Laurence Fox

Liamo

Well-known member
If you thought his earlier Tweet was bad, he's now followed it up with if anything, an even worse offering:

'The @nhs isn't my church and salvation. It's employees aren't my saviours.

'If you can't deal with a 99.9% survival rate virus, you aren't fit for purpose. You don't need protecting, my elderly relatives do.

I also love your emergency care and will continue to pay for it. For now.'

Certainly gets my nomination for, "Person you would most like to see come down with a fairly nasty (but of course, non-fatal) bout of CoVid-19."
 
Strangely there is a discussion to be had here but he is just too much of an attention seeker for that to happen.
NHS
* struggles to cope in any crises (Nothing to do with those working on the front line)
* Brilliant for emergency support

To have a go at any front line workers for organisational/structural failures is just nasty
 
It is utterly depressing how many seem to agree with him. I’ve stopped even giving this guy any time. He’s as eloquently put above an oxygen thief intent on winding up people. Male Katie Hopkins.
 
Strangely there is a discussion to be had here but he is just too much of an attention seeker for that to happen.
NHS
* struggles to cope in any crises (Nothing to do with those working on the front line)
* Brilliant for emergency support

To have a go at any front line workers for organisational/structural failures is just nasty

It is an interesting debate. I suppose the question is how much funding do you want to give the NHS so that it is always "crisis ready"?

The ideal situation is that it is always "over-funded" with a surplus of nurses and doctors so that we have surge capacity for when something hits. The flip side of that is how much are we willing to pay to make that happen when it is maybe only needed once a decade?

As always the answer is in the middle somewhere. I'm lucky to be in a position where I could afford to pay some extra tax to help make the NHS, dare I say it, "world beating"... but that is obviously not true of a lot of people, and even a lot of people who could afford it wouldn't always be so keen. It's also likely to be a lot more money than people realise...
 
He was in a coupe of Episodes of Ultimate Force alongside "TV hardman" Ross Kemp

must be where his sense of invincibility comes from.

1606989264421.png

and he was married to Billie Piper before she divorced him in 2016.

it just gets better and better.
 
He was in a coupe of Episodes of Ultimate Force alongside "TV hardman" Ross Kemp

must be where his sense of invincibility comes from.

View attachment 9870

and he was married to Billie Piper before she divorced him in 2016.

it just gets better and better.

Oh yeah, wasn't he a snide little get in that too ?

I still can't believe that the lovely Billie fell for his "charms".
 
He was in a coupe of Episodes of Ultimate Force alongside "TV hardman" Ross Kemp

must be where his sense of invincibility comes from.

View attachment 9870

and he was married to Billie Piper before she divorced him in 2016.

it just gets better and better.

It gets even better. He's been following another actor around on twitter, every time the guy posts he's on his case, seemingly for no apparent reason.
The other guy finally explained the reason when and why the trolling started.

Apparently they both went to audition for a roll in a film about the actor James Fox, his father, it was to play the son of J.Fox.
The other actor got the gig.
 
It is an interesting debate. I suppose the question is how much funding do you want to give the NHS so that it is always "crisis ready"?

The ideal situation is that it is always "over-funded" with a surplus of nurses and doctors so that we have surge capacity for when something hits. The flip side of that is how much are we willing to pay to make that happen when it is maybe only needed once a decade?

As always the answer is in the middle somewhere. I'm lucky to be in a position where I could afford to pay some extra tax to help make the NHS, dare I say it, "world beating"... but that is obviously not true of a lot of people, and even a lot of people who could afford it wouldn't always be so keen. It's also likely to be a lot more money than people realise...
Have a "territorial care force".
Ex Drs & Nurses keep their professional qualifications up to date & their hand in with the odd weekend & holiday stint, but on call so that in an emergency they'd come back full time for up to 6 months.
 
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