first-self-amplifying-mrna-vaccine

 

If you were reading this site during 2020 and 2021, you'll recall the frequent updates on potential coronavirus vaccines and vaccine technologies. It's easy to forget that until that point, no adenovirus-platformed vaccine had ever been approved for use in humans, nor had any mRNA vaccine candidate made it to that point, either. It was remarkable to see both of those technologies (which had been under development for years) simultaneously reach the point of huge human trials, let alone regulatory approval and going into a substantial fraction of the earth's population.

 

But while that was going on, there were several other technologies also under investigation. For example, Pfizer and BioNTech had at least four mRNA vaccine candidates at one point before they narrowed down on the one that we all know about. And one of these was a "self-amplifying" version, which is an idea that's been kicking around in the field for some time. A "standard" mRNA vaccine is full of nanoparticles of the appropriate RNA sequence, heavily optimized for stability, cell penetration, and efficiency of protein production once a strand gets in. But the amount of mRNA present in the shot is all you get: these species do degrade with time, and you have to set the dose so that you've given enough to induce the desired immunologic effect.

 

A self-amplifying mRNA shot, as the name implies, contains the equipment needed to make more of itself once it enters cells. You do this by not only injecting the mRNA for the antigen of interest (such as one that encodes the coronavirus spike protein) but also mRNAs that get translated into replicase proteins that will in turn produce more of the mRNA species. Picture sending someone a sheet of paper with some important information on it, and then imagine that you've sent them a whole pile of copies of that sheet so they can distribute them. Now imagine sending them a bunch of sheets of material that can assemble themselves into a working photocopier and crank out more sheets when they do. That sounds weird and ridiculous, but hey, that's biology for you. It's very, very strange down there in the cell.

 

Having an mRNA that can make more copies of itself means that (first off) you probably don't have to inject very much. John von Neumann, an early thinker in the field of self-replicating devices, would have been beside himself with excitement. It also means that even with a small initial injection that you might well expect to get a larger and more thorough exposure to your desired antigen protein than you could feasibly inject in a standard all-at-once dose. So although this idea didn't make it into the first round of coronavirus vaccines, it has definitely not gone away, and there have been reports of progress in the field.

 

Well, the first vaccine of this type has been approved in Japan, and the companies involved (CSL and Arcturus) are seeking European regulatory approval next. Their vaccine (ARCT-154) uses mRNA that codes for replicase proteins lifted from the Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus. Here's a report on a Phase III trial of it versus the Pfizer/BioNTech as a booster, and the self-amplifying one seems to have shown an increased antibody response (which you'd hope would translate to increased protection from disease). It seems to have been well-tolerated, although there was one hepatic event in the self-amplifying group that could have been related to the vaccine, and that will bear watching as it rolls out into a larger population.

 

But overall, I think this is quite encouraging, to see this vaccination mode reach the real world. There's no telling how much longer it would have taken had things not been so hugely acclerated during the coronavirus pandemic, but I have no doubt that we would not be seeing it as soon as this. My usual analogy is what happened to aircraft design during World War II. Of course, the fact that world wars and global pandemics can have a few positive externalities is not exactly an argument in their favor, but we take what we can get!

Anonymous ID: c33ea4 Jan. 28, 2024, 8:23 a.m. No.20318166   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8218 >>8253

https://note.com/spiderman886/n/n40fe04f49481

 

Israel poised to invade Lebanon - Media

 

January 28, 2024 01:24

Homeworld News

Israel poised to invade Lebanon - Media

 

Hezbollah reportedly received information that the Israel Defense Forces are preparing for war on two fronts.

 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is ready to launch a full-scale war against the Lebanese pro-Palestinian militant group Hezbollah, Lebanese broadcaster LBCI reported on Saturday.

 

Hezbollah has been firing rockets and mortar shells at Israeli positions as the Israeli-Hamas war continues in the Gaza Strip. The shelling has prompted a retaliatory strike by the Israeli army.

 

According to LBCI, information reports on Israel's plans were provided to Hezbollah by an unnamed Arab country. The Israeli military's operation is aimed at forcing Hezbollah to comply with UN Security Resolution 1701, which was adopted after the end of the Israeli-Lebanon war in 2006, the news agency said. The UN resolution promotes the creation of a demilitarized zone along the Israeli-Lebanese border.

 

The situation escalated further this month when an Israeli airstrike killed Hamas deputy leader Saleh al-Alouri in Beirut.

 

Last week, Israel's chief of staff, Lieutenant General Halevi, said the likelihood of a clash with Beirut was "much higher than in the past," adding that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) were in a state of "increased readiness" for cross-border attacks.

 

Meanwhile, Lebanese Foreign Minister Abdallah Boo Habib said it was "unacceptable" for other countries to be involved in the fighting between Israel and Hamas. He also warned that the war with Lebanon is not a "picnic" for Israel. Hezbollah MP Hassan Edzeddin likewise said that the militants "will fight back twice as hard and strike a blow at the enemy."

 

Earlier this month, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited the Middle East to prevent a full-scale war between Israel and Hezbollah.

 

According to the Washington Post, U.S. officials are concerned that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants an attack on Israel's northern neighbor amid growing criticism of the government's failure to prevent the government's Oct. 7 invasion of Hamas, which killed about 1,200 people. The report also suggests that in a two-front operation against Hamas and Hezbollah, the Israel Defense Forces "will be difficult to succeed."

 

Pictured above: Hezbollah fighters in Beirut, Lebanon, November 4, 2023. © Marwan Naamani / picture alliance / Getty Images

Anonymous ID: c33ea4 Jan. 28, 2024, 8:30 a.m. No.20318204   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8243

https://twitter.com/shadygrooove/status/1751330026946191570

 

Shadygrooove

@shadygrooove

MUST WATCH!! 🚨

 

You are being PLAYED!!

 

There is no REAL border wall defense by Texas or the Military.

 

Do Not Go to the border. It is unsecured and dangerous.

From

TestDummy

1:43 PM · Jan 27, 2024

 

https://twitter.com/shadygrooove/status/1751330026946191570

Anonymous ID: c33ea4 Jan. 28, 2024, 8:31 a.m. No.20318211   🗄️.is 🔗kun

One time at band camp? Nah nigga, on national german tv for real…

 

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