Brexit and the waning days of the United Kingdom

Started by Josquius, February 20, 2016, 07:46:34 AM

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How would you vote on Britain remaining in the EU?

British- Remain
12 (12%)
British - Leave
7 (7%)
Other European - Remain
21 (21%)
Other European - Leave
6 (6%)
ROTW - Remain
34 (34%)
ROTW - Leave
20 (20%)

Total Members Voted: 98

crazy canuck

Quote from: mongers on Today at 03:55:31 PM
Quote from: crazy canuck on Today at 03:35:46 PM:)

I didn't realize it was only a North American saying - and only an English American saying at that.

Yes and it's possibly a class imbibed expression, my guess is, it's comparing the inferior print quality of a bromide photographic image versus one produced using paper coated in silver halide solution. So it's referencing something only the lower classes could have just afford to have.

That's really interesting. Thanks  :)

Barrister

Quote from: Tamas on Today at 04:20:54 PMAgain, I can imagine an extension of assisted dying being done in a bad way. I'll worry about that once that extension happen and we'll know the details. I am not going to want to condemn thousands of people -potentially myself included- to a tormented nightmare of months-long agonising death just because this VERY limited bill MIGHT at some point in the future, assuming a series of various fuckups by legislators, be the precursor of a badly regulated MAID law.

I can't understand how you guys can have this position.

"Just pass the bill, and we'll work out the details later" tends to not actually work in practice.

I'll give you a different Canadian example.  Also under Trudeau we passed marijuana legalization.  The regulations were to follow.  And I mean they did eventually come - but there's a fucking marijuana shop in every single strip-mall.  I don't think any proponents of legalization ever expected the outcome we wound up with.

The time to get the details right is before the thing happens.
Posts here are my own private opinions.  I do not speak for my employer.

HVC

Quote from: Barrister on Today at 04:52:24 PMI'll give you a different Canadian example.  Also under Trudeau we passed marijuana legalization.  The regulations were to follow.  And I mean they did eventually come - but there's a fucking marijuana shop in every single strip-mall.

And civilization fell :P
Being lazy is bad; unless you still get what you want, then it's called "patience".
Hubris must be punished. Severely.

Sheilbh

#30063
Also the detail is in the bill - that's kind of the problem a lot of opponents have had. It's wanting.

With some very odd details like the total exclusion of civil liability (including for negligence) and restrictions on coroners. The details of the bill are basically a process flow for something where absolutely nothing goes wrong and it's all fine, the concerns of opponents are that something might go wrong and the bill is silent (at best).

Edit: And in my view, generally almost as bad as "pass the bill and sort out the details later" is passing legislation that is designed for the best case scenario.
Let's bomb Russia!

mongers

Well the parliamentary political process went well, MP representing the wide range of views on this issue and considering the details without it being turned into a national culture wars sling-fest.

I wonder if the incoming US House of Representatives could debate and consider something similar in the US?
"We have it in our power to begin the world over again"

garbon

Quote from: mongers on Today at 06:49:04 PMWell the parliamentary political process went well, MP representing the wide range of views on this issue and considering the details without it being turned into a national culture wars sling-fest.

I wonder if the incoming US House of Representatives could debate and consider something similar in the US?

I'm not sure why you want to turn discussion to the US in this thread. I would think we have enough threads discussing those Republican assholes.:hmm:
"I've never been quite sure what the point of a eunuch is, if truth be told. It seems to me they're only men with the useful bits cut off."
I drank because I wanted to drown my sorrows, but now the damned things have learned to swim.

mongers

Quote from: crazy canuck on Today at 04:46:16 PM
Quote from: mongers on Today at 03:55:31 PM
Quote from: crazy canuck on Today at 03:35:46 PM:)

I didn't realize it was only a North American saying - and only an English American saying at that.

Yes and it's possibly a class imbibed expression, my guess is, it's comparing the inferior print quality of a bromide photographic image versus one produced using paper coated in silver halide solution. So it's referencing something only the lower classes could have just afford to have.

That's really interesting. Thanks  :)

Ha Ha, nope I'm definitely wrong, for some reason I can't access the OED online, so looked it up in my large Chambers dictionary, which says this:

QuoteBromide n. .... ; a platitude; a dull platitudinous person (from the use of bromides as sedatives) ...
"We have it in our power to begin the world over again"

Sheilbh

Quote from: Tamas on Today at 07:46:13 AMWhy would it need disabled people's support?
Incidentally just to follow up on this, from a disability activist's point of view.

But this also, I think, gets to Diane Abbott's point. The people who are used to exercising agency and autonomy in their lives may truly experience this as an increase in their autonomy. But that is in part because of their relationship with the state, where they use the health service occasionally at moments of acute need. Why wouldn't they "trust doctors"?

But the people who are already reliant on and routinely interacting with the state, including its caring functions like the NHS and care system, as well as DWP have far less trust. I think we have to acknowledge that's for very good reasons, it's a different relationship to the state and to agency and autonomy. As pointed out by another disability activist we are a country where it can take up to two years to get the right wheelchair (and as Abbott noted, the palliative care system only gets 30% of the funding it needs):
QuoteMPs may trust doctors to manage assisted dying. Disabled people like me cannot
Liz Carr
Two friends recently woke up in hospital to find 'Do not resuscitate' orders on their notes. We're all too aware that some lives aren't valued as much as others
Thu 28 Nov 2024 15.20 GMT

It's a cold November evening, and MPs are no doubt snuggled up wondering what to watch on TV and how to vote on Kim Leadbeater's assisted dying bill. What a perfect opportunity to watch my documentary on that very theme, Better Off Dead?.

You may know me or you may not. I'm the wheelchair-using disabled woman who spent eight years playing the forensic boffin Clarissa in the BBC drama Silent Witness. I'm also a disability rights activist, and when it comes to assisted suicide (as I prefer to call it) I'm a bit of a nerd. Oh yes, and I'm opposed to a change in the law: I don't think we should allow medical professionals to assist some people to end their lives.

Because those in favour of it like to discredit any opposition as anachronistic and arising from faith, I feel obliged at this point to tell you that I am not religious. Instead, I oppose the bill from a secular social-justice perspective. I should also state for the record that opposing assisted suicide does not make me cruel, evil or lacking in compassion – although I'm regularly called these things by proponents.

As someone who relies on the health service and the state for my survival, I simply have a healthy distrust of giving either of them any more power over my life – and death – than they already have. Though some people want the right to die, many of us are still fighting for the right to exist. That's why I'm part of Not Dead Yet, an international network of disabled people who oppose a law that would give the state and the medical profession potentially even more involvement in many ill and disabled people's lives.

While I was making the documentary, a disabled friend had a serious but completely treatable condition yet was placed in a frailty ward – a place for older people (and my friend) where the support provided was more about cups of teas than CAT scans, and where, on one night, none of the staff were qualified to provide her with a cannula for pain relief as she screamed in agony. It was "lucky" that she had a life-threatening seizure that put her in intensive care, because that's when the medical staff began to provide active care. But still she woke to find "Do not resuscitate" (DNR) written on her notes without her consent. It was a tough time.

A month later, another of my closest friends, who is also a disabled person, had a similar adventure. The district nurses who visited him day after day failed to notice the delirium that sepsis had caused until he was rushed into hospital with near-total organ failure. And there, despite his fervent opposition to a DNR, there was one on his notes, too. His partner and brother, my partner and I and a palliative care consultant I know from this campaign worked through the night to have this removed. The next day in a "the end is nigh" conference with his doctors, they were shocked to hear that this 58-year-old disabled man in a wheelchair had any kind of life – any kind of quality of life.

Both of these friends will be joining the rest of us who are passionately protesting against assisted suicide outside the Houses of Parliament tomorrow. We'll be there because we fear that this law will further enshrine these misconceptions, underestimations and stereotypes – and the inherent inequality that exists for ill, older and disabled people. There are too many anecdotes about disabled people having to fight the insidious, unconscious bias that says people who have certain conditions, look a certain way or need care or support might just be better off dead. And we remember the early days of Covid when the death tolls rose, with the reassurance from behind the podium that those dying were only people with "underlying health conditions". As someone who fitted that definition, I was so frightened at seeing myself as a statistic every single day that I resorted to my survival mode of humour and tweeted that I might as well change my name to Underlying Health Condition, just to cut out the middle man. In case you're wondering, I never did.

During that time, many of us feared that if we ended up in hospital we wouldn't stand a chance of ever leaving. They were dark times for everyone and difficult choices were being made in impossible circumstances. Decisions over who should get the bed or the ventilator or the resources, however, felt very personal: "frailty scores" meant those of us who needed help with basic daily tasks were, even briefly, placed lower down the list of priorities. Infected people were moved into residential care homes with older, frailer residents. Letters went out to similar homes including those for people with learning difficulties to suggest "blanket" DNR orders. If we learned anything from the Covid-19 pandemic – so far – it is perhaps that some people's lives aren't valued as much as others.

Leadbeater has repeatedly suggested that we need to put our faith in medical professionals, lawyers and judges. But many doctors and judges admit they are fallible. My experiences and those of many other disabled people, also show this is true. And faith in our current broken systems and the people trying their best within them doesn't feel like a gold-standard safeguard to me.

As long as the lives of marginalised people are seen as more disposable than others, how can any safeguards truly protect us from the potential abuses, coercion and mistakes that will come if assisted suicide is legalised?

That's why I made the documentary. And that's why I urge MPs to watch Better Off Dead? before this life-and-death vote.

    Liz Carr is an actor and disability rights activist
Let's bomb Russia!

Tamas

And any of this applies to the current bill how?

A theoretical dystopian future thst cannot possibly directly stem from this bill is simply a disingenuous reason to remove people's right over their own bodies and life.

Especially since it is impossible to address the above concerns to the author's satisfaction with anything but the complete absence of assisted dying. And even so her very examples show that absence of assisted dying would do nothing to address her concerns.