I have the good fortune of being the co-chair of this.
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Thursday, April 23
by
Reynolds
on Thu 23 Apr 2009 09:26 AM BST
I have the good fortune of being the co-chair of this.
They are currently looking for more good ideas to be discused on the day, so feel free to send your ideas to sirastudio.mac.com
Wednesday, April 22
by
Reynolds
on Wed 22 Apr 2009 02:18 PM BST
Because I'm a bit too busy at the moment (with good stuff, more of which later), here is a press release. ----- The UK Government plans massive new security snooping on the internet,under their ‘Intercept Modernisation Programme’. Internet Service. Some of the plans you'll have heard about - including plans to “snoop on Facebook” and other social networking sites, by looking at your internet traffic as it passes through special government equipment. Even more seriously, they may intend to centralise all the info they can in a central database, or get special access to ISPs’ data stores, so they can retrieve information without having to ask ISPs first. == ACT NOW == Please contact your MP to ask them to bring your concerns to the attention of Jacqui Smith. If you get a reply, it will probably be lazy and a brush off - respond and you are very likely to get a better answer. This page has a template letter and links to further info: http://www.openrightsgroup.org/act-today-to-stop-government-snooping-on-the-internet/ == WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT ORG? == To find out more about our supporters, in particular what motivates you to campaign for digital rights and how we can better help you take action, Open Rights Group is holding two focus groups in the evening of 27 and 29 April. If you can help us out for a couple of hours, please email to supporters@openrightsgroup.org with 'focus' as the subject heading. We'll reply with a brief form for you to fill out and return, which will ensure we get a balanced, representative view of our supporters. The focus groups will take place at our office in central London. We'll cover reasonable travel expenses to be sure of getting supporters from across the country. Looking forward to meeting some more of you! Tuesday, April 21
by
Reynolds
on Tue 21 Apr 2009 09:16 AM BST
From Fox News.
I would say that pretty much the same thing happens in the UK - so, what is the solution? Here's the crazy idea, if it costs $3 million for these people to keep attending the emergency room, and that isn't counting the cost to other people of ambulances and A&E staff being tied up with these patients - how much would it cost to provide 24 hour care for those people? Because if it costs less, wouldn't that be a more effective use of money? Per year each person cost $55,555 which, while clearer, isn't as 'sexy' a number as $3 million - it's pretty obvious why the larger number is the headline. That isn't, I think, enough to provide 24 hour care, it's the cost of one and a half hip operations. If you moved all nine people into one house you could cut some costs there and then I think it *would* be cheaper to look after them. And with that sort of concentrated care you could maybe move towards 'curing' them of the things that they keep attending A&E for. Of course, there would be opposition from those that would argue that it is not 'fair' on those people who work every day, pay their own rent and struggle to make ends meet. But even with that argument, isn't that annoyance worth having more free space in ambulances and A&E departments? And if you save money, well, that's just more hip operations for the people who 'deserve' it. I don't know - am I being daft, because it seems pretty obvious to me? Monday, April 20
by
Reynolds
on Mon 20 Apr 2009 10:41 PM BST
There are currently around 6,000 signatures for the petition below. This is from the RCN website - and I'm happy to reproduce it here.
by
Reynolds
on Mon 20 Apr 2009 01:13 AM BST
As some of you may know, as well as being ambulance staff, I'm also a registered nurse. For that privilege I pay the NMC a sum of money every year to be on the professional register. If I am not on that register then I cannot practice as a nurse. Should I ever have to leave the ambulance service nursing would allow me to pay the rent. The NMC have the power to strike me off the register, meaning that I would no longer be able to work as a nurse. Which is why this blog should come to an end. No longer can I be safe to tell you all about the terrible conditions in some of the nursing homes that I go to. I can't tell you about the problems that occur in A&E and I can't shout about the atrocious state of home/social care. It's just not safe because to whistleblow like this can result in you being struck off the register. What this decision means is that all bloggers that have a professional registration are now skating on thin ice. Nurse bloggers, Doctor bloggers, Paramedic bloggers - all these are on a professional register and all end up writing about situations that trusts would rather were kept under the carpet. Might I also suggest that in the cases of hospital trusts wanting to get rid of a 'troublesome' staff member they may well turn to organisations like the NMC, HPC or GMC to do their work for them. I know I could point you to HPC rulings that appear to do that, not evidential to be sure, but it does look very much like that. One further suggestion that I'd like to make is that you don't see many managers being taken to the professional registers for malpractice. Are any trust managers from Stafford hospital being struck off any professional register that they might be on? What I can say with certainty is that, as a nurse, no matter how many Incident Reporting Forms you fill in, nothing seems to change. You end up not filling them in at all, because you know that they will be ignored. So you want to shout about the situation as loudly as you can. Which can lead to you losing your job or being struck off the register - which results in your career ending. Which is why most people just try to o the best they can, and avoid 'rocking the boat'. And this is why I should stop blogging. But I won't. I, and many others who are braver than me, will continue to try and get the truth of the situation in the NHS out there, out in the public eye because that is the only way that change occurs. It's the right thing to do. Sunday, April 19
by
Reynolds
on Sun 19 Apr 2009 01:31 PM BST
This is the sort of thing I love. The BBC releasing video and assets under a Creative Commons license. It's one of the reasons I'm more than happy to pay my TV License (which really should change it's name as the BBC is much, much more than TV these days). R&DTV comes as an edited 5 minute programme and also as a longer version and an 'asset bundle' which contains everything that didn't make the edit. Imagine a future where you could download the assets of a TV programme like 'Planet Earth', remix and re-edit it, add subtitles for other languages and recut sections to be used in schools. We pay for it, why can't we be allowed to 'own' it? It would also help prevent the terrible situation where knowledge that is 'out of print' suddenly becomes unavailable. For example - my brother (a teacher who really should write a blog) has a teaching resource book called 'Science Investigations - pack 1' edited by Richard Gott and Ken Foulds. Collins educational have let it drift out of print, and so my brother can't get hold of packs 2 and 3. This means that the children that my brother teaches don't have access to something that my brother assures me is an excellent teaching resource. If it is out of print and it wasn't making enough money to keep in print - why not put it up on a website somewhere so that it can be downloaded? Archive.org give free hosting for such things, so it would cost nothing, but would let people keep that knowledge alive. Downloading from Collins would also put Collins in that person's mind and so would have a 'relationship' with the publisher. This is just one reason why I make everything that I do available under a Creative Commons license. Including my second book, and should I every get around to writing it - book three. Saturday, April 18
by
Reynolds
on Sat 18 Apr 2009 01:53 PM BST
I don't know if we ever met in a professional capacity, but that doesn't matter, my thoughts go out to his colleagues, friends and families. I was following the story since Sunday and hoping that he would recover. Friday, April 17
by
Reynolds
on Fri 17 Apr 2009 11:40 AM BST
A court in Sweden has jailed four men behind The Pirate Bay (TPB), the world's most high-profile file-sharing website, in a landmark case. Now the IFPI should go after Google for doing the same thing (hint, type the name of a copyrighted bit of media and the word 'torrent' into Google's search box). Once Google has been found guilty they should go after the ISP's, after all, it is their service that lets people download illegal content. After the ISPs, they should sue Apple and Microsoft because they make the software that runs on your computer that lets you connect to the internet to download copyrighted content. After Apple and Microsoft they should sue the power companies because they provide the power that computers use to download illegal content. ----- My question would be - how much of those damages payments are actually going to go to the artists? I know that if I were an artist being handled by one of the big companies I'd ask for that amount to be pointed out in my royalty payment. I think it'd be a rather small amount. |
Welcome to Random Acts Of Reality, a Blog based in London, England, written by an E.M.T working for the London Ambulance Service. Also, number one search result for "Womble porn". All names have be changed to protect the guilty. This Blog was previously known as "Why I Hate Humanity" but the antipsychotic medication seems to have kicked in.
All opinions on this website are mine alone, and may not reflect those of the L.A.S or other ambulance crews Find out more about me here.
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