Daily review 02/05/2025

Written By: - Date published: 5:30 pm, May 2nd, 2025 - 6 comments
Categories: Daily review - Tags:

Daily review is also your post.

This provides Standardistas the opportunity to review events of the day.

The usual rules of good behaviour apply (see the Policy).

Don’t forget to be kind to each other …

6 comments on “Daily review 02/05/2025 ”

  1. SPC 1

    Thanks Mr Starmer …"with the Tories still resting in their coffin awaiting someone to shovel the dirt on" being that unpopular has to leave an opportunity for someone like the mercenary for hire, the local Ferengi, to exploit

    https://www.bbc.com/news/live/c39jedewxp8t

  2. joe90 2

    .

    Odile de Vasselot, who heard Charles de Gaulle’s World War II appeal to resist the Germans on a makeshift radio at the family château in south-central France and jumped in, first delivering mail and messages to the Resistance and later helping to escort Allied airmen across the Belgian front, died on April 21 in Paris. She was 103.

    Her death, at a retirement home for nuns and priests, was announced by the Order of the Liberation, the organization that awarded her a medal established by General de Gaulle to honor heroes of the French Resistance.

    […]

    “One had to do something,” she said in an interview many years later. “One never has the right to just sit there and do nothing.”

    She recalled being incensed, as an 18-year-old, by the sight of the giant Nazi flags over the Rue de Rivoli in Paris: “It was unthinkable, with those huge banners flying with the swastika on them.”

    […]

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/01/world/europe/odile-de-vasselot-dead.html

    https://archive.li/W6odI

  3. joe90 3

    See, Labour, it can be done.

    .

    Mark Carney

    @MarkJCarney

    We’re expanding the Canadian Dental Care Plan. Starting today,Canadians aged 55-64 can apply. In the coming weeks, applications will open to Canadians aged 18-54.

    Because of this plan, millions of people can now afford to see a dentist — some for the first time in decades. Soon, millions more will get that same care.

    11:27 AM · May 2, 2025

    https://x.com/MarkJCarney/status/1918084786020614561

    https://www.canada.ca/en/services/benefits/dental/dental-care-plan/coverage.html

    https://www.canada.ca/en/services/benefits/dental/dental-care-plan.html

    • SPC 3.1

      We would have to start with an annual free dental visit for those with CSC's.

      And maintaining support for free emergency dental care in public hospitals. Otherwise fund emergency clinics travelling the country for those in need.

      And school programmes – avoid sugary drinks etc ( water cleanse after all sugary foods etc), free toothbrushes and toothpaste.

      Given our lack of dentists, this is where our start is.

      Otherwise better fund primary health services, so everyone had access to a GP.

      • joe90 3.1.1

        Poor dental health is directly linked to all manner of piss poor health outcomes, social anxiety, depression, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, autoimmune diseases, neurodegeneration, etc, etc…

        Our primary health system desperately needs a national dental care plan.

        • SPC 3.1.1.1

          Our our primary health care system was not failing and causing pressure on hospitals they cannot cope with.

          And we need a national dental care plan.

          What can be done without enough trained dentists would be part be part of that.

          Is it a shorter training period for basic care – cleaning and the like?

Leave a Comment