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Doesn't matter how you try to justify it...
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    Doesn't matter how you try to justify it...
  • You can’t be a good anything and be a landlord

    A good parasite?

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    I hope this song finds you well.. Jimmy.
  • Yes! It premiered last night, first 2 episodes were brilliant, and I'm trying really hard not to binge the rest so that I can make it last

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    If I don't overshoot my planned sleeping time by 1 hour doomscrolling, I'm usually sick.
  • Those lyrics hit far too close to home right now..

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    Vermont becomes 1st state to enact law requiring oil companies pay for damage from climate change
  • I am sooooo fucking sick and tired of people touting out that tired cliché to defend capitalists..

    I think instead we should start saying "don't let the manipulation by their benefactors stand in the way of the reality of the systems they maintain".

    I doubt anyone is expecting perfection at this point, I know I'm not (it being a literal impossibility and all), but them pretending to be "good" and you buying it, doesn't actually make it any good at all (as I said - it's just giving them the space to continue as they are for a fee that they will never pay, their trapped customers will).

    Defending this bullshit as the good we should be happy to compromise for serves no one but the people running the oil companies (and the politicians they pay to ensure such legislation has no legs).

    You are playing their game, and supporting their team, bathing in the placation of their greenwashing and letting them get away with it. That is what's in the way of good.

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    Vermont becomes 1st state to enact law requiring oil companies pay for damage from climate change
  • So they can pay a relative pittance to keep chugging along uninterrupted, and pass the cost on to the consumer.
    Yeah, that'll fix things...

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    If I don't overshoot my planned sleeping time by 1 hour doomscrolling, I'm usually sick.
  • I know perfectly well what space I'm in, and if the NT encroaching on it didn't realise (and they did, because they were making excuses for themselves from the get go) them coming from /all would only excuse the first comment, not the rest of the thread where they make it clear that they don't care that they're talking over ND's in our own space.

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    If I don't overshoot my planned sleeping time by 1 hour doomscrolling, I'm usually sick.
  • And yeah, I thought it was a no-brainer that actively reading social media makes it harder to fall asleep while doing so, but these days I’m not so sure how common this “common sense” is.

    And there it is.

    The NT has ridden in on their white horse to teach all us NDs about their "common sense" that is clearly what we're lacking..

    What would we do without you, oh great neurotypical??? /S

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    If I don't overshoot my planned sleeping time by 1 hour doomscrolling, I'm usually sick.
  • Lmfao, that's a lot of condescending words to say "no, I will absolutely NOT listen to the people whose space I'm encroaching on and try to learn about their experience and do better for their benefit (or simply walk away), I WILL continue to always centre myself, because that's all I care about".

    I’ve been on the receiving end of righteous anger for giving neurotypical advice before

    And yet the thought to, you know, just fucking not never seems to have crossed your mind..

    The "experience I'm facing" that is causing me "anger" is you and your behaviour, no amount of twisting things to justify it to yourself changes that, the least you can do is take some accountability (lmfao, as if.. This entire thread is absolutely textbook NT behaviour, including the framing me as "emotional" and yourself as "logical", and you've already made it clear that you don't give a shit about the impact of your own actions).

    Sorry it came across the way it did. I’ll try to be more careful about it in the future, assuming I remember.

    Fuck your non apology and your insistent on there being a next time for you to be "careful about it" - you don't need to "be careful", what you need is to have some respect for spaces that aren't for you and the people they are for, and resist your desperate need to insert yourself and your unsolicited unhelpful and uninformed opinions absolutely everywhere.

    I thought expressing a bit of solidarity

    TIL solidarity means privileged people talking over the experiences of marginalise people in their own space 🙄

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    Do 9-5 jobs still exist in the U.S.?
  • you’re always free to walk away.

    Yeah, and die of starvation or exposure, which ever comes first..
    Maybe take a look around at the reality most people face before giving such out of touch advice..

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    Veritasium's new video on Jumping Spiders is having its sponsor Better Help on blast in the top comments. Should we hold content creators to account?
  • made a pretty weird video about autism, using the fact that his son has it as like qualification for him to talk about it. folks with autism tried to talk to him about the problematic nature of the video in the comments, and he just blocked them.

    So typical Autism Parent™ then lol it's like they can't help but make it about themselves.. 🙄

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    If I don't overshoot my planned sleeping time by 1 hour doomscrolling, I'm usually sick.
  • I'm autistic and I'm the same but for me it's less about going a minute without stimulation, more about not wanting to be alone with my thoughts because they're constant and horrible at best.

    Without my tv and pc always on around me (and weed) I don't think I could sleep at all (pc to scroll/read till my eyes get sleepy, and tv to give my brain external conversation to focus on rather than the one going on in my brain). Even then it's a struggle, but I'm still 100% more likely to get some sleep with these things on, than I am without (I don't consider crying for several hours in either frustration or deep despair until my eyes can't stay open anymore a good enough alternative ¯\(ツ)/¯).

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    If I don't overshoot my planned sleeping time by 1 hour doomscrolling, I'm usually sick.
  • Not everything is about or for you, you don't always have to chip in, and this is a perfect example of a time where you actually have nothing of much value to contribute to the conversation so should just taken a seat and listen (if you must. Again - some things simply aren't for you and it's ok to move on without piping up).

    You are literally being the top person in the meme who doesn't get it. We face several of you a day every single day of our lives.

    I hope you take this opportunity to learn and do better in the future, instead of trying to justify, and continuing to centre yourself in conversations that aren't for you.

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    Blow for Rishi Sunak as IFS says Tories oversaw ‘worst income growth for generations’
  • Tories oversaw deliberately caused ‘worst income growth for generations’ to line their own pockets

    FTFY

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    Ableism
  • It's always nice to meet a fellow link collector lol

    I'll admit it might be a while since I've read some of these myself (or in the case of the book pdf - not fully yet) so they might not all be up to date, but the gist should still stand.

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    Labour deselecting left-wing candidates and women of colour in first week of campaign
  • They're basically fancy ways of saying "non white".

    Exactly

    And yeah, it can get confusing and complicated when terms are a bit vague or euphemistic, which like you say, is intentional in probably most cases for both identities and countries examples (and others). But really it means we just have to put in a little more thought in to what we actually mean to say, and also be open to learn an adapt.

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    Labour deselecting left-wing candidates and women of colour in first week of campaign
  • Happy to help, and yes, there is definitely a move away from the more general "catch-all" terms that seem to exist mostly to make life easier for those outside of the group in question, rather than those in it. It's a good move.

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    Ableism
  • Cool. I figured I'd just troll my bookmarks and paste anything related, but there was more than I realised lol. I did cut back, but this still feels like a bit much, sorry 😂

    Language related:

    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/331107477_SaytheWord_A_Disability_Culture_Commentary_on_the_Erasure_of_Disability

    https://fightingtalk.substack.com/p/disability-is-not-a-dirty-word

    https://30daysofautism.blog/2023/03/21/lets-talk-about-language-is-disability-a-bad-word/

    https://sailhelps.org/so-whats-wrong-with-the-word-handicapped/

    https://everydayfeminism.com/2014/05/grammar-snobbery/

    https://medium.com/no-prescription-needed/grammar-the-worlds-most-under-recognized-social-construct-a54e096ecc9c

    https://theautisticadvocate.com/functioning-labels-why-you-shouldnt-be-using-them-thanks-a-bunch-terminology-dudes/

    https://www.ncmh.info/2019/04/04/fallacy-functioning-labels/

    https://graymattersmd.com/functioning-labels-autism/

    https://web.archive.org/web/20231127173144/https://thebodyisnotanapology.com/magazine/15-common-phrases-that-are-way-more-ableist-than-you-may-realize/

    https://everydayfeminism.com/2015/08/alternatives-to-oppressive-language/

    https://web.archive.org/web/20201108200517/https://raddle.me/f/Illegalism/77441/40-alternatives-to-ableist-and-oppressive-words

    https://www.autistichoya.com/p/ableist-words-and-terms-to-avoid.html

    https://www.learningforjustice.org/magazine/no-joking-matter-words-and-disability

    Capitalism/"productivity" related:

    https://dailyfreepress.com/2020/11/19/mind-your-business-ableism-is-rooted-in-capitalism/

    https://atmos.earth/productivity-culture-ableism-ecofeminism-capitalism-the-slow-grind/

    https://thestrand.ca/capitalism-ableism-and-the-glamorization-of-productivity/

    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2021/09/24/pers-s24.html

    https://www.npr.org/2021/09/24/1039676445/laziness-does-not-exist-devon-price

    Independence related:

    https://web.archive.org/web/20240224035644/https://thebodyisnotanapology.com/magazine/independence-is-an-ableist-myth-unlocking-the-power-of-community-in-healing/

    https://leavingevidence.wordpress.com/2011/02/12/changing-the-framework-disability-justice/

    Covid related:

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/andrewpulrang/2022/01/31/6-ways-responses-to-covid-19-have-been-ableist-and-why-it-matters/

    https://www.mencap.org.uk/press-release/eight-10-deaths-people-learning-disability-are-covid-related-inequality-soars

    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2024/03/09/xdvx-m09.html?pk_kwd=wsws

    https://www.disabilitynewsservice.com/it-was-emergency-planning-that-was-vulnerable-during-covid-not-disabled-people-inquiry-is-told/

    https://www.donotpanic.news/p/its-all-out-war-on-the-vulnerable?utm_source=publication-search

    https://www.donotpanic.news/p/mass-disabling-event-denial?utm_source=publication-search

    Internalized ableism:

    https://www.neurodiverging.com/what-is-internalized-ableism-neurodivergent-people-need-to-know/

    https://www.autisticparentsuk.org/post/overcoming-internalised-ableism

    Other/general:

    https://www.fullspectrumchildcare.com/blog/to-be-a-radical-crip-and-the-power-in-identifying-as-one

    https://deathsbywelfare.org/

    https://leavingevidence.wordpress.com/2017/08/06/forced-intimacy-an-ableist-norm/

    https://privateplacespublicspacesblog.wordpress.com/about-the-project/

    https://www.euronews.com/2023/06/05/i-see-the-scar-and-i-want-to-die-why-the-eu-allows-sterilisation-of-women-with-disabilitie

    https://blueannoyed.wordpress.com/2024/04/30/welcome-to-the-crip-warehouse/

    https://www.womenspress.com/what-can-feminists-make-of-the-eugenicist-history-of-abortion/

    https://level.medium.com/disability-justice-is-an-essential-part-of-abolishing-police-and-prisons-2b4a019b5730

    https://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/images/other-images/9781452963495_intro.pdf

    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/354037224_Destroying_Disability_Expanding_Application_of_the_Genocide_Convention

    https://alexschadenberg.blogspot.com/2024/03/scotlands-deceptive-euthanasia-bill.html?m=1&mibextid=K35XfP

    https://disability-memorial.org/

    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2022/dec/09/from-the-wheelchair-using-black-panther-to-the-cripple-suffragette-10-heroes-of-the-disabled-rights-movement

    https://www.theguardian.com/money/2020/jun/24/you-cant-pay-cash-here-how-cashless-society-harms-most-vulnerable

    https://themighty.com/topic/disability/tweet-thread-straw-bans-disability/

    https://medium.com/@thorafelicitybell/our-environmentalism-has-to-be-intersectional-4cf824ab2aa4

    https://www.eater.com/2018/7/19/17586742/plastic-straw-ban-disabilities

    https://www.bvanudgeconsulting.com/bias-of-the-week/just-world-hypothesis/

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    I hope this song finds you well.. Jimmy.
  • I thought folks here especially would appreciate this song lol

    (also transcribed by ear and vague memory of the subtitles during the episode lol, if you think I got it wrong let me know!)

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  • Jimmy ate my yogurt now he's putting it back Used to ignore but I'll plain attack Drop the defence now I've got you in my scope Jimmy walk away from the fridge slowly

    Got your email Jimmy, you sent it at night You expect a response but I'm tucked in tight I'm different now Jimmy, I'm in my power I'll respond to your email at a reasonable hour At a reasonable hour At a reasonable hour At a reasonable hoooouuuur

    Self care, bad bitch, I'm a villain, I'm a villain, out of office email saying zero fucks given x4

    You ask me to work late, but I'm all done Off the clock punched out time for fun! You ask me where I'm going so I tell you the truth Jimmy boy I'm going to a spin class! Kind regards, best wishes, EAT SHIT Yours truly, sincerely, THIS BITCH I'm different now Jimmy, I'm in my power I'll respond to your email at a reasonable hour At a reasonable hour At a reasonable hour At a reasonable hoooouuuur

    Self care, bad bitch, I'm a villain I'm a villain, out of office email saying zero fucks given x6

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    Documentary portrait of the trail-blazing activist, poet and writer Maya Angelou. Born in 1928, she enthused generations with her bold and inspirational championing of the African-American experience that pushed boundaries and redefined the way people think about race and culture.

    Maya Angelou was captured on film just before she died in 2014, and this documentary celebrates her life and work, weaving her words with rare and intimate archival photographs and videos. It reveals hidden episodes of her exuberant life during some of America's defining moments, from her upbringing in the Depression-era south to her work with Malcolm X in Ghana and her inaugural speech for President Bill Clinton, the film takes us on an incredible journey through the life of a true American icon.

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    400 Years Ago a Prudish Aristocrat Censored This Artemisia Gentileschi Nude. Using Tech, an Italian Museum Has Revealed the Stunning Original Work

    https://news.artnet.com/art-world/censored-artemisia-gentileschi-female-nude-revealed-2375778

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allegory\_of\_Inclination

    Her other work is also well worth a look:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artemisia\_Gentileschi

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    www.imdb.com Body Brokers (2021) - IMDb

    Body Brokers (2021) on IMDb: Movies, TV, Celebs, and more...

    An eye opening movie based on the realities of the for-profit rehab/addiction treatment complex (though the text at the end, as well as revealing some horrific related statistics, also makes it clear that this is a at least partly promotional material for the 12 step programs, which have their own issues).

    A pretty depressing watch, but important if you want a better understanding of the tip of the iceberg of reasons why profit and care (health, social, communal, any care really) should never mix.

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    I shine to make you smile, I try to save you one more time, for your lonely place, you need a friendly face, when your option's low, I lift you from below

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    Praying for Armageddon is a political thriller that explores the power and influence of American Evangelical Christians as they aim to fulfil the Armageddon prophecy.

    The film observes American believers as they prepare for what they call The Holy War and exposes the powerful megachurch pastors who call for the 'final battle' that they believe will trigger the Second Coming of Christ. Completed before the current crisis in Israel and Gaza, it also unveils how politicians driven by faith embrace the State of Israel as the key to their prophetic vision for the end of days

    Watch in UK on BBC

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    A documentary about a young deaf Kurdish boy and his family who move to the UK so he, and they, can learn to communicate. It quite delicately touches on so many themes from family, community, acceptance, self determination, pride, to ableism, displacement, hostile immigration policy, and other systemic barriers. I cried throughout.

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    I’m a little emotional, gotta be rational, being ok is optional, I’m in a phase, ani mevushal...

    Ani mevushal = I'm baked (literally - cooked) Ani metugan = I'm fried Ani meturlal = I'm crazed Ani mechushmal = I'm electrified Mechin megulgal, ve tas lachalal = I roll one up, and fly to space

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    One of my favourite ever albums, never fails to get some rage out of the system

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    The Intruder (1962) [CW: racism]

    The Intruder (1962) full movie. AKA "Shame" is a low budget Roger Corman film that deals with early integration in the south. William shatner portrays a carpet bagger from the North? Who just shows up to cause trouble. The film is way ahead of its time when you consider the strife we are encountering in 2020. Watch it! - Broken Trout -

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    Emergency Social Security Campaigns Meeting Sunday 21 April 2024 3 – 4.30pm

    Join Zoom Meeting https://us06web.zoom.us/j/88958156364?pwd=ah3dyMFY3y20G1HajLzZaLNVa3wKag.1

    Meeting ID: 889 5815 6364 Passcode: 069808

    We have called this meeting to bring together all those worried by and/or wanting to fight back against the Tories’ current all out assault on Disabled people, culminating in Rishi Sunak’s announcement today with plans to cut access to social security for millions of people.

    For anyone who is worried, please remember that some of these changes may take time to roll out and others will only affect new claimants not existing ones.

    For accurate information on what the key changes announced this week are see:

    Tory plans: PIP no longer always cash, WCA harder to pass, UC migration sooner, no GP sick notes, DWP power to arrest and fine (benefitsandwork.co.uk)

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    Emergency Social Security Campaigns Meeting Sunday 21 April 2024 3 – 4.30pm

    Join Zoom Meeting https://us06web.zoom.us/j/88958156364?pwd=ah3dyMFY3y20G1HajLzZaLNVa3wKag.1

    Meeting ID: 889 5815 6364 Passcode: 069808

    We have called this meeting to bring together all those worried by and/or wanting to fight back against the Tories’ current all out assault on Disabled people, culminating in Rishi Sunak’s announcement today with plans to cut access to social security for millions of people.

    For anyone who is worried, please remember that some of these changes may take time to roll out and others will only affect new claimants not existing ones.

    For accurate information on what the key changes announced this week are see:

    Tory plans: PIP no longer always cash, WCA harder to pass, UC migration sooner, no GP sick notes, DWP power to arrest and fine (benefitsandwork.co.uk)

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    NEW analysis has found that over £23 billion worth of welfare benefits went unclaimed in the last year.

    The report, by Policy in Practice, found that the number had risen from £19bn the year before and that figures could be closer to £30bn if it were to analyse disability benefits and discretionary support.

    Universal credit is the most unclaimed benefit at £8.3bn, with an estimated 1.4 million missing out on this type of support.

    This is followed by carer’s allowance (£2.3bn), pension credit (£2.2 bn) and child benefit (£1.7 bn).

    The analysis said that most claimants are simply unaware that certain benefits exist and cited navigating complex criteria as a serious barrier.

    The report comes as household debt rises to £8.8bn a year.

    Policy in Practice managing director Jade Alsop said: "Our findings show that as a society, we can’t afford not to consider these measures to prevent further costs to our health, education and social care services.

    “It is estimated that, by improving pension credit take-up alone, the cost of social care will decrease by £4bn a year.”

    Claire Atchia McMaster, director of income and external affairs at anti-poverty charity Turn2Us, said that feedback they receive indicates that accessing benefits is “complicated, inaccessible and emotionally draining.”

    She said: “This complexity prevents millions from claiming vital support, exacerbating financial insecurity and impacting wellbeing.”

    Ms McMaster called for clearer action from the government to ensure support reaches everyone who needs it.

    Benefit calculators can be accessed on the Turn2Us and Policy in Practice websites.

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    NEW analysis has found that over £23 billion worth of welfare benefits went unclaimed in the last year.

    The report, by Policy in Practice, found that the number had risen from £19bn the year before and that figures could be closer to £30bn if it were to analyse disability benefits and discretionary support.

    Universal credit is the most unclaimed benefit at £8.3bn, with an estimated 1.4 million missing out on this type of support.

    This is followed by carer’s allowance (£2.3bn), pension credit (£2.2 bn) and child benefit (£1.7 bn).

    The analysis said that most claimants are simply unaware that certain benefits exist and cited navigating complex criteria as a serious barrier.

    The report comes as household debt rises to £8.8bn a year.

    Policy in Practice managing director Jade Alsop said: "Our findings show that as a society, we can’t afford not to consider these measures to prevent further costs to our health, education and social care services.

    “It is estimated that, by improving pension credit take-up alone, the cost of social care will decrease by £4bn a year.”

    Claire Atchia McMaster, director of income and external affairs at anti-poverty charity Turn2Us, said that feedback they receive indicates that accessing benefits is “complicated, inaccessible and emotionally draining.”

    She said: “This complexity prevents millions from claiming vital support, exacerbating financial insecurity and impacting wellbeing.”

    Ms McMaster called for clearer action from the government to ensure support reaches everyone who needs it.

    Benefit calculators can be accessed on the Turn2Us and Policy in Practice websites.

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    www.theguardian.com Sunak accused of launching ‘full-on assault on disabled people’

    PM criticised for personal independence payment review amid ‘spiralling’ disability welfare bill

    PM criticised for personal independence payment review amid ‘spiralling’ disability welfare bill

    Rishi Sunak is considering withdrawing a major cash disability benefit from some people with mental health conditions, prompting claims he has launched a “full-on assault on disabled people”.

    The prime minister announced fresh curbs on disability benefits on Friday, saying he wanted to explore whether some cash payments to claimants with mental health conditions could be replaced by treatment or access to services.

    In a speech on welfare, Sunak said he was launching a consultation on the personal independence payment (Pip), a non-means-tested benefit paid to disabled people to help with the extra living costs caused by long-term disability or ill health.

    He said that in addition to reviewing payments to people with mental health conditions, the government would look at whether some other disabled people should get help with one-off costs rather than continuing payments.

    The announcement triggered an outcry from disability charities, which said the rates of people being signed off work and claiming benefits were being caused by crumbling public services, poor-quality jobs and high rates of poverty among disabled households. Mind, the mental health charity, said services for mental health conditions were “at breaking point”.

    There are 1.9 million people on a waiting list for mental health treatment in England, meaning the treatment they should be able to access through the NHS is not currently available to them.

    Sunak said Britain was proud to have a strong safety net of welfare payments to those who needed them, but he also said the country had a “sicknote culture” that needed to be tackled.

    He said “something has gone wrong” since the pandemic to increase the number of economically inactive people who are long-term sick, especially with mental health conditions.

    “Most worrying, the biggest proportion of long-term sickness came from young people … parked on welfare,” Sunak said.

    He said the country could not afford the “spiralling” disability welfare bill of £69bn, which was now more than the core schools budget, and claimed the Pip budget was forecast to increase by 50% in the next four years.

    Other measures he set out included:

    • Shifting responsibility for issuing fit notes, formerly known as sicknotes, away from GPs to other “work and health professionals” in order to encourage more people to return to work.

    • Confirming plans to legislate “in the next parliament” to close benefit claims for anyone who has been claiming for 12 months but is not complying with conditions on accepting available work.

    • Asking more people on universal credit working part-time to look for more work by increasing the earnings threshold from £743 a month to £892 a month, so people paid below this amount have to seek extra hours.

    • Confirming plans to tighten the work capability assessment to require more people with “less severe conditions” to seek some forms of employment.

    On the review of Pip, Sunak said it may be right to pay one-off costs for adaptations, but that the payments may not need to be ongoing.

    The prime minister said the government would look at whether more medical evidence about conditions should be provided, as some payments were made on the basis of “subjective and unverifiable claims”.

    He said some people with mental health conditions may be better served by treatment and access to therapies rather than cash payments.

    Sunak also warned about the “the risk of over-medicalising the everyday challenges and worries of life” when it came to paying benefits to people with mental health conditions.

    His comments were echoed by Mel Stride, the work and pensions secretary, who told Sky News on Friday: “If you go to the GP and say you are feeling a little bit depressed, and you’re signed off, in 94% of occasions, a box is ticked that says you’re not capable of work whatsoever.

    “What we want to do is change the system so that that individual will be referred to – the government is setting up something called Work Well – where they will get both the healthcare support they need, but also a work coach who will be involved to either help them stay in work if they are in employment, or to help them get into work if they’re not.”

    Ed Davey, the Liberal Democrat leader, said: “Millions of people are stuck on NHS waiting lists, unable to get a GP appointment or struggling to access mental health support. Rishi Sunak is attempting to blame the British people for his own government’s failures on the economy and the NHS and it simply won’t wash.”

    Matthew Pennycook, the shadow housing minister, said Sunak had been pursuing a “cheap headline” over his claims that Britain has a “sicknote culture”.

    “There has been a long-term rise for many, many years under this government in people who are on long-term sickness benefits, either because they can’t get the treatment they need through the NHS, which is on its knees after 14 years of Conservative government, or they are not getting the proper support to get back into work,” he said.

    Charities warned that the benefit curbs would make people’s problems worse. James Taylor, the director of strategy at the disability equality charity Scope, said the speech “feels like a full-on assault on disabled people”.

    “These proposals are dangerous and risk leaving disabled people destitute,” he said. “In a cost of living crisis, looking to slash disabled people’s income by hitting Pip is a horrific proposal.

    “Calls are pouring into our helpline from concerned disabled people. Life costs more for disabled people. Threatening to take away the low amount of income Pip provides to disabled people who face £950 a month extra costs isn’t going to solve the problem of economic inactivity … Much of the current record-levels of inactivity are because our public services are crumbling, the quality of jobs is poor and the rate of poverty amongst disabled households is growing.”

    Dr Sarah Hughes, the chief executive of Mind, said the mental health charity was “deeply disappointed that the prime minister’s speech today continues a trend in recent rhetoric which conjures up the image of a ‘mental health culture’ that has ‘gone too far’.

    “This is harmful, inaccurate and contrary to the reality for people up and down the country,” she said. “The truth is that mental health services are at breaking point following years of underinvestment, with many people getting increasingly unwell while they wait to receive support. Indeed the Care Quality Commission’s latest figures on community mental health services show that nearly half of people (44%) waiting for treatment found their mental health deteriorated in this time.”

    Iain Porter, a senior policy adviser at the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, said the prime minister had launched an “irresponsible war of words on people who already aren’t getting enough support, which the government would rather not talk about”.

    “Many people want to work, as the prime minister says, but have their hopes dashed by woeful health and wellbeing support and job centres unfit for purpose,” he said.

    The British Medical Association said the prime minister should focus on getting people access to the medical help they needed to get back to work rather than “pushing a hostile rhetoric on ‘sicknote culture’”.

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    www.theguardian.com Kemi Badenoch: ‘UK’s wealth isn’t from white privilege and colonialism’

    Minister told London conference that Glorious Revolution of 1688 paved way for economic certainty

    Minister told London conference that Glorious Revolution of 1688 paved way for economic certainty

    It would be wrong to attribute the UK’s wealth and economic success to its colonial history or racial privilege, the business and trade minister, Kemi Badenoch, has told an audience in the City.

    Addressing financial services bosses at TheCityUK’s international conference in London, the business secretary said the UK’s past exploitation and oppression of other countries and groups of people could not sufficiently explain the country’s economic trajectory.

    Badenoch said: “It worries me when I hear people talk about wealth and success in the UK as being down to colonialism or imperialism or white privilege or whatever.”

    Instead, she said the Glorious Revolution of 1688 – which led to the development of the UK constitution and solidified the role of parliament – should be credited for providing the kind of economic certainty that paved the way for the Industrial Revolution.

    Any other interpretation could derail efforts to increase growth at home and abroad, Badenoch said.

    “It matters, because if people genuinely believe that the UK only grew and developed into an advanced economy because of exploitation and oppression, then the solutions they will devise will make our growth and productivity problem even worse,” she said.

    “It matters in other countries too, because if developing nations do not understand how the west became rich, they cannot follow in its footsteps.

    “And it matters when, as your trade secretary, I go to the World Trade Organization conference negotiating on the UK’s behalf, and some of my counterparts spend the entire time in meetings talking about colonialism, blame the west for their economic difficulties, and make demands that would make all of us – not just in this country, but around the world – poorer.”

    Her comments come nearly a year after the UK prime minister, Rishi Sunak, refused to apologise for the UK’s role in the slave trade or to commit to paying reparations.

    That was despite descendants of some of Britain’s wealthiest enslavers calling on the government to apologise for slavery and begin a programme of reparative justice in light of the “ongoing consequences of this crime against humanity”.

    “Its after-effects still harm people’s lives in Britain, as well as in the Caribbean countries where our ancestors made money,” a member of the Heirs of Slavery campaign group said.

    A report published by the University of the West Indies last June concluded that the UK alone owed $24tn (£18.8tn) in reparations for transatlantic slavery in 14 countries, including $9.6tn to Jamaica. The report used calculations made by the Brattle Group, which factored in the wealth and GDP amassed by countries that enslaved African people.

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    www.theguardian.com Private health insurance market grows by £385m in a year amid NHS crisis

    Demand for private treatment booms as NHS waiting lists remain long, while more people also sign up for dental cover

    Demand for private treatment booms as NHS waiting lists remain long, while more people also sign up for dental cover

    Britain’s health cover market has grown by £385m in a year as the NHS crisis prompted more people to seek out private medical treatment and demand for dental insurance increased, according to a report.

    The total health cover market, including medical and dental insurance and cash plans, grew 6.1% to £6.7bn in 2022, the latest year for which figures are available, according to the health data provider LaingBuisson.

    About 4.2 million people were subscribed to medical cover schemes. Including dependants on the policies, 7.3 million people were covered – the highest number since 2008.

    Since the market’s Covid-driven drop in 2020, when it declined by 2.2%, it has grown considerably faster than historical norms. Average annual growth was 6.1% between 2020 and 2022, compared with 1.7% between 2008 and 2019.

    The NHS waiting list in England continued to lengthen, to a peak of nearly 7.8m last September. In February, it was still 7.5m and half of the patients had been waiting for 18 weeks or longer.

    Private medical insurance, the largest part of the health cover market, grew by 6% year on year in 2022 to £5.3bn, more than triple the average annual growth rate of 1.8% between 2008 and 2019. After a decade of decline until 2018, more people signed up, particularly in the aftermath of the Covid-19 pandemic which led to a backlog of major procedures such as hip and knee replacements.

    Tim Read, author of the report, said: “Demand began to increase in 2018, as the NHS waiting list began to rise out of control. A new Labour government is likely to aim to tackle it but will have limited fiscal headroom to make substantial progress.

    “With people still struggling to access NHS services and the waiting list remaining stubbornly high, there is little likelihood that demand for health insurance is going to fall any time soon.”

    Read added: “Growth is led by company-backed schemes, which may suggest an increased awareness of the impact of employee ill-health on a business – and possibly frustration at the impact that an inaccessible NHS is having on productivity.”

    Growing numbers of people are also paying out of their own pockets for medical treatment, despite the high cost of some procedures, such as knee operations which typically cost between £12,000 and £15,000.

    Dental insurance and capitation plans (fixed monthly payments) have shown the highest growth of the market, up 9.7% year on year in 2022. However, most people who see a dentist privately pay for treatment without any cover.

    The emergence of “dental deserts” – swathes of the UK where NHS dentists are not taking on new patients – means hundreds of thousands of people have turned up in hospitals or at GPs with severe tooth decay.

    skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotion The average health insurance premium went up to £1,225 in 2022 from £1,203 in 2021, according to LaingBuisson. Premiums on work policies went up to £975, while individual premiums rose to £2,252.

    Insurers have flagged premium rises of more than 10%, with one placing them as high as 40% this year and possibly beyond. This reflects a rise in claims and higher medical costs. Some people who could not get what would have been a cheaper treatment option during the pandemic are now suffering from more expensive conditions to treat, Read said.

    The UK health insurance market is dominated by Bupa, France’s Axa Health, Aviva and Vitality Health, which is owned by South Africa’s Discovery.

    In dental insurance, the main players are Bupa, Simply Health and Unum, after Cigna left the UK market.

    Read said: “I don’t think that the NHS is going to fall apart overnight or that the private sector is going to run rampant overnight. But I do think as people as customers, rather than people as taxpayers, are beginning to reconceptualise the value of paying additionally for healthcare entitlements, which technically they should get on the NHS.”

    8
    www.theguardian.com Private health insurance market grows by £385m in a year amid NHS crisis

    Demand for private treatment booms as NHS waiting lists remain long, while more people also sign up for dental cover

    Demand for private treatment booms as NHS waiting lists remain long, while more people also sign up for dental cover

    Britain’s health cover market has grown by £385m in a year as the NHS crisis prompted more people to seek out private medical treatment and demand for dental insurance increased, according to a report.

    The total health cover market, including medical and dental insurance and cash plans, grew 6.1% to £6.7bn in 2022, the latest year for which figures are available, according to the health data provider LaingBuisson.

    About 4.2 million people were subscribed to medical cover schemes. Including dependants on the policies, 7.3 million people were covered – the highest number since 2008.

    Since the market’s Covid-driven drop in 2020, when it declined by 2.2%, it has grown considerably faster than historical norms. Average annual growth was 6.1% between 2020 and 2022, compared with 1.7% between 2008 and 2019.

    The NHS waiting list in England continued to lengthen, to a peak of nearly 7.8m last September. In February, it was still 7.5m and half of the patients had been waiting for 18 weeks or longer.

    Private medical insurance, the largest part of the health cover market, grew by 6% year on year in 2022 to £5.3bn, more than triple the average annual growth rate of 1.8% between 2008 and 2019. After a decade of decline until 2018, more people signed up, particularly in the aftermath of the Covid-19 pandemic which led to a backlog of major procedures such as hip and knee replacements.

    Tim Read, author of the report, said: “Demand began to increase in 2018, as the NHS waiting list began to rise out of control. A new Labour government is likely to aim to tackle it but will have limited fiscal headroom to make substantial progress.

    “With people still struggling to access NHS services and the waiting list remaining stubbornly high, there is little likelihood that demand for health insurance is going to fall any time soon.”

    Read added: “Growth is led by company-backed schemes, which may suggest an increased awareness of the impact of employee ill-health on a business – and possibly frustration at the impact that an inaccessible NHS is having on productivity.”

    Growing numbers of people are also paying out of their own pockets for medical treatment, despite the high cost of some procedures, such as knee operations which typically cost between £12,000 and £15,000.

    Dental insurance and capitation plans (fixed monthly payments) have shown the highest growth of the market, up 9.7% year on year in 2022. However, most people who see a dentist privately pay for treatment without any cover.

    The emergence of “dental deserts” – swathes of the UK where NHS dentists are not taking on new patients – means hundreds of thousands of people have turned up in hospitals or at GPs with severe tooth decay.

    The average health insurance premium went up to £1,225 in 2022 from £1,203 in 2021, according to LaingBuisson. Premiums on work policies went up to £975, while individual premiums rose to £2,252.

    Insurers have flagged premium rises of more than 10%, with one placing them as high as 40% this year and possibly beyond. This reflects a rise in claims and higher medical costs. Some people who could not get what would have been a cheaper treatment option during the pandemic are now suffering from more expensive conditions to treat, Read said.

    The UK health insurance market is dominated by Bupa, France’s Axa Health, Aviva and Vitality Health, which is owned by South Africa’s Discovery.

    In dental insurance, the main players are Bupa, Simply Health and Unum, after Cigna left the UK market.

    Read said: “I don’t think that the NHS is going to fall apart overnight or that the private sector is going to run rampant overnight. But I do think as people as customers, rather than people as taxpayers, are beginning to reconceptualise the value of paying additionally for healthcare entitlements, which technically they should get on the NHS.”

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    One of those tracks where Duvdev's background in rock really shines through. Great mood boost.

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