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The NHS. What it was and what it has become.
This from the NHS website, describes when the National Health Service was created in
Great Britain, and why it was deemed essential.

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The National Health Service or NHS as it is more commonly known, was set up on the 5th July 1948 to provide healthcare for all citizens, based on need, not the ability to pay.

The NHS is funded by the taxpayer and managed by the Department of Health, which sets overall policy on health issues. It is the responsibility of the Department of Health to provide health services to the general public through the NHS.

It was launched as a single organisation based around 14 regional hospital boards. This new NHS was originally split into three parts:

  • hospital services
  • family doctors, dentists, opticians and pharmacists
  • local authority health services, including community nursing and health visiting

Since 1948 there have been huge changes to both the organisational structure of the NHS and the way that patient services are provided.

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This was way back in 1948, and it cannot be argued that it was an utterly brilliant initiative. And who knows how many of us are only here today because of the NHS? Many of our parents, grandparents, etc, may well have lost their lives over the decades. So in truth many of us owe them gratitude for our very existence.

Unfortunately, like everything else, a great idea has been perverted by politicians for their own ends. And ordinary people are dying of previously curable illnesses and diseases, because it is more ‘politically correct’ to treat or cure those who have particular afflictions that usually only affect specific groups. Expenses, research, manpower, and resources are constantly being maneuvered towards such afflictions.

For example, smoking tobacco is legal in the UK. Successive governments have raked in fortunes of tax revenue from charging extortionate duty on tobacco products. Yet sick patients are being refused life saving treatment, unless they prove they have given up smoking permanently. Alcohol has also always been legal in the UK, and this also provides major revenue for the British government. Yet the treatment available for people with drink problems is almost none existent. People who are overweight are being told to lose weight before they can be considered for crucial heart treatment. But the reason they are overweight is hardly likely to be because they desire to be. So who gains from all this? Well firstly billions of pounds of taxpayers money is being spent on AIDS / HIV, this mostly affecting homosexuals and foreigners who come here knowing they will get free and preferential treatment. Of course infection figures issued for this disease indicate that it is becoming more frequently caught by heterosexuals, but these reports fail to mention the fact that these people are infected in other countries such as Africa. Substance misuse health facilities are run almost entirely on money allocated or donated for the treatment of illegal drug users and addicts. Even perverts who wish to have sex change operations are treated at our expense.nhs.jpg

Then there is the serious threat that soon there will be no white British health or medical workers left in our hospitals, clinics, surgeries, etc. And as our own Nurses, Doctors, etc are being lured abroad by the prospect of better pay and superior training and facilities, the gap they leave is being filled by foreigners, and one of the biggest initial problems there is with communication, as many cannot even speak English.

And as these new foreign workers arrive here and take up their positions in our healthcare facilities, we are seeing once very rare diseases like tuberculosis, mumps, and measles, and occasionally even bubonic plague, return to our wards. Hygiene standards are so poor that so called ‘super bugs’ are killing hospital patients who are often healthy people admitted for routine treatment. Of course these ‘super bugs’ are merely mutations of bacterium that has constantly survived slap dash hygiene and become resistant to even the strongest industrial detergents and disinfectants.

The answer to all this isn’t to simply throw more money at the NHS, and certainly not to employ even more pen pushers to create even more red tape. We need to introduce higher wages for healthcare workers, with performance related incentives, to attract the best personnel. More money needs to be spent on the education and training of our own potential health workers, with absolute guarantee’s of employment given to those who succeed. Healthcare costs for HIV / AIDS should be met by the many wealthy ‘people’ in the homosexual community, if of course they wish to continue with their disgusting practices in privacy only of course. Drug addicts should be given one course of treatment, and should they return to their illegal drug habits, then they should be prosecuted as the criminals they are. Any foreign healthcare workers will be encouraged to swap jobs with British healthcare workers who work abroad, before their imminent deportation of course. And strict training courses must be created for anyone involved in NHS cleaning, with national standards being enforced, and all facilities being inspected regularly by a body of healthcare hygienists.

 

Last but not least, all healthcare treatment should be carried out in order of preference for White Heterosexual British People. Let us make our health service national again! 

 



© 2006 British People's Party, BM Box 5581, London WC1N 3XX