- cross-posted to:
- news@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- news@lemmy.world
It’s going to be really tough for the next government to get out of this hole. god forbid the labour party don’t manage to make significant steps within one term.
Cause then we might get Farage and his ilk
This seems to be a repeating pattern everywhere around Europe.
Conservatives fuck up the economy and society in general, leftists get elected and try to fix things but face resistance from conservatives, conservatives blame leftists for everything they fucked up themselves, even more extreme conservatives get voted in because people are morons and conveniently forget who it was who was responsible for the problems conservatives claim are all the left’s fault. Rinse and repeat.
Sounds like a global thing, really…
Very true, unfortunately. Probably isn’t going to get any better before things get much worse first, either
Let’s do try to not make that happen somehow, though.
Wish I knew how.
Voting doesn’t seem to be the thing that’s going to unfuck this, considering how popular right wing extremists are right now and how morons are voting for them in droves, at least here in the EU.
Elites really gotten good at socializing expenses of running a society.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Britain’s schools and primary health services are “staggering” under the pressure of demand caused by an epidemic of extreme poverty, as desperate families unable to afford food, clothing or heating increasingly turn to them for crisis help.
Teachers and GPs in England, Scotland and Wales are informally acting as emergency food providers, welfare advisers, housing officers and social workers alongside their day jobs, as they devote more and more time and resources to support struggling parents and children, new research has found.
Staff routinely helped parents solve housing, visa and benefits problems, and provided them with food, clothes, and shower and washing machine facilities.
Schools said they were devoting growing resources to “firefighting” behavioural issues stemming from pupil and parent hunger, poverty, poor housing and mental ill health.
GPs and schools, particularly in deprived areas, were now typically regarded by struggling families as a “first-line service” that would deal with their problems, the JRF said, in part because other forms of community-based advice and support such as Sure Start had been cut over the past 14 years.
Prof Kamila Hawthorne, the chair of the Royal College of GPs, said: “General practice, and other public services, can’t be expected to pick up the pieces – we’re already facing unprecedented pressures as demand for our appointments increases in volume and complexity.”
The original article contains 839 words, the summary contains 219 words. Saved 74%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!